Author Archives: bbarrett

Flight 5: High angle turns, Power-on stalls and emergency landings

Today was flight #5 for me. Building on last week, we worked on power-on stalls this week, as well as emergency landings. Power on stalls gave me some trouble, but I think I got the hang of it in the end. As one could almost guess from reading about flights 2 – 4, I wasn’t quick enough or forceful enough with the rudder when the plane wanted to start rolling to the left. Had some not so fun moments in there. The good news is that I started getting the hang of it at the end — I think a couple more tries next flight and I should be ok.

Did some high angle (45 degree) turns. Drifted altitude too much, but I think I can master that with a bit more practice.

Also worked on emergency landings. At some random point in flight, the instructor pulls the throttle back to idle and I have to react as if the engine had failed. Step one is continue flying the plane – reduce speed to optimal glide speed (70 knots in the C 150 I fly) and retrim to maintain the glide angle. Then, go through a quick checklist — open carb heat (since the available heat will be going away shortly), fuel mixture to rich, fuel to on (or try another tank if a multi-tank feed system), which is apparently a common problem and people emergency land only to figure out they ran a tank out of gas and could have used a different tank, check the mags, and check that the primer isn’t open. Then comes picking a suitable landing site. By suitable landing site, one of course means a field or something similar. The first attempt was pretty smooth, found a good field, made a nice approach, lined up a bit high but used flaps to adjust my glide and ended up a couple hundred feet above the ground and about 500 feet before the start of the field. Would have drilled the landing perfectly. Second attempt didn’t go so well. I made a bad turn to start the pattern for landing, lost the field, found the field, then discovered the the field had a damned power line running through it. Had enough altitude to push over to a (crappy) but less electrified field. Would have made a bad, but survivable landing.

Flight 6 is on saturday. More power-on stalls and do some instrument flight. That should be completely painful, but should be interesting. Oh, and the Flying Hoosiers meeting is Wednesday – that should be interesting.

[update] I forgot to mention – I managed to land the plane at the end of the lesson, marking the first time that has happened….

How do these people get elected?

Unfortunately, the article is in the New York Times, so you’ll have to donate your pint of blood to read it, but there is an article running now about Evangelical groups and the environment. Basically, a couple of small evangelical groups are finally realizing that they should perhaps pay more attention to parts of the Bible not involving gays or abortion (which is not all bad, given the light coverage they receive in the BIble), and maybe be good stewards of the Earth. Therefore, they are working with the environmental lobby to reduce CO2 emissions. Ok, nothing wrong there, and the picture of tree hugging hippies and religious fanatics working together is kind of amusing.

Senator James M. Inhofe, an Oklahoma Republican who is chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee was interviewed for the article. He’s one of many Republicans that has done everything possible to make sure that we’re all going to die from a lack of Oxygen in a couple of years. Anyway, his stance on this of course is that there is nothing wrong with the environment and all empirical evidence being collected is just some vast conspiracy. But that’s not the disturbing part. There’s this little bit:

He said the National Evangelical Association had been “led down a liberal path” by environmentalists and others who have convinced the group that issues like poverty and the environment are worth their efforts.

Wait, back up a second. Now, I’m pretty sure that Evangelical groups are Christian groups. And Christians believe in the teachings of Jesus Christ. And there’s something in the New Testament about the Golden Rule and all that. And I’m pretty sure that poverty is one of those things that is involved in the whole “Do unto others as you would want them to do unto you” thing. It just disgusts me that someone would think that poverty is something that religious groups should not be concerned about. In fact, I can’t think of many things that religious groups should be more concerned about.

Flight 4: Falling out of the sky with grace

Finally starting to get comfortable talking to the controllers – don’t feel like a complete idiot, although for some reason I always miss the barometer reading (the altimeter needs to have the current pressure setting so that it gives reasonable altitudes). One would think I would be better at remembering random numbers, but apparently that is a talent I just don’t have.

Today became a lesson on taxing in high wind, as the winds were out of the southwest at 14, gusting to 22. Managed to taxi without any real problems (had to slow way down a couple of times before turns while thinking about which way the ailerons should be set, but nothing horrible). Takeoff was more problematic – I was too slow in rotating and getting the plane off the ground and didn’t adjust near enough to the cross wind. The first could have been problematic in the right situation, but wasn’t too big of a deal. The drifting all over the place is a definite problem. I think I need to spend some time in the not too distant future practicing maneuvers that require very active use of the rudder – I seem to not cope well with those situations. The climb out was entertaining because it was a bit bouncy and ground speed was much lower than I’m used to (we were pushing out into the wind for our west / south west departure). But I survived and we eventually reached altitude without any major difficulties.

Today’s lesson was power on and power off stalls. I don’t know why, but the hardest part for me was pulling back enough to actually stall the plane – why do something that is definitely going to go badly for you? Anyway, I need to work on recovering – not enough rudder and trying to compensate with aileron led to a couple of secondary stalls, which is not a good thing at all. Today was mostly power-off stalls, which are pretty basic to recover from: reduce angle of attack, increase power, and stabilize the plane (hopefully getting it into a climb somewhere in there so you don’t crash). Of course, when you open the throttle, the plane tries to roll and yaw to the left, so you have to get that under control. Which means using the rudder, which means I suck at it. Hopefully, that will improve in short order.

