I've always heard, "step on the ball," to fix adverse yaw. Over many years teaching low altitude orientation, however, I have become uncomfortable with this admonition. Of course it is correct. When we are uncoordinated we step on the ball to bring the rudder into coordination with the steering wheel. This makes it obvious what the real problem is: we lead aileron in turns. In high altitude thinking where both vertical and horizontal space is ample and turns are to heading and it takes two minutes to turn around and neither rudder nor aileron is used throughout the turn, the nose going the wrong way initially is just a nuisance.
Why is step on the ball of primary concern? Because most pilots lead aileron and limit rudder for fear of the skidding spin. That is because most pilots pull back on the stick in all turns to maintain altitude at any cost. When the Stearman was a primary trainer, "step on the ball," was too late. The airplane was doing a Hover knife edge. But with modern airplanes that minimize adverse yaw but don't eliminate it, we can just teach mostly using the steering wheel and stepping on the ball if we really need to turn smartly. High altitude stuff.
The real problem rears it's head on short final. Low altitude stuff. Because we use the steering wheel as the primary turning control (rudder is primary because it pulls down aileron around properly,) we have a problem here. We don't want to turn, we want to nail the centerline between our legs. If we are on the steering wheel, if we are using aileron, if we are turning, we already have messed up the longitudinal alignment or even the crab if that's your thing. But the real frustrating thing for the student, very evident in most training videos, is that as soon as they move the steering wheel the nose goes the wrong way initially. This is very confusing for them. And the wing wagging gets worse the closer they get to the runway where they are also having to deal with round out, closing throttle, hold off, and flair. A good power pitch approach will eliminate all that latter, but we still have to line up and have the fuselage pointing the way we want to roll.
Finally, the fatal part. If we don't know how to lead rudder and to bank steeply, and how to allow the nose to go down naturally to prevent stall, and how tolevel the wing prior to pull up (the energy management turn) it might result in unrecoverable stall. Uncoordinated stall might result in spin. Yes, the wing away from the turn will probably be the one to drop (slipping spin). It really doesn't matter down low. Once we have stalled, it doesn't make any difference which way we spin or don't spin.
Are any of you instructors uncomfortable with the truism: "step on the ball?" What would be more proficient?
