hotrod180 wrote:I've never even been in a helicopter, but I'm not sure that applying helo approach tactics to flying a fixed wing airplane is necessarily the best way to go. The army's training tactics for the L19 Birddog, U17 Skywagon, or the L20/U6 Beaver might be more appropriate for most of us.
… Lots of unlearning to do to fix that gdaniels wrote:Jim, I flew Charlie models and then Cobras, with an occasional flight in an H model. Got frequent rides in Loachs on days off. All of this was in RVN in the Ankhe área in 69. Then back to Wolters for Th-55s. Now I am flying a 185
Gilbert
Zzz wrote:I'm familiar. I think my issue is the terminology.
Gunny wrote:Zzz wrote:I'm familiar. I think my issue is the terminology.
I guess that is my limitation in this discussion as well. Speaking of Primacy, I'm used to describing things in a certain language, not one I personally made up. Things like buoyancy are terms that strike a major discord in my understanding of the flying/airborne environment. Energy I understand, Kinetic and Potential. I guess my degree in Physics limits me here, I just can't get my mind around these terms.
Jim if these are terms you got from flying in the Army, fine. But, if you'll allow me to suggest they are probably more applicable to helicopters and incredibly capable STOL airplanes than most of the airplanes folks here fly. Brisk walk is hard to do at 60 mph.
Closure rate, is closure rate. It varies with true airspeed and is affected by winds. The effects of perception is affected by the nature of how our eyes are constructed. The operation of Rods and Cones and the concentration of Cones in the Fovea and our evolved drive to look directly at something to see it (which does not help in detecting closure rates either in the vertical or horizontal). These are things I think about and try to teach. I just can't get my arms around the terminology.
Sorry, I guess I'm just not that flexible.
gunny
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