PlasticPilot website banner

Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries Random Aviation Photo from PlasticPilot-net's galleries

Top Three Stressing In-Flight Moments

Flying is fun – parts of it can be stressing. This post is about the top three stressing moments on my personal stress-o-meter. Feel free to comment about yours.

Line-up and wait…

When operating on airports with airline traffic, it’s frequent to be instructed by ATC to line-up and wait. The more stressing combination is having to wait for three minutes when already lined-up, until the wake turbulence of the previous take-off are dissipated, while another airliner is already on short final.

Light aircraft have no mirrors (with the exception of glider towing planes), so there is no possibility to see that approaching traffic. You just know that a 40 tons aircraft if coming to land on the same runway, and you wait for a take-off clearance… Wait and don’t see…

Hot, heavy and high ground
I won’t make a climb performance lesson here, but shortly said for non-pilots, plane performance decrease with temperature and load, a.k.a. passengers. Under adverse conditions, the climb performance can easily be reduced by 50%.

Any serious pilot makes performance calculations before take-off and incudes a safety margin, so as to ensure a safe climb. Even when one knows that performance will increase with speed increase, and that the expected rate of climb will be achieved, the seconds spent waiting for that can look impressive and be stressing.

And she floooooooooooooats
I did not found a photo for that one, but all pilots already understood it. Any approach flown a bit quickly will result in a long flare and landing – necessary to loose the extra speed.

As runway length is usually limited, there can be long seconds during which the plane seems to endlessly float a couple of feet about ground. It’s anyway better to do so than land with excessive speed, but looking at the quickly approaching runway end can also generate some pilot stress.

Nothing unsafe
These three cases are all but unsafe. Good radio watch, good controller work and possible go-around for the approaching aircraft ensure that the first case is safe. Good preparation and flying skills ensure that any climb that is started is achievable, and going-around is the safe way out of a too long flare.

What make these situations stressing is the short time available for decision making. If anything goes wrong, the pilot must take the right decision within a couple of seconds. That might seem obvious, but “Safety First” is the motto in such moments.

Email this post to a friend Email this post to a friend

ForeFlight Checklist Ad

2 Comments, Comment or Ping

  1. Sam at “Blogging at FL250″ had a very good post recently about what goes on in a captain’s mind as the airliner is approaching V1:

    http://fl250.blogspot.com/2008/07/moment-of-truth.html

    Just to add to Plastic’s stressful moments, I would say that a flooooooating flare in a crosswind landing is double stressful: the problem is not so much the approaching end of the runway than the approaching runway edge as the plane drifts downwind if ailerons are not used to offset the drift. Easier said than done, since in the flare one usually looses sight of the runway centerline and has to rely on what can be seen through the side window to guess where the plane is in relation to the centerline.

  2. PlasticPilot

    Thank you Julien for that additional one. Not being rated for Multi-Engine aircraft, I did not thought of that. It’s true that the concept of V1 itself (speed after which take-off is no longer an option) is rather stressing.

    However, on long runways, V1 and Vr (rotation speed), are frequently the same.

Reply to “Top Three Stressing In-Flight Moments”

    Ad for ForeFlight, pre-flight intelligence

     

    Flying Across America

     


  • Pilot Blogs


  • Photo Mousepad


    $13.99

    Selected products from MyPilotstore

    Sennheiser HMEC-250 ANR Headset - Lightweight, foldable, stereo headset with outstanding transmission quality for clear communications.

    Jeppesen IFR Clipboard with Elastic Leg Strap - A great basic kneeboard for IFR pilots

    Sennheiser HMEC-350 ANR Headset - Experience excellent noise attenuation over the entire frequency range.

    AV COMM AC900 Headset - The premium choice in the AVCOMM headset lineup.

    Sennheiser HMEC-25-CAP ANR Headset - Lightweight and comfortable dual earcup commercial pilot's headset with NoiseGard™ active noise compensation

    IP Trainer and On Top Bundle - Money saving bundle for two great Instrument simulators!

    ASA Instrument Refresher: An IPC Simulator - Training platform for instrument-rated pilots to help maintain competency and prepare for the Instrument Proficiency Check.

    Flightcom Headset Bag - Padded nylon headset bag with 2 chart-size mesh pockets.

    Bendix/King AV8OR Handheld GPS / MFD - Portable GPS with navigation routing and planning for aircraft and car navigation along and even provides multimedia entertainment along the way.

    David Clark H10-66 Military Headset - A unique dual impedance headset for use in civilian and military style aircraft.