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#11
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I've gone up with my CFI for a couple more flights just working the landings
in the Bonanza (A BE33, by the way). They're alot better, but once in a while I'll still float past where I need to be. I failed the first short-field because I was way long, and the short approach was well below best glide with the gear hanging out & a very nose high attitude at the very last. We would have made the runway, but he called for a go-around. That apparently, was the final straw that ended the ride. I agree it was a crappy approach. Now I've got them more consistent. But once in a while, there's still a floater I can't seem to get down, or a power off that's setup & safe, but still short of my desired touchdown point. Ugh. "Jim Burns" wrote in message ... As others have mentioned, speed control and a tight pattern. I'd rather be high and tight, guaranteed to make the runway and allowing a slip as an option, low and wide doesn't leave you that option. Explaining your reasoning, as long as it's safe and correct, shows commercial knowledge. My commercial ride was the last ride that I was able to take with our local DE. He's a real parrot on checkrides and a great teacher. When we were about 5ft agl on the 180 degree power off spot landing, he asked if we'd make the designated touchdown spot. I responded confidently that we would because if we were short the ride would be over. Then he asked what options I had to extend the glide "just in case"... Prop I said, pull the prop and reduce the disc drag. "Ever done it?" he asks. "Nope" by that time his hand was already on the prop control and it was coming back. We floated an extra distance, I can't remember how far, but he laughed and said "See how that works? But think before you do it, you need oil pressure in a single" And with that our ride ended on a fun and informative note. Jim |
#12
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Morgans wrote:
I don't know what everyone else thinks, but that does not seem like very much time to transition into a Bo, to me. I had about 550 hours in a C172 before I moved up to a Bonanza and it took me about 12 hours with an instructor to get (more or less) comfortable with the added workload and speed of the aircraft. -- Peter |
#13
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But once in a while, there's still a
floater I can't seem to get down, or a power off that's setup & safe, but still short of my desired touchdown point. Are you taking wind sufficiently into consideration in your sight picture? Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#14
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"Peter R." wrote
I had about 550 hours in a C172 before I moved up to a Bonanza and it took me about 12 hours with an instructor to get (more or less) comfortable with the added workload and speed of the aircraft. Yeah, I would think. Did you also have to pass a commercial checkride at the end of the 12 hours? I would think you would want to be more than (in your words) "more or less comfortable with the added workload and speed" before you had to pass a checkride, with all of the added pressures and nervousness that "automatically" comes with a checkride. -- Jim in NC |
#15
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I like 1.5 Vs until on final, that provides a good margin
for maneuvering with bank angles up to 30 degrees. Yes you can calculate the proper speed, Beech does have the proper speeds on their performance charts, adjusted for actual weight. "john smith" wrote in message ... | In article 4B6Fg.4479$SZ3.926@dukeread04, | "Jim Macklin" wrote: | | Lands are all about controlling speed, the right speed. 1.3 | Vs(x) for the weight you're actually flying. | | Remember that Vsx gear down is about 15-20 mph slower than Vsx gear up. | Look it up in the charts. | | You didn't say | what model Bonanza, but an A36 can be 800 pounds under | certificated GW, or 25% under. You must reduce your | approach speed by the proper amount or you will float | forever. Beech does publish excellent TO and Landing graphs | with speed adjustments. | | Landing weight = w2 | Max gross weight =w1 | Stall speed landing weight, landing config = Vs1 | Stall speed at max gross weight, landing config = Vs | | [sqrt (w2/w1)*Vs] = Vs1 | | You can fly a few knots, not more than 5, faster which will | give you a steeper descent and then you can use the extra | speed to slow down to get a better glide. If you are using | best glide speed there is nothing you can do to improve your | approach without adding power. | | You are likely flying too fast and too wide on downwind. | You are also probably watching your gauges and airspeed as | you configure the Bonanza for the approach, do it by sound | and feel and watch the runway for relative motion (drift and | glide path) and you should do fine. | | Remember, you will get a landing gear failure and it may | come in the pattern with a simulated engine failure. Make | sure you know the procedure and have checked during the | pre-flight that the gear handle can be un-stowed [sometimes | the spar cover is installed over the handle]. But also | remember that it take 50 turns to get the gear down and you | only have so much time. If he gives you a simulated engine | failure and then the gear fails, exercise your judgment, | tell him that in a real case you'd land gear up rather than | risk a crash while trying to crank the gear. Then add power | and go-around, crank the gear on downwind to show him you | know how. Sometimes an examiner will give you a task to see | if you have fixated on the checkride and not the safety of | the flight. | | Jim, is there any speed that is best to fly when cranking the gear down | by hand? |
#16
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Morgans wrote:
Did you also have to pass a commercial checkride at the end of the 12 hours? Not at all. This was just to move up to the aircraft, not to obtain my commercial. About half those hours were flying in real IMC to get used to handling the aircraft in an IFR setting, which I don't believe is part of the commercial training, is it? In any regard, I doubt I would have passed the commercial checkride after those 12 hours/ I would think you would want to be more than (in your words) "more or less comfortable with the added workload and speed" before you had to pass a checkride, with all of the added pressures and nervousness that "automatically" comes with a checkride. Agreed. -- Peter |
#17
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#18
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I got my commercial due to being a military pilot so I only had to take a
