Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight schools

Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

A query for those reading this: How many of you teach that the throttle can also be used similarly to the trim?
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

A query for those reading this: How many of you teach that the throttle can also be used similarly to the trim?

Actually I teach them to just leave it in, even for landing. Just lean out the mixture at varying degrees and that's all the power correction you need.
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

I always enjoyed the adjustable twisty action of the early Bonanza power lever.....not sure if later ones retained it. Pretty nice for fine tuning, though you sometimes need a pretty quick hand in the approach turn w/ lifties.
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

Actually I teach them to just leave it in, even for landing. Just lean out the mixture at varying degrees and that's all the power correction you need.

You're scaring me.....and ruining a good engine!
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

You're scaring me.....and ruining a good engine!

You're dangerous!

MORTAL COMBAT!
mortal-kombat-deadly-alliance-wallpaper-scorpion.jpg
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

I always enjoyed the adjustable twisty action of the early Bonanza power lever.....not sure if later ones retained it. Pretty nice for fine tuning, though you sometimes need a pretty quick hand in the approach turn w/ lifties.

Yes! zactly
I've seen some A36s without it, but the '92 F33 still had the twisties.

Agreed. Teaches them finer power management.

"If you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball."
"What?"
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

it takes them 10 seconds to go tail to tail between planes on their ramp (pretty much riding the brakes the entire time- i'd say around 2 mph).. it's funny watching them taxi from a taxiway to their ramp- they'll be going 25-30 kts and as soon as they come up to the line that marks their ramp they grind to a halt and continue on at a crawl pace. I understand the need to go slow on the ramp due to the congestion of planes, fuel trucks, golf carts, and people- but that doesn't give you the right to make up for lost time once you leave your ramp! i'm surprised dab ATC doesn't say anything about it.
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

POH checklist says I must set engine RPM to 1,000. I must keep it there or the engine will blow up.
I've been in planes where idle IS 1,000, so no way to go below it.
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

should probably re-set the idle then.
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

I should have probably attached this to that post to avoid confusion....

:sarcasm: :)
Hey, it's not like I haven't been given hell for it before.

Instructor: Slow down, you're going too fast
Me: Ok (Steps on brakes)
Instructor: Stop using the brakes, take some power out
Me: It's already out
Instructor: Oh

(Of course this is from the same instructor that is always telling me I am too fast on final when he isn't even IN the plane. (And I'm not BTW.))
 
Re: Primacy and bad habits at the "Harvard" of flight school

You really should get the idle adjusted. It's not supposed to idle that fast. That also makes your landing flare stretch out because you are essentially landing with power. There are concrete mechanical reasons why the engine should not idle that fast,...but, to me, an old time instructor, the main reason that fast-idling engines are a problem is that they teach new pilots a very bad habit of riding the brakes.

See? You're doing it, and you think it is ok.
 
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