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I used to keep my pattern turns to 15 degrees and could fly tight, make the
airfield if the engine quits, patterns with no problem. Not all planes will do this but a 172 and a 152 will. Now that I have more experience, I go up to 25 but keep to 20 most of the time. Everything else you wrote, I agree with. A good rule for the original poster to drill in his head: If you overshoot the turn to final, take your eyes off the runway, look at the instruments, nail the 20 degree bank angle, keep the ball centered, and stabilize the airspeed at the proper number for the plane. Just hold that until you are almost on the extension line and then turn on to final. You'll be amazed in most cases how much room there is left to the threshold. Focusing on the aircraft attitude instead of being late in the turn will help avoid getting slow and when you overshoot. If you did make your turn too close, getting back on centerline will get you set up for a proper go around. -- Roger Long mike regish wrote in message 20 degrees of bank is pretty conservative. You'd have to use airliner patterns with that shallow a turn, which will put you way out of gliding range to the runway. Not safe at all. |
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