Great tutorial. When i learnt IR my idea was: the attitude is my master, then based on what i want to achieve, my primary focus is what i want to stay constant. Example: i want straight and level flight? My goal is to keep altitude and heading constant then. So scan will be attitude, altimeter, attitude, heading. I want to climb? Then my goal is to not let the airspeed drop, to avid a stall, and to keep mantaining my heading. So attitude, speed, attitude, heading. I want to change heading? Then i want to keep my rate of turn and my altitude constant. So attitude, altimeter, attitude, rate of turn. I want to make a climbing turn? Then my goal is not to loose speed on the climb and to keep a constant rate. So attitude,speed, attitude,rate. I ve heard some ppl learning primary and secondary scans by memory. But doing it my way will help u understand why u do it, and it will stick to your mind better :)
Thanks for the clarification. I was confused between Bank Angle and Turn Rate. Great to know you are monitoring comments and able to respond so quickly.
Finally somebody talks about this fundamentals. My technique is different in terms of time per value and time to the next secondary instrument check. Much more rapid and frequent in all phases of flight.
Had my first ir simulation yesterday the instructor started yelling at me for not holding the altitude at 6000 😂 without even showme how to basic monitor the instruments thanks for this video ❤
It's a shame that there are instructors like this, especially when there are fantastic instructors and schools out there. If your training continues like that, I suggest you talk to the Head of Training and politely request a different instructor. Best of luck and feel free to ask me any questions along the way!
Great video. Now imagine doing this being kicked about by turbulence with instruments that wave all over the place as well as an aircraft which isn't stable in roll i.e. wants to bank right or left depending on load and its very very difficult and at first seems impossible.
At 11.10 and often, but not always thereafter, the highlight of the scan target shows heading when the commentary states turn rate. Ideally this will be fixed, but if not go by the commentary rather than the visual highlight.
Hi, thanks for the comment. The turn rate indication on the G1000 is the small magenta bar that extends left/right from the heading indicator, which is what we're trying to highlight when saying "turn rate". Unfortunately, it's difficult to highlight the turn rate indicator on its own without making our highlighting so small it becomes impossible to see. Hope that makes sense!
What turn rate should you be looking for when in the standard rate turn, even though you highlighted where to look on the hsi as you were turning, I wasn't sure what the turn rate should be.
During instrument flight, turns are typically flown at what's known as "Rate 1", which is 3° per second or 2 minutes to complete a 360° turn. Hope that helps!
Excellent presentation. Thanks
Thank you!
You make the best and clarifying videos. Please don't stop and thank you!
Great tutorial. When i learnt IR my idea was: the attitude is my master, then based on what i want to achieve, my primary focus is what i want to stay constant. Example: i want straight and level flight? My goal is to keep altitude and heading constant then. So scan will be attitude, altimeter, attitude, heading. I want to climb? Then my goal is to not let the airspeed drop, to avid a stall, and to keep mantaining my heading. So attitude, speed, attitude, heading. I want to change heading? Then i want to keep my rate of turn and my altitude constant. So attitude, altimeter, attitude, rate of turn. I want to make a climbing turn? Then my goal is not to loose speed on the climb and to keep a constant rate. So attitude,speed, attitude,rate.
I ve heard some ppl learning primary and secondary scans by memory. But doing it my way will help u understand why u do it, and it will stick to your mind better :)
Thanks for the clarification. I was confused between Bank Angle and Turn Rate. Great to know you are monitoring comments and able to respond so quickly.
Finally somebody talks about this fundamentals. My technique is different in terms of time per value and time to the next secondary instrument check. Much more rapid and frequent in all phases of flight.
Had my first ir simulation yesterday the instructor started yelling at me for not holding the altitude at 6000 😂 without even showme how to basic monitor the instruments thanks for this video ❤
It's a shame that there are instructors like this, especially when there are fantastic instructors and schools out there. If your training continues like that, I suggest you talk to the Head of Training and politely request a different instructor. Best of luck and feel free to ask me any questions along the way!
@ClearFlight1 yeah was gonna do that infact I had second simulator class today and she didn't show up 😭
@ClearFlight1 thanks again ❤
Great! Wish it was done on steam guages though
Great video. Now imagine doing this being kicked about by turbulence with instruments that wave all over the place as well as an aircraft which isn't stable in roll i.e. wants to bank right or left depending on load and its very very difficult and at first seems impossible.
At 11.10 and often, but not always thereafter, the highlight of the scan target shows heading when the commentary states turn rate. Ideally this will be fixed, but if not go by the commentary rather than the visual highlight.
Hi, thanks for the comment. The turn rate indication on the G1000 is the small magenta bar that extends left/right from the heading indicator, which is what we're trying to highlight when saying "turn rate". Unfortunately, it's difficult to highlight the turn rate indicator on its own without making our highlighting so small it becomes impossible to see. Hope that makes sense!
What turn rate should you be looking for when in the standard rate turn, even though you highlighted where to look on the hsi as you were turning, I wasn't sure what the turn rate should be.
During instrument flight, turns are typically flown at what's known as "Rate 1", which is 3° per second or 2 minutes to complete a 360° turn. Hope that helps!
@@ClearFlight1 What I didn't see at first was the magenta turn rate line. I didn't notice it at first. Thanks for your response.