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#91
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buttman wrote:
On May 11, 9:28 pm, "Dudley Henriques" wrote: PLEASE! Do I REALLY have to reiterate to you that pulling a fuel valve on a student on takeoff is poor technique for a flight instructor dealing with a student.....and this goes for having a runway 50 miles long....IT JUST ISN'T A GOOD SAFE PRACTICE TO DO THIS? 'Safe' is a relative term. What is exactly does 'safe' begin and end? You admit that a practice engine failure on takeoff is perfectly safe when done by closing the throttle. The only difference between pulling the throttle instead of the gas valve means you have power if you need it. With a wide and long runway 50 feet below you, what would you need the power for? When the maintenance truck drives onto the runway ahead of you by mistake. When the (deer, moose, etc.) runs onto the runway ahead of you. I can probably think of others, but these two have happened to me personally. Cutting the fuel is simply an unnecessary risk in this situation. Matt |
#92
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You are either an imposter posing as a flight instructor or a CFI who uses
the worst deductive reasoning I have ever seen posted on these forums. You in fact might simply be a teen age troll. I suggest you either quit instructing before you kill someone or disconnect your little plastic stick from the computer and put it away for the night. Dudley Henriques "buttman" wrote in message oups.com... On May 11, 9:28 pm, "Dudley Henriques" wrote: PLEASE! Do I REALLY have to reiterate to you that pulling a fuel valve on a student on takeoff is poor technique for a flight instructor dealing with a student.....and this goes for having a runway 50 miles long....IT JUST ISN'T A GOOD SAFE PRACTICE TO DO THIS? 'Safe' is a relative term. What is exactly does 'safe' begin and end? You admit that a practice engine failure on takeoff is perfectly safe when done by closing the throttle. The only difference between pulling the throttle instead of the gas valve means you have power if you need it. With a wide and long runway 50 feet below you, what would you need the power for? I admit there could be a perfectly good reason why you losing that ability to add back power could result in an accident, but I haven't heard it. I bet if I were to print out this thread and give it to the FAA office, I'm pretty sure they'd agree with you. I actually would be surprised if they recommended doing it. But at the very least, they'd give good reason to not do so (I hope). It's like one of those puzzles that you know has an answer, and you kind of know the answer, but non the less is nowhere to be found. Do I REALLY have to tell you that regardless of a traffic situation in the pattern, and regardless of your position in that pattern and the position of another aircraft in or coming into that pattern, YOU as the pilot in command, and as the instructor flying with a student, should KNOW what to do in ALL situations and should have done whatever was needed quietly and professionally without further discussion or incident regardless of the actions of the other pilot ? What should I have done? I misjudged the Cirrus. It was a mistake. I regret that it happened, but it happened. I thought it would be further out, but apparently he was closer. I wasn't looking right in front of me, I was looking further out because thats where I thought he was. I'll say it for the 100 millionth time; I made a mistake. I don't know what you want me to do... This situation should have been a non event for you as an instructor....period! It sort of was a non-event. I took the controls from my student, turned back to rejoin the extended downwind until the cirrus passed, turned final behind the cirrus, then made a call to the CTAF saying I had re-established on final behind the cirrus. I didn't snap back at him, I didn't start crying, I didn't end the flight there... It did bother me a little, but what do you expect? Are you saying that the comment bothering me means I'm a bad instructor? Is a controller who is annoyed by a snappy pilot a bad controller? At the very least, what you SHOULD have done in the Cirrus situation is avoid the problem by taking whatever action was necessary to insure the safety of your aircraft. What makes you think I didn't "ensure safety of my aircraft"? You are making things up. If there was an issue with the Cirrus pilot concerning his language, this should have been nothing more to you than a golden opportunity to stress the safety issue with your student. The language issue should have been another golden opportunity to stress the need for proper radio etiquette with the student at the moment of infraction, What makes you think I didn't use this as an opportunity to teach my student proper radio technique? If I remember correctly, my student (who is a native Chinese speaker, who can hardly speak English in the first place) even commented "what was that guy's problem" as we were heading home. I also think that way I didn't snap back (something I'd never EVER do) goes to teach my student more than I could ever tell him on the ground. NOT here on the group as a rant! Why? People here made threads ranting about little stuff like this all the time. I remember a thread about tower induced go-arounds lot too long ago. How is that any different? Or any of the other 10,000 threads that are made here every year. What exactly makes this thread so intolerable? I seriously want to know so I won't make anymore. In my opinion, just these two examples are quite enough for me to make a decision about you as a flight instructor. And those "two examples" are completely ridiculous. So your opinion is worthless. You asked me for specifics. I have given them to you. I realize of course that my personal opinion of you as a CFI might not be exactly to your liking. I have no objection whatsoever if you would like to print out the entire two threads on pulling the fuel valve on your student pilot and also the incident in the pattern with the Cirrus and take both of them down to your local FAA office. Then report back here if you like with their collective opinion on these two situations involving your decision making abilities as a CFI. Sometimes a fresh input from another source will shed much needed light on an issue. Dudley Henriques |
