MTV,
Why do you write so organized? And you haven't bent many airplanes either. Oh well.
Contact
hpux735 wrote:He asked me "what is the one thing different about short field approach?" His answer was "you have to be stabilized by 1000' agl." On that part of the flight he had me fly a one mile final. He was totally unfazed when I said that a lot of time a field is short because there's a mountain there, and responded that the faa guarantees a 3-percent glide slope.

soyAnarchisto wrote:hpux735 wrote:He asked me "what is the one thing different about short field approach?" His answer was "you have to be stabilized by 1000' agl." On that part of the flight he had me fly a one mile final. He was totally unfazed when I said that a lot of time a field is short because there's a mountain there, and responded that the faa guarantees a 3-percent glide slope.
Perhaps, maybe you can find another cfi? If he has you flying 1 mile finals and stabilized at 1000'AGL in cub type aircraft for short field work he probably shouldn't be giving dual in them.
If you are stabilized at 1000'AGL what was TPA? 3000'?
Troy Hamon wrote:FAA short field is different than real world short field anyway. You will not be a short field master in any airplane for a few hundred hours or more. Do what your cfi says, learn what he has to offer, get your certificate, then learn the finer arts. My two cents.
contactflying wrote:Troy,
True. I am just griping. I am encouraged that the PTS now says to accelerate in ground effect until Vx or Vy as appropriate and to use no more than 1.3Vso on approach.
Jim
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