4.8 • 730 Ratings
🗓️ 26 August 2017
⏱️ 51 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
You’ve undoubtedly heard of a stabilized approach and know it’s helpful to have one prior to landing. But many pilots don’t know all of the elements of a stabilized approach, or the potential expense of an unstable approach. Last year, two pilots I know dug deep into their wallets to pay for damage resulting from landings that followed unstable approaches. Both considered going around, but didn’t. The pilots of an IFR charter fight into Akron, Ohio in November 2015 weren’t so lucky; everyone died after their unstable approach. So what is a stabilized approach, and why does it matter? Cirrus Aircraft’s Flight Operations Manual gives a good description. It says: “A stabilized approach is characterized by a constant angle and constant rate of descent approach profile ending near the touch-down point. Stabilized approach criteria apply to all approaches including practice power-off approaches.“ It goes on to say that for VFR landings, an “approach is considered stabilized when all of the following criteria are achieved by 500' AGL:
A go-around must be executed if the above conditions are not met, and the aircraft is not stabilized by 500' AGL.” This episode contains lots of tips to help you consistently fly stable approaches every time you fly the traffic pattern, including tips for long, straight-in approaches, which often lead to unstable approaches. Click here for the listener survey. Tell us what flight planning tools you use when planning a longer flight. Please visit my new Patreon page and make a contribution to help me with my goal of improving the AviationNewsTalk.com website. You can Dictate a listener question from your phone and I’ll try to answer it on a future show, or send an email. News Stories
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0:00.0 | Hello, and thank you for joining me today. |
0:03.8 | Coming up in the news, a student pilot lies to investigators about his solo flight, |
0:09.1 | and he is now facing time in prison. |
0:13.6 | And there's lots of news on ATZ privatization, including one airline which has just shifted its position on privatization, |
0:22.3 | and one country that plans to cut the number of controllers to improve the bottom line. And finally, we have a boy who's |
0:28.1 | legally blind and he uses new technology to fly a real airplane. Welcome to Aviation News Talk |
0:34.6 | where we talk about, ah, we love it, don't we? General Aviation. |
0:38.2 | I'm Max Truscott. I'm here to help you get smarter, faster to keep you safe as a pilot or student pilot |
0:42.8 | by sharing my experience as a licensed pilot for more than 40 years and also author and 2008 |
0:48.1 | National Flight Instructor of the Year, where I got to represent all 96,000 flight instructors |
0:53.0 | here in the United States. |
0:54.7 | Well, last week, we talked about the 13 fun things to do for National Aviation Day, |
0:58.7 | but you can do them anytime. |
1:00.4 | So if you didn't hear episode 26, please check it out. |
1:03.7 | And as you know, Labor Day is coming up fast. |
1:06.0 | That's when we'll have the M&R Aviation Joke Hour. |
1:09.2 | I'm M, Rob Marcus R,. We're going to have great time reading |
1:12.6 | jokes you sent us. So stick around because the news starts now. Now, this first story is a little shocking, but it ties into an incident that happened |
1:36.3 | here in my neck of the woods just about a year ago, which I'll tell you about. |
1:39.6 | So on October 31st, 2015, and by the way, this story comes from Flying Magazine, student pilot Brian |
1:46.2 | Woodhams lost control of his Piper Cherokee while landing in an upstate New York airport, |
1:50.9 | approximately 60 miles southeast of Buffalo. The aircraft departed the runway and ended up |
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