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#1
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I wonder if part of the problem we have in patterns is the patterns themselves. Probably because of a military aviation background, I really (for both power and gliders) prefer the military continuous 180 turn from a lower closer downwind to final to the civilian higher, downwind - turn - base - turn - final approach.
I keep the pattern speed a bit high (say 60 - 65 knots in glass), half spoilers abeam the touchdown aimpoint, about 500' agl, pretty close in to the field, then at the TLAR point, roll into about 30 degrees of bank and turn in. If wide I can steepen up, if tight open out, but the turn is one continuous turn until rollout on final, and then I start transitioning to my final speed and adjusting to where I want to touch down. Lower and closer in, I find it a lot easier to judge the angles; I HATE long finals! So the turn is pretty much like any thermalling turn while adjusting the center, without having to roll completely in and out twice with the usual chance to under/over rudder the turn.. Just my 2 cents... Kirk 66 |
#2
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On 3/4/2014 9:54 AM, kirk.stant wrote:
I wonder if part of the problem we have in patterns is the patterns themselves. Probably because of a military aviation background, I really (for both power and gliders) prefer the military continuous 180 turn from a lower closer downwind to final to the civilian higher, downwind - turn - base - turn - final approach. I keep the pattern speed a bit high (say 60 - 65 knots in glass), half spoilers abeam the touchdown aimpoint, about 500' agl, pretty close in to the field, then at the TLAR point, roll into about 30 degrees of bank and turn in. If wide I can steepen up, if tight open out, but the turn is one continuous turn until rollout on final, and then I start transitioning to my final speed and adjusting to where I want to touch down. Lower and closer in, I find it a lot easier to judge the angles; I HATE long finals! So the turn is pretty much like any thermalling turn while adjusting the center, without having to roll completely in and out twice with the usual chance to under/over rudder the turn.. Just my 2 cents... Kirk 66 FWIW... Way back when I had about 200 total hours, all glider, I flew an HP-14 from a busy municipal airport with 3 closely-spaced parallel runways. SOP traffic separation had gliders flying a 4-sided pattern entered from midfield, the downwind, base and final legs being inside the same-turning-direction power pattern, which normally used the southernmost E-W runway. Schreder's original HP-14 design wasn't noted for being a rapid roller. While it WAS possible to fly a rectangular pattern in it inside the power pattern, doing so required serious (both arms essentially required) stick effort to achieve max aileron deflection on the final-to-base and base-to-final turns, to the point I found doing so a mental distraction...and thus less than "ideally safe." I found "a circling approach" (a la the U.S. Navy) from downwind to final considerably easier - and a no-brainer, as Kirk suggests above - to implement. A circling approach quickly became my standard procedure in that ship at that airport. When people asked, I told 'em why. Few asked. Bob W. |
#3
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I know someone who flies the pattern as you describe; he had flown F-4's onto carriers. My instructor told me he felt it was safer to separate tasks in the pattern rather than combine them. So I do it his way...
-John, Q3 On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 11:54:37 AM UTC-5, kirk.stant wrote: I wonder if part of the problem we have in patterns is the patterns themselves. Probably because of a military aviation background, I really (for both power and gliders) prefer the military continuous 180 turn from a lower closer downwind to final to the civilian higher, downwind - turn - base - turn - final approach. I keep the pattern speed a bit high (say 60 - 65 knots in glass), half spoilers abeam the touchdown aimpoint, about 500' agl, pretty close in to the field, then at the TLAR point, roll into about 30 degrees of bank and turn in. If wide I can steepen up, if tight open out, but the turn is one continuous turn until rollout on final, and then I start transitioning to my final speed and adjusting to where I want to touch down. Lower and closer in, I find it a lot easier to judge the angles; I HATE long finals! So the turn is pretty much like any thermalling turn while adjusting the center, without having to roll completely in and out twice with the usual chance to under/over rudder the turn.. Just my 2 cents... Kirk 66 |
#4
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I must be at risk! As I think and do it a bit differently to most here.
