Steep Turns Flashcards
Relationship of Bank Angle, Stall Speed, and Load Factor
- as bank angle increases = load factor increases = stall speed increases
Overbanking Tendency
- due to outside wing taking longer path than inside wing
- outside wing has to travel faster than inside wing to complete turn in same amount of time as inside wing
- increased speed of outside wing leads to more lift on outside wing
- countered by using aileron in the opposite direction
Torque Effect in Left and Right Turns
- based on Newton’s 3rd Law
- left turn = encourages a left turn, can result in a skid, countered by rudder
- right turn = discourages a right turn, can result in a slip, countered by rudder
Selection of a Suitable Altitude
- Recovery can be made no less than 1,500 AGL
Improper Pitch, Bank, and Power Coordination during entry and rollout
- entry = add power to compensate for decreased vertical lift
- rollout = take out power to compensate for increased vertical lift
Uncoordinated Use of Flight Controls
- rudder will be required to maintain coordination
- important to use rudder throughout the entire turn
Improper Procedure of Correcting Altitude Deviations
- use bank and pitch to get back to correct altitude
- small changes
Loss of Orientation
- not entry heading in addition to a visual reference
- glance at heading indicator to maintain awareness of where you are in the turn
Purpose of Steep Turns
To develop smoothness, coordination, orientation, division of attention, and control techniques while executing a high performance turning maneuver
Orientation, division of attention, and planning
- majority should be spent looking outside
- line up in cardinal heading with prominent visual reference (road)