You'll have to show me that trick...Cluemeister wrote:A few more touch and goes, and one full stop so I can adjust my seat.

Moderator: drseti
You'll have to show me that trick...Cluemeister wrote:A few more touch and goes, and one full stop so I can adjust my seat.
You know the Skycatcher has that foot spinner to adjust the seat. During preflight I set it where I thought it was comfortable, but then during flight I felt like my knees were way up high and I couldn't extend properly for rudder work.Flocker wrote:You'll have to show me that trick...Cluemeister wrote:A few more touch and goes, and one full stop so I can adjust my seat.
eyeflygps wrote: I do both sides in case something were to happen and I needed to jump over to the other side to fly.
Do it with the right passenger at or above 5,280' and you could possibly kill two birds with one stone!Half Fast wrote:eyeflygps wrote: I do both sides in case something were to happen and I needed to jump over to the other side to fly.
Quite a feat with a passenger on board. Could you post video of that trick?
Good one. LOLFastEddieB wrote:Do it with the right passenger at or above 5,280' and you could possibly kill two birds with one stone!
FastEddieB wrote: Do it with the right passenger at or above 5,280' and you could possibly kill two birds with one stone!
We have not done any simulated instrument flight. I'm not sure that's part of the Sport Pilot Training.3Dreaming wrote:I don't recall you mentioning it, but have you done any simulated instrument flight?
If you are flying an LSA with a Vh > 83 Kts (100 MPH), then before you can fly solo XC you are required to have received and logged training on flight solely by reference to instruments. You also need a logbook endorsement to this effect. Doesn't specify any particular number of hours, or maneuvers. I generally teach the student how to stabilize airspeed, heading, and altitude under the hood, and then how to execute a shallow 180 degree turn holding airspeed and altitude constant, so the student will be able to fly back out of a cloud if he or she inadvertently stumbles into one.Cluemeister wrote:We have not done any simulated instrument flight. I'm not sure that's part of the Sport Pilot Training.
Or if it is, they haven't told me!
I agree.eyeflygps wrote:I was wondering about that myself. One way to perhaps mitigate that is to get the required instrument training, then do all the required solo cross-country again.3Dreaming wrote:
BTW, there could be implications beyond just doing the training at this point.