In the circuit I trim for landing speed c. 50% above stall speed + c. half the headwind speed. In still air in my 27 this is 52kts and in a gale it could be 70 or 80kts. Fast is good unless in something like a Duo going into a small field! In the UK we are taught not to fly a square circuit, we lop off the downwind corner to keep us closer to the airfield (less downwind) and keep the landing area and reference point in view. This tends to induce a curving base leg anyway. I aim to get at the final turn between 300ft and higher if windy and I put in a steeply banked final turn. The steeper the bank the harder it is to over rudder into a spin. Probably impossible at 45 or more - Chris Rollings would know. It is also much harder to stall requiring a lot of elevator. From the point of starting my final turn to landing I am pretty much focussed only on the reference point and the airspeed. Keep the airspeed pegged and use the brake to arrive in the right place. This close to the ground it is pretty obvious if you are slipping, which could of course be intentional. If you are side slipping on purpose you probably don't have enough elevator to stall. Should I give up before I kill myself? |
#5
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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. "kirk.stant" wrote in message ... I wonder if part of the problem we have in patterns is the patterns themselves. Probably because of a military aviation background, I really (for both power and gliders) prefer the military continuous 180 turn from a lower closer downwind to final to the civilian higher, downwind - turn - base - turn - final approach. I keep the pattern speed a bit high (say 60 - 65 knots in glass), half spoilers abeam the touchdown aimpoint, about 500' agl, pretty close in to the field, then at the TLAR point, roll into about 30 degrees of bank and turn in. If wide I can steepen up, if tight open out, but the turn is one continuous turn until rollout on final, and then I start transitioning to my final speed and adjusting to where I want to touch down. Lower and closer in, I find it a lot easier to judge the angles; I HATE long finals! So the turn is pretty much like any thermalling turn while adjusting the center, without having to roll completely in and out twice with the usual chance to under/over rudder the turn.. Just my 2 cents... Kirk 66 |
#6
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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. |
#7
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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. |
#8
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Thanks, Dan. I suspected you'd keep on with what was familiar to you.
-John, Q3 PS - My Navy buddies tell me they do circling approaches because the airstrip is moving. Air Force pilots copy Navy pilots because the field knows an Air Force pilot is coming and it will run away... grin On Wednesday, March 5, 2014 11:10:00 AM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote: 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. |
#9
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snort, chuckle...
"John Carlyle" wrote in message ... Thanks, Dan. I suspected you'd keep on with what was familiar to you. -John, Q3 PS - My Navy buddies tell me they do circling approaches because the airstrip is moving. Air Force pilots copy Navy pilots because the field knows an Air Force pilot is coming and it will run away... grin On Wednesday, March 5, 2014 11:10:00 AM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote: 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. |
#10
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On Wednesday, March 5, 2014 7:35:51 AM UTC-6, John Carlyle wrote:
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. Depends. If low, yes - I'll fly whatever pattern I can to land safely. If I have more time and want to look over the landing area more, then I might fly a higher, longer pattern to give more time to pick the best place to land. Also need to be able to fly bigger patterns when sequencing behind other gliders, so all the skills need to be maintained. I think it's important to be able to fly a "de-stabilized" (non-constant airspeed) approach in gliders, so that energy can be maintained until late in the approach, and used or gotten rid of as required. Also should be able to fly an approach from just about anywhere around the intended point of landing. Always flying the same pattern into the same airfield pretty much guarantees that your first landout will be exciting! Power pilots are taught to fly "stabilized approaches" because that is how you land a big airplane.. Totally unnecessary in small planes, and IMO downright dangerous in gliders. As far as watching the ASI, after reaching the TLAR point where I want to start the turn, I look just to the inside (11 or 1 o'clock) when initiating the turn, monitor the ASI for trend (glider is trimmed slightly fast), monitor the yawstring, then check how the turn is progressing, then back to ASI - yawstring - turn, etc until time to roll out. If it's a busy runway I might roll out momentarily to check the extended final, then roll back into the turn - those would be pretty aggressive rolls with lots of speed. Kirk |
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