Stall/spin and ground reference maneuvers
John,
Yes, I would. It's the pattern I've flown for 40+ years and it's always
worked well for me. I would not consider changing to a square base with a
90 degree turn to final during a critical outlanding at a fenced field.
Likewise, I wouldn't advise anyone to switch to a circling landing under the
same circumstances.
I plan my patterns to roll to a stop at the same location every time using
minimal wheel brake. I do this with calm winds and 30+ kt winds. I find it
easier to plan and execute simply by changing the point where I begin my
final turn.
PS - Navy pilots can't land, then only crash and hope the wire stops them
before they go over the side. ;-)
"John Carlyle" wrote in message
...
Dan,
Would you do a circling approach if you were going into a difficult strip,
too? Say, a narrow cornfield surrounded by trees. I ask because the Navy
pilots I know who fly gliders have reverted to the non-circling approach.
-John, Q3
On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 12:59:10 PM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote:
I fly my pattern just like Kirk, though a little higher and faster at the
start. I begin my descending final turn when abeam the touchdown point
and
roll out on final at about 200 ft and over the numbers. I do this both
in
my LAK and in the tow planes.
I did it this way in the Air Force and when I flew a King Air for
FlightSafety. The only exception was in the B-727. Gotta be gentle for
the
pax.
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