Landing, well, yeah, we didn’t even try. Between the bouncing and the blowing off course, I was having fun just trying to get to the pattern at some reasonable speed. The final approach wasn’t even an option. Maybe monday.

Sweet Home Chicago

Congrats, Rich and Sarah

Rich and Sarah got married on Saturday. The wedding and reception were on Notre Dame’s campus. Congrats Rich and Sarah. May you have many happy years together!

Blues and whatnot

After the reception Saturday afternoon, I headed over to Chicago to catch up with Rachel, who was in town for a conference. The conference was having a dinner saturday evening, and I was going as Rachel’s guest. I was expecting your standard boring conference dinner. Turns out the conference had rented out Buddy Guy’s Legends blues club. In addition to a random Chicago blues band that did a 30 minute opening set, they had Buddy Guy himself do a 90 minute set. Oh, and there was an open bar and Cajun food that was pretty good (not nearly hot enough, but it is the northern half of the country). So major thanks to Rachel for the mad fun. Rachel and I spent Sunday afternoon at the Shedd Aquarium — the hotel had given her two free tickets with checkin for some reason. The aquarium is just about how I remembered it from whenever I went in grade school. But still a good way to spend an afternoon in Chicago (especially one that is cold and threatening to rain).

Random Updates

So I’ve sucked at this journal thing (with the exception of flying updates, which doesn’t really count). Some things that you might find interesting:

  • Went fishing with my dad, Uncle Bill, and some others on Lake Erie a week or so ago. Fun was had had, although the weather kind of sucked. The catch was pretty good, so that was nice.
  • I broke my nice set of closed-ear headphones last week. Attempts to repair with superglue failed. I liked those headphones :(.
  • My picture album software recently was upgraded to Gallery 2 (from Gallery 1). I like some of the new features, including the ability to store and show movies in a reasonable way. It also has some nice software for maintaining multiple installations on the same host, which will be nice for Mavin (since I’m now Web and DNS god).

Flight 3: Slow Flight and Flaps

Today was my third flight lesson. Topics included slow flight and the use of flaps. We spent most of the time flying at the minimum maneuverability speed of the aircraft. At such low speeds, the controls are really soft and don’t react particularly well. Most of the time, we were going slow enough and at high enough an angle of attack that the stall warning horn was blowing. I managed to make a couple of reasonable turns at such low speeds, but I wasn’t maintaining altitude nearly as well as I would have liked — of course, this is true for normal flight conditions as well. I need to work on better coordination of using ailerons and rudder. I’m not using enough rudder when conditions aren’t optimal — slow flight and cross winds being two of the notable examples. I also fail at maintaining heading when I’m working on other maneuvers. The last one I’m hoping will settle down a bunch when I get comfortable with the general flying thing and I have some time to pay attention to something other than not running the plane into the ground. The lack of rudder usage in slow conditions means that I try to get control of the plane with the ailerons, which means that I let the plane get way out of whack and it’s hard to get it settled back down again.

Next lesson (Friday early morning) will be more slow flight, this time working on stall recovery (which unfortunately means stalling the plane, which will be a gut wrenching experience).

There was an article in the IDS about the Flying Hoosiers, a flight club at IU. Of course, the article included no useful contact information (stupid IDS). I’m going to try to get in touch with the group, as it would be nice to be able to talk to other people learning to fly :).

Flight 2: climbing and gliding turns

Today’s flight lesson was at 7:00, which is pre-dawn by about 10 minutes. Unfortunately, the sky was overcast, so there wasn’t a beautiful sunrise or anything like that. But it’s always impressive to be up and about when it goes from dark to light outside. Today was turns while climbing and gliding. Turns were much happier than last week, although I still don’t hold quite as nice of an angle as I might like. But from taxi to maneuvers in the sky, things were definitely slowing down from last week, so that’s good. Today I was talking to the tower (as opposed to my instructor doing so). There was actually some traffic around the airport, so it was a learning experience. Don’t think I screwed it up too badly ;). Still can’t land, but I think next time I might get the hang of it. Less confusing than last week, but came in way too high :/. Taxing was much improved – I looked tipsy instead of outright drunk.

The sky is no longer safe

I’ve always wanted to learn how to fly, but have generally found some excuse not to get my pilots license (usually lack of funding, lack of time, or not wanting to learn to fly in LAX airspace). Since I’m newly single and need distractions, I decided in September that I was going to learn how to fly. Turns out that Bloomington has an airport and one of the FBOs, BMG Aviation even offers flight school. KBMG isn’t a huge airport, but it has a tower and can get busy around big IU events. So a good place to learn, without all the hell of LAX airspace (last time I looked at flying was when I was in LA – Santa Monica has it’s own tower, but then you get dumped into LAX airspace. No thanks.). Anyway, I had my first flight on Monday, Oct 17. All in all, not too bad. Takeoff was, not unexpectedly, not too bad. I could make some reasonable turns, but tended to overturn and/or lose altitude in turns. Both should be pretty easy to fix with practice. Landing was mostly my instructor, and was moving way too fast for me. I’m sure it will slow down after a couple of flights. Next flight is Thursday (Oct 27) – more details to follow…