Typhoon1244
Member in Good Standing
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2002
- Posts
- 3,078
I've noticed an unusual phenomenon that I can't explain. Maybe I'm missing something...
Quite often, I will seat myself in the cockpit of a Canadair CRJ-200 shortly after another captain of approximately my height and leg proportions (I'm 6'0") has left. I will adjust the seat so that I can comfortably and confidently manipulate the yoke and throttles, sometimes even using the little "gunsight" on the windshield center post...only to find that the rudder pedals are cranked all the way back to my armpits.
Now my preference is to crank the pedals all the way to the stops away from me. I still have full rudder and brake authority, but my legs aren't bent at a sixty degree angle. And yet guys with legs the same length as mine are riding around with the pedals in their laps.
This is not a joke; I'm serious: is there some rule of jet rudder technique that I'm missing?
Quite often, I will seat myself in the cockpit of a Canadair CRJ-200 shortly after another captain of approximately my height and leg proportions (I'm 6'0") has left. I will adjust the seat so that I can comfortably and confidently manipulate the yoke and throttles, sometimes even using the little "gunsight" on the windshield center post...only to find that the rudder pedals are cranked all the way back to my armpits.
Now my preference is to crank the pedals all the way to the stops away from me. I still have full rudder and brake authority, but my legs aren't bent at a sixty degree angle. And yet guys with legs the same length as mine are riding around with the pedals in their laps.
This is not a joke; I'm serious: is there some rule of jet rudder technique that I'm missing?