A Passion for Flying...Where are Aviation Safety Ethics Today
Part Four-
In those days remembering my flight instruction on a case by
case, lesson by lesson was easy. Both my brother and I reveled in stories,
books, and movies about flying. If it had wings we were interested.
My interest in flying started by building model airplanes.
Memories of going to the local hobby shop with my father on a rainy weekend day
and picking out a model to buy and take home to assemble might have been the
start of a yearning and understanding of aviation.
After the plastic models, were the flying balsa models, then
the U-Control plastic Cox gas .049 powered models flown at the corners of our
neighborhood. This progressed into larger U-Control balsa and rice paper
airplanes. From there we skipped radio controlled to much larger Cessna 150s.
These were obtained by renting from Rex and Mildred Wells,
and flown with our flight instructor Tony Mason.
Our lessons consisted of a conversation about what we were
going to learn before each lesson. A conversation about what we were about to
do while we were sitting in the airplane, then taking off and doing what was
discussed. We would perform flight maneuvers or a takeoff and landing at the direction
of a cool, calm, Tony Mason.
Tony was usually
around the airport but when he wasn’t you could depend on him to pull up in the
families leaf green Toyota pickup truck.
Mason wearing his Ray-Ban aviator sunglasses looked the part
of a flight instructor, was a bit quiet and always challenging our motor skills
with some exacting activity. He reminded me of a circus act performer or a
tight rope walker always practicing precision.
Mason would first show you how to perform then talk you
through your takeoffs and landings and then would require you to do the same by
telling him what you were doing. If you slipped up instead of yelling at you or
grabbing the controls he would tell you to go around. Start over, or would
perform the required action again.
Quick look for this or that, airspeed altitude attitude
questions could come at any time, best
of all were the lets do that again and see how you do replies…meaning I did a
poor job the first time around. This would allow me to re-think and perform a
more masterful approach, or turns with no loss of airspeed or altitude. In
short he demanded perfection and mastery of the aircraft.
My favorites were learning to spin the aircraft and recovery
from stalls in a turn. Today most flight instructors would be terrified to
teach a student these very essential aspects of flight. The theory of how an aircraft will recover,
and the reality are sometimes very different.
For example the stall in a turn, a scenario that we in
Alaska call a Moose stall meaning that while looking at an animal, in this case
a moose, while flying low and slow you stall the aircraft low to the ground the
result is usually fatal. Why the
aircraft gives you no warning, buffet or indication and suddenly flips on its
back in the opposite direction of your turn, with one wing stalling and the
other still creating lift, or drops nose down too low to recover airspeed
before planting the aircraft like a lawn dart in the ground.
Most pilots will immediately
yank on the ailerons to correct the action when adding rudder to stabilize the
gyration is the solution to the stall. Of course the rate of gyration or in
some cases a half snap roll is exaggerated by adverse yaw due to the direction the
spinning propeller. If you fight it or use ailerons you will lose a fair amount
of altitude.
If you understand
this stall entry you can recover in a few hundred feet, or less if you are
ready and aware.
Tony once showed me this and I was amazed at how the
aircraft stalled rolled on its back and by quickly pushing forward on the elevators
while inverted with neutral aileron and by using the rudders to re-position the
nose the plane rolled right out almost on the point that we entered the stall
albeit some feet lower.
You never forget those violent maneuvers, but when your
flight instructor says ok let’s do it in the other direction and follows you
through… it makes more sense.
Just a note; Mason then remembered that we did not cage the
artificial horizon, said I’ll take the controls and proceeded to do a series of
maneuvers to right the gyros.
His explanation was
like this: “This is a rented aircraft and if we return with the horizon out of
kilter the owners will think we were doing aerobatics. You and I will then be
restricted from using the aircraft again.”
Well Tony might have been teaching on the edge according to
the aircraft rental agreements which amounted to a lecture from Rex Wells (who
incidentally flew with Sammy Mason and the Hollywood Hawks) but it left me with
a better understanding that the aircraft and its controls will react if the aircraft
has airspeed and altitude and what the correct inputs are at the right moment.
Labels: Certifed Flight Instruction, CFIs, Hollywood Hawks, learning to fly, Mike Dewey, Mike Mason, Pete Mason, Sammy Mason, Santa Paula Airport, Santa Paula California, Tony Mason, Upset Attitudes, Vince Stapleton
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