Emergency Landing for absolute novice?
Suppose I am a passenger in a small, non-commercial plane (e.g. at most 8 seats), and the pilot suddenly dies or is otherwise incapacitated mid-flight. Suppose further that nobody else on the plane knows the first thing about flying, or that I were the only other person on the plane. I understand the basic physics of flying, and have been in airplane cockpits before for a ride, but never piloted one. Cockpits are an intimidating bank of switches and dials, and I imagine I'd have very little time to acquaint myself with them experimentally in an emergency.
What minimalistic, general information should I know in an emergency situation to try to land a small plane?
I'm looking for perhaps 5–10 fast-and-simple rules-of-thumb that would be useful in a life-or-death situation, yet easy to remember.
A great answer might include 2–3 sentence answers for things such as:
- Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
- How could I contact air traffic control?
- What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
- What rate of descent is too dangerous?
- How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
- How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
- How might I determine a good angle of attack?
landing emergency passenger pilot-incapacitation
New contributor
add a comment |
Suppose I am a passenger in a small, non-commercial plane (e.g. at most 8 seats), and the pilot suddenly dies or is otherwise incapacitated mid-flight. Suppose further that nobody else on the plane knows the first thing about flying, or that I were the only other person on the plane. I understand the basic physics of flying, and have been in airplane cockpits before for a ride, but never piloted one. Cockpits are an intimidating bank of switches and dials, and I imagine I'd have very little time to acquaint myself with them experimentally in an emergency.
What minimalistic, general information should I know in an emergency situation to try to land a small plane?
I'm looking for perhaps 5–10 fast-and-simple rules-of-thumb that would be useful in a life-or-death situation, yet easy to remember.
A great answer might include 2–3 sentence answers for things such as:
- Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
- How could I contact air traffic control?
- What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
- What rate of descent is too dangerous?
- How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
- How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
- How might I determine a good angle of attack?
landing emergency passenger pilot-incapacitation
New contributor
1
Similar question (but not necessarily a duplicate): Pilot passed out in a small GA plane. What can a passenger do?
– Tanner Swett
8 hours ago
Welcome to aviation.SE! As Tanner said, we have a very similar question already; it would probably be helpful if you could add something about how your question is different, otherwise people may vote to close yours as a duplicate.
– Pondlife
4 hours ago
Thanks to @TannerSwett for pointing that out — it's definitely close! Whereas that question was intended for somebody familiar with planes (e.g. "initiated to fly a plane" and "100s of hours on flight sims"), my question is intended for somebody with essentially zero experience with planes: I don't know how to turn an engine on/off, or how to operate the radio. I expect that the answer for these questions would be different based on the different levels of familiarity with aircraft. I'm also interested what people would consider most immediately important.
– jvriesem
3 hours ago
@jvriesem You have to assume some familiarity and knowledge, not least because there is no single standardised cockpit layout when it comes to knobs and switches. Many knobs and switches have labels, but they are very abbreviated or technical. Unlike cars where you have almost (but not entirely) identical controls laid out relative to the driver which are sufficient for complete control; the only familiar controls in the pilot's seat that are (almost) always in the same position are the yoke, throttle and pedals, but those alone are not sufficient if you hope to land in one piece.
– aerobot
10 mins ago
You may find this question relevant: Why are the cockpit controls of airplanes so complicated?
– aerobot
7 mins ago
add a comment |
Suppose I am a passenger in a small, non-commercial plane (e.g. at most 8 seats), and the pilot suddenly dies or is otherwise incapacitated mid-flight. Suppose further that nobody else on the plane knows the first thing about flying, or that I were the only other person on the plane. I understand the basic physics of flying, and have been in airplane cockpits before for a ride, but never piloted one. Cockpits are an intimidating bank of switches and dials, and I imagine I'd have very little time to acquaint myself with them experimentally in an emergency.
What minimalistic, general information should I know in an emergency situation to try to land a small plane?
