akpilot907
Pre-takeoff checklist
Anyone know of a good equation for descent? Altitude to loose, distance to cover, and time out?
if you're in a plane that descends at roughly 120kts and you want to do a standard 500FPM descent then it's:
twice the thousands of feet that you need to descend in minutes or four times in miles.
i.e. if you're cruising at 7500' and TPA is 1500' then you need to descend 6,000' and you'd start your descent 12 minutes or 24 miles out.
I descend at about 135 to 140kts and I still use this formula. I just descend at 600fpm instead of 500.
(ps the minute calculation is the same regardless of cruise speed for 500 fpm to work)
Immediately above the airport, chop the throttle to idle, and do a steep spiral down to final and do a straight-in with no radio calls.
Immediately above the airport, chop the throttle to idle, and do a steep spiral down to final and do a straight-in with no radio calls.
I always wonder why folks pull the power back. No need until you're joining the flow of the pattern, other than airspeed limitations of the aircraft or legal speed limitations.
Admittedly the 182 is a draggy truck, but I just push the nose down in smooth air. Might as well make up some of that time and speed lost to the climb.
Immediately above the airport, chop the throttle to idle, and do a steep spiral down to final and do a straight-in with no radio calls.
+1,000 !!!!
Just roll the trim forward to 500 FPM and go down. Gradually reduce the throttle to keep the MP from climbing and/or to keep the speed below yellow line.
As my primary instructor used to say "you paid for that altitude now cash in"
Caveat: the game ends at the first bump.
I always wonder why folks pull the power back. No need until you're joining the flow of the pattern, other than airspeed limitations of the aircraft or legal speed limitations.
What...no overhead break?
Since this was posted in the Instrument flying subforum, my answer is to start my descent when ATC tells me.
I can't believe how's my of you depend on you gps. It's very simple. 3 time your altitude loss is how far out you start down. 5 times your groundspeed is how fast you come down. And guess what, it keeps you on a perfect 3 degree glide slope.
Since this was posted in the Instrument flying subforum, my answer is to start my descent when ATC tells me.
or . . . ask for a pilot discretion if you don't want to burn all that fuel down low leveled off!
I haven't had that problem yet.....I'm usually left high.....like a few weeks ago when Chattanooga Approach kept me at cruise altitude (9000') until I was literally over the field.or . . . ask for a pilot discretion if you don't want to burn all that fuel down low leveled off!
Since this was posted in the Instrument flying subforum, my answer is to start my descent when ATC tells me.
I haven't had that problem yet.....I'm usually left high.....like a few weeks ago when Chattanooga Approach kept me at cruise altitude (9000') until I was literally over the field.
Didn't say the pilot shouldn't have a plan....but I would counter that 'bad form' are the guys that are repeatedly/constantly bitching at ATC for lower when ATC has a need to keep them high.Waiting for ATC to start you down is poor form. The pilot is responsible and a good pilot should have a plan. If ATC starts you down way too soon you should recognize that and act accordingly. If they forget about you (it happens) you should recognize that too and request down. If you overfly the field at cruise altitude YOU look dumb, not ATC.
This touched a nerve with me as it happened to me within the last 12 months. FO flying and we're 100 miles away at FL350. I ask the FO what his descent planning is and he responds, "Oh, I just go down when ATC tells me." Great. This guy is collecting a pay check for this wonderful airmanship.
Didn't say the pilot shouldn't have a plan....but I would counter that 'bad form' are the guys that are repeatedly/constantly bitching at ATC for lower when ATC has a need to keep them high.
I can't believe how many of you depend on you gps. It's very simple. 3 time your altitude loss is how far out you start down. 5 times your groundspeed is how fast you come down. And guess what, it keeps you on a perfect 3 degree glide slope.
Waiting for ATC to start you down is poor form. The pilot is responsible and a good pilot should have a plan. If ATC starts you down way too soon you should recognize that and act accordingly. If they forget about you (it happens) you should recognize that too and request down. If you overfly the field at cruise altitude YOU look dumb, not ATC.
This touched a nerve with me as it happened to me within the last 12 months. FO flying and we're 100 miles away at FL350. I ask the FO what his descent planning is and he responds, "Oh, I just go down when ATC tells me." Great. This guy is collecting a pay check for this wonderful airmanship.
Waiting for ATC to start you down is poor form. The pilot is responsible and a good pilot should have a plan. If ATC starts you down way too soon you should recognize that and act accordingly.
I can't believe how many of you depend on you gps.
It's very simple. 3 time your altitude loss is how far out you start down.
5 times your groundspeed is how fast you come down.
And guess what, it keeps you on a perfect 3 degree glide slope.
If'n you fly an unpressurized airplane then 500 fpm should be a max number for comfort. Every 60 kts GS is a mile per minute. So if your GS is 120 that's two miles a minute. Easy math with the 500fpm requirement. 5,000 foot descent equals 10 miles out start your descent.