nosehair
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2003
- Posts
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NoPax said:If its hard to get in, its harder to get out, if you let it fully develop.
...hmmm, would you care to expand on this??
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NoPax said:If its hard to get in, its harder to get out, if you let it fully develop.
nopax said:If its hard to get in, its harder to get out, if you let it fully develop.
NoPax said:Be careful out there guys & girls, spinning a cessna 152/172 just isn't good for the airframe...
NoPax said:You can do spins, but its not considered part of training towards a certificate per FAR, but you have to wear parachutes,
dumbluck said:If you have acess to a katana, they make great little spin trainers. Docile in the beginning, but if it goes past 3-5 turns the rotation increases dramatically, and positive control input is required to recover. Cessna's are great to start with but they fail to teach the proper recovery techniques. I don't consider "letting go" a proper recover. Just my opinion.
Huh?NoPax said:Seek training from a professional first, before conducting aerobatic training.
Even then, I'd send the students to an aerobatic instructor.
Huh?
NoPax- You were a CFI? Did you ever teach spins? I'm trying to make sense of your posts.
Gee, thanks for the spin explanation.NoPax said:I began flight-training in the UK with the RAF, then onto a civilian flight-school.
After I got my FAA Commercial SE, I did aerobatic training and got my CFI Spin endorsement. Then I finished up my CFI & CFII at the flightschool I did all my other certificates at. When I did my CFI checkout with the seasoned instructor I told you about, he was the one that snap-rolled the 172 when demonstrating a 'spin'. A snap-roll is a spin of sorts, but in the flight-path of the airplane. The accelerative loads induced in entry and recovery from a snap are far greater than in a properly entered spin.
The aerobatic school looked down upon the usual spin training given to most CFI applicants ie one or two turn over-the-top spin in a Cessna 152. When you do a fully developed spin in an aerobatic airplane, the experience is entirely different, and worth the $300-500 for a couple of flights.
You learn all about the stall, stall recovery, the spin, spin phases, design considerations, neutral inertia, fuselage loaded, wing loaded, configuration effects, tail design, spins in twins, inverted spins, flat spins, loss of control.
When I taught spins, I did the ground portion. I also sent my students home with my copy of, 'Anatomy of a Spin' by John Lowery (covers everything above and then some). We'd go over it in class, then we would do spins in a 150 (CFI applicants only). I would also recommend further spins & aerobatics at the aerobatic flight school, and with the instructor I had there.