I'm looking for perhaps 5–10 fast-and-simple rules-of-thumb that would be useful in a life-or-death situation, yet easy to remember.
A great answer might include 2–3 sentence answers for things such as:
- Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
- How could I contact air traffic control?
- What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
- What rate of descent is too dangerous?
- How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
- How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
- How might I determine a good angle of attack?
landing emergency passenger pilot-incapacitation
New contributor
Suppose I am a passenger in a small, non-commercial plane (e.g. at most 8 seats), and the pilot suddenly dies or is otherwise incapacitated mid-flight. Suppose further that nobody else on the plane knows the first thing about flying, or that I were the only other person on the plane. I understand the basic physics of flying, and have been in airplane cockpits before for a ride, but never piloted one. Cockpits are an intimidating bank of switches and dials, and I imagine I'd have very little time to acquaint myself with them experimentally in an emergency.
What minimalistic, general information should I know in an emergency situation to try to land a small plane?
I'm looking for perhaps 5–10 fast-and-simple rules-of-thumb that would be useful in a life-or-death situation, yet easy to remember.
A great answer might include 2–3 sentence answers for things such as:
- Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
- How could I contact air traffic control?
- What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
- What rate of descent is too dangerous?
- How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
- How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
- How might I determine a good angle of attack?
landing emergency passenger pilot-incapacitation
landing emergency passenger pilot-incapacitation
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 8 hours ago
jvriesem
1163
1163
New contributor
New contributor
1
Similar question (but not necessarily a duplicate): Pilot passed out in a small GA plane. What can a passenger do?
– Tanner Swett
8 hours ago
Welcome to aviation.SE! As Tanner said, we have a very similar question already; it would probably be helpful if you could add something about how your question is different, otherwise people may vote to close yours as a duplicate.
– Pondlife
4 hours ago
Thanks to @TannerSwett for pointing that out — it's definitely close! Whereas that question was intended for somebody familiar with planes (e.g. "initiated to fly a plane" and "100s of hours on flight sims"), my question is intended for somebody with essentially zero experience with planes: I don't know how to turn an engine on/off, or how to operate the radio. I expect that the answer for these questions would be different based on the different levels of familiarity with aircraft. I'm also interested what people would consider most immediately important.
– jvriesem
3 hours ago
@jvriesem You have to assume some familiarity and knowledge, not least because there is no single standardised cockpit layout when it comes to knobs and switches. Many knobs and switches have labels, but they are very abbreviated or technical. Unlike cars where you have almost (but not entirely) identical controls laid out relative to the driver which are sufficient for complete control; the only familiar controls in the pilot's seat that are (almost) always in the same position are the yoke, throttle and pedals, but those alone are not sufficient if you hope to land in one piece.
– aerobot
10 mins ago
You may find this question relevant: Why are the cockpit controls of airplanes so complicated?
– aerobot
7 mins ago
add a comment |
1
Similar question (but not necessarily a duplicate): Pilot passed out in a small GA plane. What can a passenger do?
– Tanner Swett
8 hours ago
Welcome to aviation.SE! As Tanner said, we have a very similar question already; it would probably be helpful if you could add something about how your question is different, otherwise people may vote to close yours as a duplicate.
– Pondlife
4 hours ago
Thanks to @TannerSwett for pointing that out — it's definitely close! Whereas that question was intended for somebody familiar with planes (e.g. "initiated to fly a plane" and "100s of hours on flight sims"), my question is intended for somebody with essentially zero experience with planes: I don't know how to turn an engine on/off, or how to operate the radio. I expect that the answer for these questions would be different based on the different levels of familiarity with aircraft. I'm also interested what people would consider most immediately important.
– jvriesem
3 hours ago
@jvriesem You have to assume some familiarity and knowledge, not least because there is no single standardised cockpit layout when it comes to knobs and switches. Many knobs and switches have labels, but they are very abbreviated or technical. Unlike cars where you have almost (but not entirely) identical controls laid out relative to the driver which are sufficient for complete control; the only familiar controls in the pilot's seat that are (almost) always in the same position are the yoke, throttle and pedals, but those alone are not sufficient if you hope to land in one piece.
