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So that's what an an airplane spin feels like

Lindley

Moderator with a Soul
Premium Member
I was out doing a solo flight early on Sunday, just practicing maneuvers. I've pretty much fulfilled all the practical requirements for the private license, so now it's just refreshing the maneuvers up to checkride level and studying the ground school stuff for the written and oral tests.

Well, in trying to pull off a power-on stall, something went wrong. I found myself in the preliminary stages of an erect spin. I recovered it immediately and only lost about 300 feet of altitude, but it really freaked me out. Something like that---a maneuver I'd never encountered before---happening without an instructor onboard? Scary.

I had noticed a tendency of the rudder on that plane to pull left in slow flight the day before (with the instructor), so knowing I was going to practice stalls, just in case I elected to refresh myself on spin recovery earlier that morning. Damn good thing I did.

So what does it feel like? Well, imagine an airplane standing upright on its tail. Now imagine it falling over sideways, pilot's window to the ground. Now imagine it not hitting the ground because the entire thing is taking place 3000 feet in the air....the nose just keeps right on over until it's more or less pointed down.

My first instinct was to try and turn the ailerons right, of course, but I remembered after about half a second that spin recovery uses full opposite rudder and the ailerons should be neutral. I don't recall whether I pulled the power out or not (you're supposed to)....I think I did. All I know is I felt much better when I was no longer moving sideways and I could feel the controls become responsive again....even though I was below the horizon. I pulled up. Okay, *really* below the horizon. Kept on pulling up....

All told the whole thing took maybe 4 seconds, and I lost about 300 feet of altitude. Could have been worse. But it shot my nerves to hell, and I elected to only do a few additional maneuvers---including a landing at the local satellite airport to get some on-the-ground time to chill out---before heading back in.

I've been flashing back to that all day, though. Which is part of why I'm still up at 3AM. I keep thinking of An Occurrence At The Owl Creek Bridge for some reason. Reading everything in my textbook regarding spins, stalls, and spin recovery has helped; writing this may as well.

In any event, not gonna try stalls again while flying solo. Bad idea. In fact I'd be happy doing the absolute minimum on the stall front from here on out.
 
Glad you're ok!

Something like that would definitely freak me out.

So do you have to file a report at the flight school now?
 
Well, that sounds exciting. :cardie:

But the good news is that you were able to regain control and pull out of it in a matter of seconds; obviously, you know what you're doing. :bolian:
 
So do you have to file a report at the flight school now?

Good question. I should probably mention it to my instructor at least. Paying the bill yesterday I was a bit too freaked to think of that.

RJDiogenes said:
But the good news is that you were able to regain control and pull out of it in a matter of seconds; obviously, you know what you're doing. :bolian:

Hmm, maybe. If I really knew what I was doing it wouldn't have happened in the first place, I think.
 
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Sounds like you had a few moments of controlled terror there Lindley. I'm glad to hear that you managed to recover as fast as you did, it shows the training has paid off.
 
do-a-barrel-roll.jpg
 
Sounds like you earned some valuable experience. You should feel good about that. Congratulations!
 
I found myself in the preliminary stages of an erect spin.

I tried that once. Page 32 of the Kama Sutra, right?


Seriously, sounds like a worthwhile learning experience. Learning to stay cool in an emergency situation is an important thing. Well done on staying alive, too. ;)
 
I always remember the adage..it's better to be on the ground wishing you were up there than being up there wishing you were on the ground..

Good job..and you did it WITHOUT THINKING..exactly the requirement of a good pilot..
 
Good insticnts. Reminds me of an aerobatic instructional flight I took out of Long Beach. Being familiar with spins in normal category, high-wing monoplanes like Lindley's, which are quite good at stall recovery, I was treated to a lesson in a more agressive machine that the instructor put into a spin by simply moving the rudder far enough. My attempts to stop spinning left by stepping on right rudder were met with a stop and then spin in the opposite direction. This continued for a few thousand feet of tumbling towards the deck of the Pacific Ocean before the experienced aerobatic instructor calmly chimed in:

Instructor: Do you want me to take it?
Me: No, I want to slam into the water really hard!
 
Seriously, I hope I never encounter an inverted spin. I know the fuel-injected Cessnas are supposed to be able to fly upside down, but that would just *totally* disorient me.

This is far more extreme than what I experienced, but that initial drop to the side looked pretty similar:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VpJ4t269ZwE
(Not sure that's actually a flat spin as the video claims, it's definitely nose-low.)
 
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