FLYING LESSONS for January 23, 2025

*Stalls in the pattern *Spark a memory. *In the dark

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FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances.  In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. So apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.  Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence.  You are pilot in command and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.     

FLYING LESSONS is an independent product of MASTERY FLIGHT TRAINING, INC.

This week’s LESSONS:

A planned work trip for my employer in the company A36 and an AIRMET for icing from the surface to 17,000 feet across my entire route of flight turned a two-hour flight into a six-hour drive (each way) for an industry conference, in turn leading to less time for this after-hours pursuit this week. So…on to the Debrief.

Questions? Comments? Supportable opinions? Let us know at [email protected].

Debrief 

Readers write about previous LESSONS

Reader, well-known flight instructor and FLYING LESSONS financial supporter Mark Sletten writes:

 

Mark’s writing about “Stalls in the Pattern,” which I wrote for Aviation Safety a few years ago and which AVWeb republished this week. This article was the result of reading an AOPA Air Safety Institute study I cite in the piece, and a couple of decades of personal contemplation on why, if power on stalls are seemingly so unrealistic, avoidable and hard to do, power on stalls are farmore common than the power off, base-to-final stalls that represent less than 4% of the NTSB total of stalls in the traffic pattern. Take a read and maybe you’ll reconsider how you practice and teach stalls too. Thanks, Mark.  

Several readers wrote about last week’s LESSONS derived from an unusual scenario that could have been (and was) interpreted by the pilots several ways before a successful landing. Bill Moore begins:

I agree. Addressing a failure in flight involves checking all indications and seeing if a pattern emerges. On the other hand, it requires the pilot to focus on flying with whatever capability remains and not allowing him/herself to become distracted by trying to figure out “why.” Ultimately to get the airplane down, at night, with a student, with oil obscuring the windscreen and under the extreme stress of an inflight emergency, the instructor and pilot indeed did do a great job. Thank you, Bill.

Reader, author, business aviation safety advocate and former Air Traffic Controller Rob Mark adds:

Introducing distraction is a key element to effective flight instruction. So is presenting realistic scenarios. Sometimes it’s realistic to have multiple emergencies, and throwing a few at the pilot (or crew) sufficiently proficient to handle them builds experience, knowledge and confidence. In the case of the Piper Arrow example that kicked off this discussion there was only one emergency (oil smell and on the windscreen) but the pilot and instructor interpreted the indications in several different ways as they gained more information while the scenario progressed. Realistic (or “almost” realistic”) multi-failure presentations in a controlled training environment—such as a simulator—probably help us deal with accepting new information, discarding old theories and implementing new responses in cases like this where there is no clear “I see this, so that is what has happened” answer. Thanks, Rob. Your comment makes me re-think presenting multiple, seemingly unrelated failures in training.

Reader Michael Long continues:

I agree. This is the sort of thing that can only come from experience. As I’ve defined here several times before, 

  • Experience is learning from the things that have actually happened to you. 
  • Training is learning from the experiences of others. 

Reading and “what if-ing” accident reports like we do in FLYING LESSONS is one form of training. Online courses, videos, ground school and actual flight instruction are others. I’ve only had one “fire” in flight, an electrical overheat that stopped as soon as I turned off the Cessna 152’s battery and alternator. I can smell that odor now just because writing this “sparked” a memory. Unfortunately, I don’t have any other inflight experience to evaluate burning smells (if that could be considered unfortunate). Readers, how can we address this in training?

Reader Brad Wolansky writes: 

I’ve heard legendary aviation educator and FLYING LESSONS reader Rod Machado once say,

Rod was joking, but he makes the same point: Most human responses are designed around the ability to see, and at night that ability is severely restricted. Further, engine and other systems failures are not any more likely to happen at night (or over mountains, or over water, etc.). But the consequences of a failure at night (mountains, water) are far more dire because you have far fewer options and in a reduced-sensing environment. I don’t fly at night any more. I don’t have to be anywhere that bad, and if I do I choose a different way to get there. Did night flight make sense for the Arrow pilot and instructor? Different pilots with different experiences and in different places in their lives will give you difference responses. But if you choose to accept the added risk, accept and mitigate those very real additional threats. Thank you, Brad.

New reader Bill Post wraps up this week’s Debrief:

Great cold-weather insights, Bill, especially the thought of an ice-blocked crankcase breather tube. That’s a distinct possibility, one most pilots and instructors in the Lower 48 might not plan around, maybe even those based in Wisconsin. Thank you, and welcome aboard!

More to say? Let us learn from you, at [email protected]

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Thomas P. Turner, M.S. Aviation Safety 

Flight Instructor Hall of Fame Inductee

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2008 FAA Central Region CFI of the Year

FLYING LESSONS is ©2025 Mastery Flight Training, Inc.  For more information see www.thomaspturner.com. For reprint permission or other questions contact [email protected].  

Disclaimer

FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances. In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. Apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.

Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence. You are pilot in command, and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.