– aerobot
10 mins ago
You may find this question relevant: Why are the cockpit controls of airplanes so complicated?
– aerobot
7 mins ago
1
1
Similar question (but not necessarily a duplicate): Pilot passed out in a small GA plane. What can a passenger do?
– Tanner Swett
8 hours ago
Similar question (but not necessarily a duplicate): Pilot passed out in a small GA plane. What can a passenger do?
– Tanner Swett
8 hours ago
Welcome to aviation.SE! As Tanner said, we have a very similar question already; it would probably be helpful if you could add something about how your question is different, otherwise people may vote to close yours as a duplicate.
– Pondlife
4 hours ago
Welcome to aviation.SE! As Tanner said, we have a very similar question already; it would probably be helpful if you could add something about how your question is different, otherwise people may vote to close yours as a duplicate.
– Pondlife
4 hours ago
Thanks to @TannerSwett for pointing that out — it's definitely close! Whereas that question was intended for somebody familiar with planes (e.g. "initiated to fly a plane" and "100s of hours on flight sims"), my question is intended for somebody with essentially zero experience with planes: I don't know how to turn an engine on/off, or how to operate the radio. I expect that the answer for these questions would be different based on the different levels of familiarity with aircraft. I'm also interested what people would consider most immediately important.
– jvriesem
3 hours ago
Thanks to @TannerSwett for pointing that out — it's definitely close! Whereas that question was intended for somebody familiar with planes (e.g. "initiated to fly a plane" and "100s of hours on flight sims"), my question is intended for somebody with essentially zero experience with planes: I don't know how to turn an engine on/off, or how to operate the radio. I expect that the answer for these questions would be different based on the different levels of familiarity with aircraft. I'm also interested what people would consider most immediately important.
– jvriesem
3 hours ago
@jvriesem You have to assume some familiarity and knowledge, not least because there is no single standardised cockpit layout when it comes to knobs and switches. Many knobs and switches have labels, but they are very abbreviated or technical. Unlike cars where you have almost (but not entirely) identical controls laid out relative to the driver which are sufficient for complete control; the only familiar controls in the pilot's seat that are (almost) always in the same position are the yoke, throttle and pedals, but those alone are not sufficient if you hope to land in one piece.
– aerobot
10 mins ago
@jvriesem You have to assume some familiarity and knowledge, not least because there is no single standardised cockpit layout when it comes to knobs and switches. Many knobs and switches have labels, but they are very abbreviated or technical. Unlike cars where you have almost (but not entirely) identical controls laid out relative to the driver which are sufficient for complete control; the only familiar controls in the pilot's seat that are (almost) always in the same position are the yoke, throttle and pedals, but those alone are not sufficient if you hope to land in one piece.
– aerobot
10 mins ago
You may find this question relevant: Why are the cockpit controls of airplanes so complicated?
– aerobot
7 mins ago
You may find this question relevant: Why are the cockpit controls of airplanes so complicated?
– aerobot
7 mins ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
That's way too complicated a question. The best thing you can do is get MS Flight Simulator and learn to fly one of the light planes on it. It even has lessons in it. You can easily learn enough to survive the real deal if that ever happened and you had access to the controls. Instructors these day frequently get new students who've spent time with FSX and are surprisingly advanced right at the start.
Other than that, the most important thing for a passenger to know is how to tune the communications radio to the emergency frequency 121.5 and how to broadcast on it. This will get you in contact with the nearest air traffic unit, wherever you are (they all monitor it) and you would be able to be talked down. It's been done a number of times.
Have your host show you how to control the plane in level flight, enough to keep in level flight do basic turns (very easy). If you can do that, and can get ATC on the radio on your own, you'll be able to make it down. You'll be steered to a suitable airport with a nice big runway and told what to do step by step. No worries.