written test on civilian regulations. Won't the examiner allow you to use power on final to drag it to the point you wish to land and then throttle to idle? After I retired from the Air Force some friends let me be a member of their aero club for free in exchange for flight instruction. This one guy had the same problem you're having. He couldn't consistently land at the beginning of an actual short runway. I asked him why he didn't take his base leg out a little further so he could drag it in with some power and then chop it at the runway. His eyes got big and he said he didn't think that was legal. I told him it was silly to purposely enter an uncontrolled event to avoid the POSSIBILITY of an engine failure and not having enough glide speed/path to get to the runway. Sure, if you have a normal runway length you should set up so that with an engine failure in the pattern you can still make it to the runway. You try not to deliberately enter a dangerous situation to avoid the possibility of something else happening. But if the regs for the CHECK RIDE don't allow it you have to do it that way for the check ride only. But not in a real very short field situation. -- Darrell R. Schmidt B-58 Hustler History: (see below) http://members.cox.net/dschmidt1/ wrote in message oups.com... I'm taking my 2nd stab at my commercial checkride in a couple days. Last week, I got through the Oral exam fine. We first flew my instructor's Bonanza for the complex pattern work. Didn't do too bad on the soft-field stuff, but I sailed right past my short-field mark by about 300 feet. We then tried a short approach. Not even the 180 deg accuracy landing. Just make the runway. Well, after several laps of dropping the gear abeam the numbers, I did it again & came up well short of the runway. Pink slip. I've gone up with my instructor to work on both accuracy landings, but can't seem to hit them consistently. Any advice? Any examiners care to tell how much "fudge" factor they may allow if I'm a little short or long? If I am, can I request another try at it? I haven't even had the chance to demonstrate the airwork in my Cherokee yet (which I think will go much better). I'm hoping the DE will let me do that stuff first & save the complex for last. But, since the complex is what I failed the first time, I don't know if we have to complete that first. My CFI says I fly just fine, and I'm starting to feel more comfortable in the Bo (only 7 hours so far). I've got 160+ in the Cherokee & 450 total. I'm just psyching myself out over 2 little landings. Ugh. |
#19
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There's 2 accuracy landings for Commercial. A short-field (with power) and a
180 degree power off landing. I took my re-test today & passed! Got passed the landings I missed in the Bo & then got to do the airwork stuff in my Cherokee. Whew. Now I can start reading up on CFI training. As my CFI & I were putting away the Bonanza, we watched 4 F-16s (based here) make a tight short approach to land. They make it look easy... ;-) Thanks for all those who chipped in some advice. "Darrell S" wrote in message news:v5HFg.1632$y61.1016@fed1read05... I got my commercial due to being a military pilot so I only had to take a written test on civilian regulations. Won't the examiner allow you to use power on final to drag it to the point you wish to land and then throttle to idle? After I retired from the Air Force some friends let me be a member of their aero club for free in exchange for flight instruction. This one guy had the same problem you're having. He couldn't consistently land at the beginning of an actual short runway. I asked him why he didn't take his base leg out a little further so he could drag it in with some power and then chop it at the runway. His eyes got big and he said he didn't think that was legal. I told him it was silly to purposely enter an uncontrolled event to avoid the POSSIBILITY of an engine failure and not having enough glide speed/path to get to the runway. Sure, if you have a normal runway length you should set up so that with an engine failure in the pattern you can still make it to the runway. You try not to deliberately enter a dangerous situation to avoid the possibility of something else happening. But if the regs for the CHECK RIDE don't allow it you have to do it that way for the check ride only. But not in a real very short field situation. -- Darrell R. Schmidt B-58 Hustler History: (see below) http://members.cox.net/dschmidt1/ |
#20
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It is a test, with a maneuver described.
http://www.faa.gov/education_researc...S-8081-12B.pdf "Darrell S" wrote in message news:v5HFg.1632$y61.1016@fed1read05... |I got my commercial due to being a military pilot so I only had to take a | written test on civilian regulations. Won't the examiner allow you to use | power on final to drag it to the point you wish to land and then throttle to | idle? After I retired from the Air Force some friends let me be a member of | their aero club for free in exchange for flight instruction. This one guy | had the same problem you're having. He couldn't consistently land at the | beginning of an actual short runway. I asked him why he didn't take his | base leg out a little further so he could drag it in with some power and | then chop it at the runway. His eyes got big and he said he didn't think | that was legal. I told him it was silly to purposely enter an uncontrolled | event to avoid the POSSIBILITY of an engine failure and not having enough | glide speed/path to get to the runway. Sure, if you have a normal runway | length you should set up so that with an engine failure in the pattern you | can still make it to the runway. | | You try not to deliberately enter a dangerous situation to avoid the | possibility of something else happening. But if the regs for the CHECK RIDE | don't allow it you have to do it that way for the check ride only. But not | in a real very short field situation. | | -- | Darrell R. Schmidt | B-58 Hustler History: (see below) | http://members.cox.net/dschmidt1/ | | wrote in message | oups.com... | I'm taking my 2nd stab at my commercial checkride in a couple days. | Last week, I got through the Oral exam fine. We first flew my | instructor's Bonanza for the complex pattern work. Didn't do too bad on | the soft-field stuff, but I sailed right past my short-field mark by | about 300 feet. We then tried a short approach. Not even the 180 deg | accuracy landing. Just make the runway. Well, after several laps of | dropping the gear abeam the numbers, I did it again & came up well | short of the runway. | Pink slip. | I've gone up with my instructor to work on both accuracy landings, but | can't seem to hit them consistently. Any advice? Any examiners care to | tell how much "fudge" factor they may allow if I'm a little short or | long? If I am, can I request another try at it? | I haven't even had the chance to demonstrate the airwork in my Cherokee | yet (which I think will go much better). I'm hoping the DE will let me | do that stuff first & save the complex for last. But, since the complex | is what I failed the first time, I don't know if we have to complete | that first. | My CFI says I fly just fine, and I'm starting to feel more comfortable | in the Bo (only 7 hours so far). I've got 160+ in the Cherokee & 450 | total. I'm just psyching myself out over 2 little landings. | Ugh. | | | |
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