4.8 • 730 Ratings
🗓️ 12 April 2017
⏱️ 41 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Delta aids downed SR22, Cessna 182s seem nose heavy but aren’t. Here’s why + how-to tips for landings that won’t crunch the nose gear. 182s and Bonanza hit by expensive service bulletin. Click here to send a Listener Question you'd like answered on the show. If you're thinking of buying a new or late model Cirrus SR20 or SR22, please contact me as early in your decision making process as possible, so that I can provide you the most assistance. Landing Technique in the Cessna 182 The Cessna 182 is an excellent aircraft, but it has one knock against it that’s undeserved. Many pilots say the Cessna 182 is “nose heavy,” making it difficult to land. I respectfully disagree. The Cessna 182 is not difficult to land, IF you know how to land it properly and remain proficient through practice. And while calling it “nose heavy,” seems to match what pilots experience when landing the aircraft, an aeronautical engineer would blanch at that description. The C182 balances at its center of gravity like any other aircraft; the front end is NOT heavier than the back end. It is true that nose wheel damage and bent firewalls are common for 182s that have spent their lives as rental aircraft. So yes, it’s easier to make a bad landing in a 182 than in a 172. And those bad landings often involve the nose wheel hitting the runway before the main wheels touch down. If you want to know three simple steps for better C182 landings, skip to the end of this article. If you want to know why those steps work so well, listen to this episode! General Aviation News
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Welcome to Aviation News Talk. |
0:04.2 | Coming up on today's program, we have a lot of general aviation news, including a Delta Airlines crew that aids in the rescue of a downed Cirrus SR 22. |
0:13.0 | Some Cessna 182 and Beach Bonanza owners are going to have to shell out big bucks in the next 100 hours because of a new engine service bulletin. |
0:21.8 | Diamond introduces a new airplane at Friedrichshafen, Germany, and it's a beautiful one. |
0:26.7 | And you may soon have a wireless hotspot for your GA aircraft. |
0:30.9 | Plus, more general aviation stories and the reason so many Cessna 182 pilots damage the nose |
0:37.1 | wheel during landing and techniques to avoid that happening. |
0:40.3 | All this and more, and the news starts now. |
0:59.3 | Welcome to Aviation News Talk, where we talk about general aviation. |
1:02.7 | I'm Max Prescott, and if you enjoy the show, please tell your friends. |
1:10.3 | From ABC News, two people on board a plane that crashed into the side of a mountain in the Olympic National Park in Washington State last week have survived after making a distress call that was picked up by a nearby Delta Airlines flight. |
1:15.6 | Delta confirmed that their flight 589 from Seattle to Shanghai heard the distress call on the emergency frequency |
1:21.7 | and established communications with the two pilots on the ground. |
1:25.6 | The pilots of Flight 589 contacted air traffic control, |
1:29.2 | which led to the dispatch of a Navy search and rescue team. The Navy team rescued the instructor |
1:34.1 | and student from an elevation of about 5,000 feet on Mount Jupiter at about 6 p.m. local time |
1:39.7 | with an MH60s helicopter. The nursing supervisor at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle says the pair are in serious |
1:46.8 | condition but are improving in intensive care. |
1:50.0 | The NTSB said that the student instructor and the Cirrus SR-12 crashed about 3.48 p.m. |
1:55.5 | local time after taking off a nearby airport for a local flight. |
1:59.9 | Now the photos of this are really quite spectacular. |
2:02.6 | You can see the aircraft partially buried into the snow and the tail appears to be, you know, |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Glass Cockpit Publishing, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Glass Cockpit Publishing and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.