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
add a comment |
ATC has successfully talked down folks with zero experience in GA planes, and if there's one thing you need to learn, it's how to call ATC so they can give you that help. Any pilot would be happy to teach you this, and it should only take a few minutes while you're sitting in the plane before departure. Anything you know beyond that will make ATC's help a lot easier to understand and get you safely on the ground that much faster, but that's the bare minimum.
My recommendation is a "discovery flight" at a nearby flight school; that will teach you far more of the basic skills you'd need to survive than days of looking for tips online. Flight sim time would save money if you're interested in becoming a pilot, but otherwise I wouldn't bother; you need to actually sit in a real plane, touch real buttons and knobs and levers, and feel how a real plane reacts--with someone at your side explaining the key points along the way. I learned every one of the things on your list and more, plus made my first landing, in that one hour lesson.
FWIW, it doesn't matter if that discovery flight is in a Cessna and your emergency happens in a Mooney, or whatever. For light planes, most of the differences border on cosmetic for emergency purposes. Once you know what to look for and why, it shouldn't take much to recognize the important controls and instruments in any other light plane. Again, any pilot you're flying with should be happy to explain the differences if you don't pick them up on your own; an instructor is only needed when you're starting from zero.
If you'll be flying GA a lot, particularly in the same plane and/or with the same pilot, look into "Pinch Hitter" courses; they'll cost quite a bit more than a simple discovery flight, but they're worth every penny if you'll be flying often enough for real concerns about emergencies.
add a comment |
flying a plane, specially a small one requires a lot a practice, but if you find your self in this situation, and assuming is a small prop, complex twin engine aircraft (Variable prop, retractable landing gear).
Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
all the controls are in the front panel, 3 levers in the mid control panel, black for thrust, blue for prop, red for fuel, don't touch red and blue, move black, back to reduce power and forward to increase
How could I contact air traffic control?
usually on the yoke is a small button (ptt) press it and talk, or by the microphone, set on the radio the frequency 121.50
What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
try to maintain level wings, aim for an airport
What rate of descent is too dangerous?
try to maintain between 500 to 700 fpm rate of descent
How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
depends on the aircraft, usually black rounded knob on the panel, usually on the right side, it moves up and down, look for it.
How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
the airspeed indicator has colors, try to maintain the speed on the green band
How might I determine a good angle of attack?
it depends on the speed, and configuration, but a good indication is the rate of descent and constant speed, aim for 500 fpm descent maintaining speed on the green band
safe flights
add a comment |
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3 Answers
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3 Answers
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That's way too complicated a question. The best thing you can do is get MS Flight Simulator and learn to fly one of the light planes on it. It even has lessons in it. You can easily learn enough to survive the real deal if that ever happened and you had access to the controls. Instructors these day frequently get new students who've spent time with FSX and are surprisingly advanced right at the start.
Other than that, the most important thing for a passenger to know is how to tune the communications radio to the emergency frequency 121.5 and how to broadcast on it. This will get you in contact with the nearest air traffic unit, wherever you are (they all monitor it) and you would be able to be talked down. It's been done a number of times.
Have your host show you how to control the plane in level flight, enough to keep in level flight do basic turns (very easy). If you can do that, and can get ATC on the radio on your own, you'll be able to make it down. You'll be steered to a suitable airport with a nice big runway and told what to do step by step. No worries.
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
add a comment |
That's way too complicated a question. The best thing you can do is get MS Flight Simulator and learn to fly one of the light planes on it. It even has lessons in it. You can easily learn enough to survive the real deal if that ever happened and you had access to the controls. Instructors these day frequently get new students who've spent time with FSX and are surprisingly advanced right at the start.
Other than that, the most important thing for a passenger to know is how to tune the communications radio to the emergency frequency 121.5 and how to broadcast on it. This will get you in contact with the nearest air traffic unit, wherever you are (they all monitor it) and you would be able to be talked down. It's been done a number of times.