#93
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![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... buttman wrote: The only difference between pulling the throttle instead of the gas valve means you have power if you need it. This single sentence is enough for me . It says it all :-)) Dudley Henriques |
#94
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This quote you quoted was my post in that thread. I remember, but cannot
reference at this point, two instances where an instructor killed the engine at altitude over an airport. When it became clear that the student was going to overshoot the runway, the engine would not re-start, and a crash ensued. Why take a chance on making a real emergency trying to simulate one? gatt wrote: Hey, all, I have a question about a comment in the "Sounds like another stupid instructor trick: practicing engine out procedure at altitude by actually killing the engine. Could lead to an 'Oh ****!' experience. " Is this no longer considered good instructional practice? -c |
#95
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![]() "buttman" wrote in message oups.com... No one is perfect, and I don't know why some people can't accept the fact that I'm not... You're right. No one IS perfect, but the job of the flight instructor is NOT to accept this fact as easily as you obviously accept it from the tone of your posts. You spend entirely too much time explaining to one and all that not being perfect is acceptable in a pilot when in fact you should be spending every minute of your time as a flight instructor doing all in your power to bring perfection as close to being attainable as possible for your student. The name of the game in instructing people to fly airplanes is in knowing that perfection is unattainable while at the same time spending your entire career as a pilot trying to attain it. If you don't understand this one single all important concept, and are unable to pass it on to a student pilot, in my opnion you are SERIOUSLY lacking in the basic fundementals of proper flight instruction. You should NEVER...and I repeat it again for you....EVER.....accept an error made in the air by you, your student, or any other pilot as simply the fact that "no one is perfect". This loigic has no place in aviation.......ESPECIALLY professional aviation.......and MOST CERTAINLY not in the CFI's deductive reasoning. Dudley Henriques |
#96
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I did an 85 mile final to Barnes from BID once.
mike "RST Engineering" wrote in message ... "Cessna Seventy-three Charlie Quebec is departing runway 25 at Grass Valley on a 2300 mile final for runway 9 Oshkosh." {;-) Jim "Allen" wrote in message ... Which does nothing to define what "final approach" is. If you are aligned with the runway and intending to land does final begin 5 miles from the threshold? 10 miles? 15 miles? 50 miles? |
#97
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In a similar vein, I had an instructor slap my hands from the controls and
take over while we taxied up to a parking spot after a check out. We were going at a slow speed, but he wanted to go to another tie down. There was no emergency or impending event, he just wanted to go in a different direction. I explained to him why I thought this was not acceptable for him as an instructor, and after hearing his weak response, I walked away and never flew with him again. He could have said "park over there" or even "I've got the plane", but as a result, he lost a student and client. |
#98
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Just about as many problems as a person who quotes several hundred lines of
text for a one line answer. Jim "Aluckyguess" wrote in message ... I dont know if this is true but if it is you sure have a lot of problems. |
#99
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![]() "Viperdoc" wrote in message ... In a similar vein, I had an instructor slap my hands from the controls and take over while we taxied up to a parking spot after a check out. We were going at a slow speed, but he wanted to go to another tie down. There was no emergency or impending event, he just wanted to go in a different direction. I explained to him why I thought this was not acceptable for him as an instructor, and after hearing his weak response, I walked away and never flew with him again. He could have said "park over there" or even "I've got the plane", but as a result, he lost a student and client. I agree. If I were grading this instructor based on solid knowledge this event occurred exactly as stated, I would find that the instructor should never have allowed the incident to progress to the point where the airplane was entering into a parking area he didn't want it to be in. His errors in this case were several. The progress of the airplane on the ground should have been better planned by the instructor so that the first area of parking entered by the student was the one desired by the instructor; so poor planning to begin with. Next, physical contact in the corrective sense with a student is never acceptable behavior for a flight instructor. If the CFI is teaching properly, the student should not be in a position where this type of correction is necessary. Not to say that sudden corrective action is never necessary for an instructor, but if it is, it should be recognized early enough by the instructor that the "correction" comes more as a "helping hand" than as a sudden corrective movement. The entire process of flight instruction is geared toward instilling confidence in the student. A poor instructor using poor technique can easily destroy in one second of sudden reaction at the end of a dual session what has been achieved in the building of confidence with the student through a last hour of dual. Dudley Henriques |
#100
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On Sat, 12 May 2007 11:13:55 -0500, "Viperdoc"
wrote in : I had an instructor slap my hands from the controls and take over while we taxied up to a parking spot after a check out. Did your instructor earn his certificate in the '30s. Instructors, indeed pilots, of that era were expected to be treated as gods. At least that has been my experience. Was he a military instructor at one time? |
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