Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

61 Preventing Airplane Accidents and the Go Around Maneuver, VFR vs IFR for long trips + GA News

61 Preventing Airplane Accidents and the Go Around Maneuver, VFR vs IFR for long trips + GA News

FromAviation News Talk podcast


61 Preventing Airplane Accidents and the Go Around Maneuver, VFR vs IFR for long trips + GA News

FromAviation News Talk podcast

ratings:
Length:
58 minutes
Released:
May 18, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

61 Preventing Airplane Accidents and the Go Around Maneuver, VFR vs IFR for long trips Your Cirrus Specialist. Call me if you're thinking of buying a new Cirrus SR20 or SR22. Call 1-650-967-2500 for Cirrus purchase and training assistance. Send us an email - http://www.sjflight.com/Forms/inquiry.htm If you have a question you'd like answered on the show, let listeners hear you ask the question, by recording your listener question using your phone. Max discusses several accidents that could have been prevented by a timely go around. One was a Cirrus SR20 that retracted flaps at too slow a speed and entered a stall spin in Houston. Another was a Emirates Boeing 777 that landed long and executed a go around without full power. An Air Canada jet lined up a night with a taxiway at San Francisco avoided what could have been the worst aviation accident in history by going around at the last second. Max also talks about his experience that almost led to him going off a runway into a lake in Andover, NJ. A similar accident occurred last month in Knoxville, TN when a Cirrus SR22 landed and ended up in a river. Next he talks about procedures for executing a go around properly. Finally he talks about common errors he sees when pilot execute the go around. The most common one is deciding too late to go around, or worse, not doing a go around when it’s needed. Another common error jamming the throttle in too fast during a go around, which can cause larger engines to choke and stumble as it’s flooded with too much fuel. Pilots also forget to add right rudder simultaneously as they add full power. A lot of pilots don’t pitch up to climb away from the runway during a go around and instead just continue to fly level. Pilots also mismanage the flaps, either removing them all at once, instead of raising them in increments, or by forgetting to raise them at all. Another mistake pilots make during a go around is that they fail to track the runway and its extended centerline as they climb up during a go around. Please visit my new Patreon page and make a contribution to help me with my goal of improving the AviationNewsTalk.com website. Check out our recommended ADS-B receivers, and order one for yourself. Yes, we'll make a couple of dollars if you do.  Check out our recommended Aviation Headsets, and order one for yourself! Mentioned in the ShowAOPA Regional Fly in - Missoula, MT June 15-16 Workshops & Registration Raspberry Pi Live Sectional Map Project Instructions Peter Garrison Article in Flying Magazine Emirates Boeing 777 Go Around Accident News Stories GAO Reports On Pilot Supply Issues Distracted Taxiing a Factor in Ground Incidents and Runway Incursions Aviation Organizations Seek Weather Station Access CESSNA DISCONTINUES TURBO SKYHAWK JT–A Flight controllers talk down ERAU student pilot after oil blocks windshield Canada: NAVAID Modernization Feedback Needed Australia: Wings over Illawarra Australia: Associations sign-up for Act Change Summit New Zealand: Many NZ air traffic controllers performing roles without certainty of toilet breaks, union tells Select Committee
Released:
May 18, 2018
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

40 yrs of experience - GA News, safety tips, IFR & technology Aviation News Talk is a podcast focused on General Aviation news, general tips for pilots, technical details on glass cockpits and flying GPS approaches, and an occasional interview. I bring over 40 years of piloting experience to the show to teach pilots and future pilots to fly safely and to answer listener questions.