Have your host show you how to control the plane in level flight, enough to keep in level flight do basic turns (very easy). If you can do that, and can get ATC on the radio on your own, you'll be able to make it down. You'll be steered to a suitable airport with a nice big runway and told what to do step by step. No worries.
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
add a comment |
That's way too complicated a question. The best thing you can do is get MS Flight Simulator and learn to fly one of the light planes on it. It even has lessons in it. You can easily learn enough to survive the real deal if that ever happened and you had access to the controls. Instructors these day frequently get new students who've spent time with FSX and are surprisingly advanced right at the start.
Other than that, the most important thing for a passenger to know is how to tune the communications radio to the emergency frequency 121.5 and how to broadcast on it. This will get you in contact with the nearest air traffic unit, wherever you are (they all monitor it) and you would be able to be talked down. It's been done a number of times.
Have your host show you how to control the plane in level flight, enough to keep in level flight do basic turns (very easy). If you can do that, and can get ATC on the radio on your own, you'll be able to make it down. You'll be steered to a suitable airport with a nice big runway and told what to do step by step. No worries.
That's way too complicated a question. The best thing you can do is get MS Flight Simulator and learn to fly one of the light planes on it. It even has lessons in it. You can easily learn enough to survive the real deal if that ever happened and you had access to the controls. Instructors these day frequently get new students who've spent time with FSX and are surprisingly advanced right at the start.
Other than that, the most important thing for a passenger to know is how to tune the communications radio to the emergency frequency 121.5 and how to broadcast on it. This will get you in contact with the nearest air traffic unit, wherever you are (they all monitor it) and you would be able to be talked down. It's been done a number of times.
Have your host show you how to control the plane in level flight, enough to keep in level flight do basic turns (very easy). If you can do that, and can get ATC on the radio on your own, you'll be able to make it down. You'll be steered to a suitable airport with a nice big runway and told what to do step by step. No worries.
answered 6 hours ago
John K
14.5k11544
14.5k11544
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
Sure, I could invest dozens or hundreds of hours in a flight sim, but I'm asking what the first things to know are for someone who doesn't want to invest that much time in learning to fly. :-) +1 for the rest of the answer, though!
– jvriesem
2 hours ago
add a comment |
ATC has successfully talked down folks with zero experience in GA planes, and if there's one thing you need to learn, it's how to call ATC so they can give you that help. Any pilot would be happy to teach you this, and it should only take a few minutes while you're sitting in the plane before departure. Anything you know beyond that will make ATC's help a lot easier to understand and get you safely on the ground that much faster, but that's the bare minimum.
My recommendation is a "discovery flight" at a nearby flight school; that will teach you far more of the basic skills you'd need to survive than days of looking for tips online. Flight sim time would save money if you're interested in becoming a pilot, but otherwise I wouldn't bother; you need to actually sit in a real plane, touch real buttons and knobs and levers, and feel how a real plane reacts--with someone at your side explaining the key points along the way. I learned every one of the things on your list and more, plus made my first landing, in that one hour lesson.
FWIW, it doesn't matter if that discovery flight is in a Cessna and your emergency happens in a Mooney, or whatever. For light planes, most of the differences border on cosmetic for emergency purposes. Once you know what to look for and why, it shouldn't take much to recognize the important controls and instruments in any other light plane. Again, any pilot you're flying with should be happy to explain the differences if you don't pick them up on your own; an instructor is only needed when you're starting from zero.
If you'll be flying GA a lot, particularly in the same plane and/or with the same pilot, look into "Pinch Hitter" courses; they'll cost quite a bit more than a simple discovery flight, but they're worth every penny if you'll be flying often enough for real concerns about emergencies.
add a comment |
ATC has successfully talked down folks with zero experience in GA planes, and if there's one thing you need to learn, it's how to call ATC so they can give you that help. Any pilot would be happy to teach you this, and it should only take a few minutes while you're sitting in the plane before departure. Anything you know beyond that will make ATC's help a lot easier to understand and get you safely on the ground that much faster, but that's the bare minimum.
