Private Pilot Flight Training and Instruction
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Turns About a Point
Some students do better if the point is selected at the intersection
of to right angle roads. This, instead of a lone tree helps maintain
orientation. It is important that the student not try to see under
a wing or around the windshield to see the point. The student
must learn to give the wing a quick flip for a look and then put
the wing back down for the turn. Keeping the circle with a 1/4
mile radius works well.
I help the student select a point and plan the downwind entry.
Water is a good way to tell if any wind exists. I suggest to him
that it is easiest to stay a constant distance by selecting points
to make the desired circle. In the beginning I help with altitude
problems but otherwise let the first left turn or two go by without
comment. Turns to the left are easier because of pilot position.
Draw your own diagram using the words.
Left turns about .
a point entry
Shallow banks going upwind
Steep banks going downwind
Aircraft headings to
make circle instead
of ellipse.
We always (New exception is now rectangles that are entered
on 45) try to enter ground reference maneuvers on a downwind leg
since the first turn will have the fastest roll rate and steepest
angle. If you do not bank quickly and steeply for the fastest
rate of turn the wind will extend your flight path out of the
desired pattern. Going upwind, the opposite concerns exist, do
not hurry either the roll rate or the angle of the bank. You must
fly into the wind to counter its effort to keep you inside the
desired turn radius. The intent is to keep a constant-altitude,
quarter-mile circle. It helps if you can select radii points that
form the circle.
With a wind, the first turn will require more than a 90-degree
angle of turn. The angle beyond 90-degrees is used to set up the
crab required by the crosswind. The upwind turn will be gradually
decreased so that when directly upwind the wings will be most
nearly level. This is where the ground speed is slowest. The bank
is gradually increased but crab must be held into the crosswind
to keep the circle from flattening on the top. Once across the
top of the circle, the bank must be gradually increased to make
the circle conform to the added ground speed caused by the tail
wind. The steepest bank is held when we are directly downwind.
All banks are gradually increased and gradually decreased.
Often the student will try to look under or around the wing
while in the turn. Any such tilting or twisting of the head may
disrupt the fluids in the inner ear and often affect altitude
control. I will suggest that a quick flip of the yoke to momentarily
raise the wing is a better way to stay oriented. Once we have
flown left turns we must reverse to fly right turns.
The turn about a point can occur in tower controlled situations
as when ATC might require a 360 on downwind or as in a SVFR arrival
clearance which might require reporting over a specific checkpoint
while remaining clear of the airport Class D surface area. The
turn about a point should be basic to many uncontrolled airport
arrivals which require circling over the field at twice pattern
altitude while determining active runway and traffic patterns.
There are two different kinds of turns related to a point.
The private level is 'turns about a point'. in this instance the
turns are to be constant in radius. In this case you can visualize
points at a constant distance from the point and use these to
fly your circle. Wind affects your ability to maintain this circle.
The first lesson is best done in a calm wind. Subsequent flights
require constant adjustment of bank to maintain your wind correction
for flying the circle.
The commercial level is a turn on a point'. The turn on a point
requires that you fly around the point with a constant ground
speed. To fly this constant ground speed you must dive lower in
a head wind and climb in a tailwind. The C-150 has a critical
pivot altitude of about 620 feet. This means that in calm conditions
you can fly a turn on a point which keeps the wing tip on that
point. You know where you are flying too fast, slow, or just right
by the tip position relative to the point. Every plane will have
a different critical altitude at any given speed. Find the critical
altitude for the speed you select and then vary your altitude
to keep the tip on your selected point. Climb if the point falls
behind the tip and dive if the point gets ahead of the tip. How
much you vary your altitude will depend on wind velocity.
Written by Gene Whitt
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