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Flying IFR through turbulence

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TradingPilot

Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2009
Posts
23
Hi everyone,

I have a stage check coming up and I'm still having some trouble staying focused, maintaining altitude, & heading with turbulence. I wrestle the airplane the whole way!

Is there any advice you guys could give me to reduce some of my work load?

Thanks,
TradingPilot
 
dont wrestle with it so much....relax and go with the bumps.....momentary deviations from alt and heading are ok provided you correct. The instructor "should" if he is at any good, will take the conditions into account.

If you constantly fight with it then it will fatigue you and then when you need your strength it wont be there.
 
Try flying with just a couple of fingers on the yoke. This should help. An airplane (depending on the design) should have built in stability, so it should return to a nuetral position of flight if disturbed by TB.
If you are having trouble holding heading and ALT and what not.
Then maybe you should take some time to practice with your instructor and delay the stage check.
If you are at a 141 school there is no reason you should be up for a stage check if you can not hold the basics in IFR with TB.
We have all been there one time or another, and there is nothing wrong with delaying the check.
I know it is a blow to the ego but ability needs to be demonstrated.
 
Flying throught Turbulance

Flying through turbulence can be a Pain in the... So the first secret is Trim. Trim thy Airplane.

If your are a VFR Student. Keep the Bug-Spot from the windshield on the Horizon. Keep the Dash parallel to the horizon.

If you are an instrument student... Read below.
Always keep your eyes moving. Fixating will kill your performance, but it also induces fatigue. So, Concentrate on 2 items.

First, note your pitch setting in stable unaccelaterated flight. Now, when you encounter the turbulence, nudge the aircraft back to the original pitch setting. Use the VSI to cross-check your input. An old gray-haired instructor used to tell me... "The VSI is the Fortune teller, The Altimeter is the history book"

Second, Watch your bank angle. Try to keep your wings level.

So, if your Pitch and Bank don't move... Neither will your Altitude and Heading.

Lastly, have fun and relax.

Reference: Instrument Flying Handbook Page 4-4
Attitude Instrument Flying Using the Primary and
Supporting Method


 
"The VSI is the Fortune teller, The Altimeter is the history book"


I like that quote. I also have learned to use the VSI as the primary pitch instrument, and will add this quote to my box of teaching tools. Thanks.:)
 
I did a lot better this last flight! The only thing affecting me now is my nerves!! I made some dumb mistakes because i was so nervous trying to do everything right! I just have to relax and keep chair flying at home.
 
All good advice above.

Try spending more time on the AI during your scan. 2-4 sec then scan the rest and make appropriate adjustments. Don't forget, thats your window in IMC. Worked wonders for me. Good luck
 
I did a lot better this last flight! The only thing affecting me now is my nerves!! I made some dumb mistakes because i was so nervous trying to do everything right! I just have to relax and keep chair flying at home.

Don't be nervous about a stage check my friend. 141 schools do a good job about hyping them up. The fact of the matter is that it isn't a checkride and there will be no permanent record of you're performance. Don't take what I'm saying out of context...a good student should always be prepared and a good instructor should make the student prepared. At the end of the day...the only thing you're about to do is take a flight with another CFI and that's all that you need to think about it as. You have NOTHING to be nervous about. The only thing on the line at this point is your ego. Take a deep breath, relax and look at the stage check as a learning experience.

I remember being in your shoes and sweating over the thought of the dreaded stage check. Now i look back on them and laugh. The only thing they really did was hold up my training. At one point i waited nearly a month and a half to get one done due to weather and scheduling conflicts...and i couldn't continue until it was done.

Don't sweat it. You'll do just fine.
 

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