My recommendation is a "discovery flight" at a nearby flight school; that will teach you far more of the basic skills you'd need to survive than days of looking for tips online. Flight sim time would save money if you're interested in becoming a pilot, but otherwise I wouldn't bother; you need to actually sit in a real plane, touch real buttons and knobs and levers, and feel how a real plane reacts--with someone at your side explaining the key points along the way. I learned every one of the things on your list and more, plus made my first landing, in that one hour lesson.
FWIW, it doesn't matter if that discovery flight is in a Cessna and your emergency happens in a Mooney, or whatever. For light planes, most of the differences border on cosmetic for emergency purposes. Once you know what to look for and why, it shouldn't take much to recognize the important controls and instruments in any other light plane. Again, any pilot you're flying with should be happy to explain the differences if you don't pick them up on your own; an instructor is only needed when you're starting from zero.
If you'll be flying GA a lot, particularly in the same plane and/or with the same pilot, look into "Pinch Hitter" courses; they'll cost quite a bit more than a simple discovery flight, but they're worth every penny if you'll be flying often enough for real concerns about emergencies.
add a comment |
ATC has successfully talked down folks with zero experience in GA planes, and if there's one thing you need to learn, it's how to call ATC so they can give you that help. Any pilot would be happy to teach you this, and it should only take a few minutes while you're sitting in the plane before departure. Anything you know beyond that will make ATC's help a lot easier to understand and get you safely on the ground that much faster, but that's the bare minimum.
My recommendation is a "discovery flight" at a nearby flight school; that will teach you far more of the basic skills you'd need to survive than days of looking for tips online. Flight sim time would save money if you're interested in becoming a pilot, but otherwise I wouldn't bother; you need to actually sit in a real plane, touch real buttons and knobs and levers, and feel how a real plane reacts--with someone at your side explaining the key points along the way. I learned every one of the things on your list and more, plus made my first landing, in that one hour lesson.
FWIW, it doesn't matter if that discovery flight is in a Cessna and your emergency happens in a Mooney, or whatever. For light planes, most of the differences border on cosmetic for emergency purposes. Once you know what to look for and why, it shouldn't take much to recognize the important controls and instruments in any other light plane. Again, any pilot you're flying with should be happy to explain the differences if you don't pick them up on your own; an instructor is only needed when you're starting from zero.
If you'll be flying GA a lot, particularly in the same plane and/or with the same pilot, look into "Pinch Hitter" courses; they'll cost quite a bit more than a simple discovery flight, but they're worth every penny if you'll be flying often enough for real concerns about emergencies.
ATC has successfully talked down folks with zero experience in GA planes, and if there's one thing you need to learn, it's how to call ATC so they can give you that help. Any pilot would be happy to teach you this, and it should only take a few minutes while you're sitting in the plane before departure. Anything you know beyond that will make ATC's help a lot easier to understand and get you safely on the ground that much faster, but that's the bare minimum.
My recommendation is a "discovery flight" at a nearby flight school; that will teach you far more of the basic skills you'd need to survive than days of looking for tips online. Flight sim time would save money if you're interested in becoming a pilot, but otherwise I wouldn't bother; you need to actually sit in a real plane, touch real buttons and knobs and levers, and feel how a real plane reacts--with someone at your side explaining the key points along the way. I learned every one of the things on your list and more, plus made my first landing, in that one hour lesson.
FWIW, it doesn't matter if that discovery flight is in a Cessna and your emergency happens in a Mooney, or whatever. For light planes, most of the differences border on cosmetic for emergency purposes. Once you know what to look for and why, it shouldn't take much to recognize the important controls and instruments in any other light plane. Again, any pilot you're flying with should be happy to explain the differences if you don't pick them up on your own; an instructor is only needed when you're starting from zero.
