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Ed Huntress Ed Huntress is offline
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Default A 'natural experience,' my foot

On Sat, 27 Sep 2014 23:52:00 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote:

"Ed Huntress" wrote in message
.. .
On Sat, 27 Sep 2014 23:16:42 -0400, "Jim Wilkins"
wrote:


Instructor, to budding 17-year-old pilot Ed, who is under the hood
on
his first IFR training: "Do you feel like you're flying straight and
level?"

Ed: "Yes, sort of. It feels like I'm pulling out of a stall, though;
everything feels heavy."

Instructor: "Lift your hood."

[Ed lifts hood, realizes he's in 20-degree controlled turn, losing
altitude.]

Ed levels out visually: "I think there's something wrong with the
artificial horizon." [Horizon says wings are level; it hasn't budged
through the turn or afterwards.]

Instructor looks at artificial horizon, takes the stick, banks left
and then right: "Holy ****!"

g What happened was that new/old instruments had just been
installed
in the Cessna 152. They had been removed the day before from a Beech
Musketeer that had stalled and crashed, at the end of Princeton
airport, through the roof of the Pontiac dealership across the
street.

Anyway, the instruments checked out OK, and they no longer had the
Musketeer for IFR training, so they put them in the Cessna. But they
weren't OK. I had my eyes glued to the horizon and the airspeed
indicator, hardly noticing the compass.

If someone had taken off on a real IFR flight in that plane that
day,
he probably would have died.

It was a great lesson to me. I abandoned IFR training and decided to
stick to flying in nice weather. d8-)

--
Ed Huntress


The Buddy Holly crash may have been caused by an unfamiliar artificial
horizon that read the reverse of normal. Think of an ordinary
gyroscope whose rear edge would rise as you climbed and drop as you
descended.
-jsw


Hmm. Interesting. I don't get why it would read in reverse, but that's
OK. I don't even like to think about artificial horizons. I still get
a chill thinking about it.

I came to like the piece of yarn on the windshield and the ball-type
turn and bank indicator on the gliders I flew in college. That's my
kind of simplicity. Nothing to go wrong -- sort of. g

--
Ed Huntress