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When circling near a steep mountain some pilots get a strong sensation
that they are diving each time the circle faces the steep terrain. Why is this? Our mind tries to make the side of the mountain, the horizon. Let's do a little test; Point your left hand up about 30 degrees to simulate the side of a steep mountain. Next, make believe your right hand is banked up in a 45 degree left turn, thermalling into the mountain. Now, rotate both hands down to make the mountain side parallel to the earth. What attitude does your right hand show? A diving left turn! Most experienced mountain flyers know about this false sensation and simply look over their shoulder to pick up a bit of real horizon each time they face the mountain as they thermal their way up the side. I get this false sensation every time I thermal close to Mt. Shasta which rises up to 12000 feet above the valley floor at about a 30 degree angle. When flying with other pilots in a 2-place ship, they have occasionally shouted out; "We're diving" when facing the mountain. Plug this tid-bit away in your bag of tricks and don't let this false monster get you some day. Have a Happy, Happy (politically correct for the forthcoming season). JJ |
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On Sat, 22 Dec 2007 07:05:07 -0800 (PST), JJ Sinclair
wrote: When circling near a steep mountain some pilots get a strong sensation that they are diving each time the circle faces the steep terrain. Why is this? Our mind tries to make the side of the mountain, the horizon. Let's do a little test; Point your left hand up about 30 degrees to simulate the side of a steep mountain. Next, make believe your right hand is banked up in a 45 degree left turn, thermalling into the mountain. Now, rotate both hands down to make the mountain side parallel to the earth. What attitude does your right hand show? A diving left turn! Most experienced mountain flyers know about this false sensation and simply look over their shoulder to pick up a bit of real horizon each time they face the mountain as they thermal their way up the side. I get this false sensation every time I thermal close to Mt. Shasta which rises up to 12000 feet above the valley floor at about a 30 degree angle. When flying with other pilots in a 2-place ship, they have occasionally shouted out; "We're diving" when facing the mountain. Plug this tid-bit away in your bag of tricks and don't let this false monster get you some day. Have a Happy, Happy (politically correct for the forthcoming season). JJ More generally, our minds try to make the surrounding terrain level. If you ride the cog railway to the top of Pikes Peak, you go up quite a steep slope, and about a third of the way up you pass a house sticking out of the slope with a deck suspended on stilts. The passengers typically show some level of disbelief when the conductor announces "That house is on the level." Next to the old US 6/40, pre-Interstate, west of Denver there used to be a pond perhaps a hundred feet across. As you drove down from the mountains, you could swear that pond was substantially tilted; my wife named it "the slanted lake". rj |
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