If you'll be flying GA a lot, particularly in the same plane and/or with the same pilot, look into "Pinch Hitter" courses; they'll cost quite a bit more than a simple discovery flight, but they're worth every penny if you'll be flying often enough for real concerns about emergencies.
answered 48 mins ago
StephenS
1,821113
1,821113
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flying a plane, specially a small one requires a lot a practice, but if you find your self in this situation, and assuming is a small prop, complex twin engine aircraft (Variable prop, retractable landing gear).
Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
all the controls are in the front panel, 3 levers in the mid control panel, black for thrust, blue for prop, red for fuel, don't touch red and blue, move black, back to reduce power and forward to increase
How could I contact air traffic control?
usually on the yoke is a small button (ptt) press it and talk, or by the microphone, set on the radio the frequency 121.50
What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
try to maintain level wings, aim for an airport
What rate of descent is too dangerous?
try to maintain between 500 to 700 fpm rate of descent
How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
depends on the aircraft, usually black rounded knob on the panel, usually on the right side, it moves up and down, look for it.
How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
the airspeed indicator has colors, try to maintain the speed on the green band
How might I determine a good angle of attack?
it depends on the speed, and configuration, but a good indication is the rate of descent and constant speed, aim for 500 fpm descent maintaining speed on the green band
safe flights
add a comment |
flying a plane, specially a small one requires a lot a practice, but if you find your self in this situation, and assuming is a small prop, complex twin engine aircraft (Variable prop, retractable landing gear).
Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
all the controls are in the front panel, 3 levers in the mid control panel, black for thrust, blue for prop, red for fuel, don't touch red and blue, move black, back to reduce power and forward to increase
How could I contact air traffic control?
usually on the yoke is a small button (ptt) press it and talk, or by the microphone, set on the radio the frequency 121.50
What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
try to maintain level wings, aim for an airport
What rate of descent is too dangerous?
try to maintain between 500 to 700 fpm rate of descent
How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
depends on the aircraft, usually black rounded knob on the panel, usually on the right side, it moves up and down, look for it.
How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
the airspeed indicator has colors, try to maintain the speed on the green band
How might I determine a good angle of attack?
it depends on the speed, and configuration, but a good indication is the rate of descent and constant speed, aim for 500 fpm descent maintaining speed on the green band
safe flights
add a comment |
flying a plane, specially a small one requires a lot a practice, but if you find your self in this situation, and assuming is a small prop, complex twin engine aircraft (Variable prop, retractable landing gear).
Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
all the controls are in the front panel, 3 levers in the mid control panel, black for thrust, blue for prop, red for fuel, don't touch red and blue, move black, back to reduce power and forward to increase
How could I contact air traffic control?
usually on the yoke is a small button (ptt) press it and talk, or by the microphone, set on the radio the frequency 121.50
What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
try to maintain level wings, aim for an airport
What rate of descent is too dangerous?
try to maintain between 500 to 700 fpm rate of descent
How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
depends on the aircraft, usually black rounded knob on the panel, usually on the right side, it moves up and down, look for it.
How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
the airspeed indicator has colors, try to maintain the speed on the green band
How might I determine a good angle of attack?
it depends on the speed, and configuration, but a good indication is the rate of descent and constant speed, aim for 500 fpm descent maintaining speed on the green band
safe flights
flying a plane, specially a small one requires a lot a practice, but if you find your self in this situation, and assuming is a small prop, complex twin engine aircraft (Variable prop, retractable landing gear).
Where might I expect to find certain, key controls?
all the controls are in the front panel, 3 levers in the mid control panel, black for thrust, blue for prop, red for fuel, don't touch red and blue, move black, back to reduce power and forward to increase
How could I contact air traffic control?
usually on the yoke is a small button (ptt) press it and talk, or by the microphone, set on the radio the frequency 121.50
What kind of terrain should I aim for, if possible?
try to maintain level wings, aim for an airport
What rate of descent is too dangerous?
try to maintain between 500 to 700 fpm rate of descent
How to deploy landing gear? (What might this button look like?!)
depends on the aircraft, usually black rounded knob on the panel, usually on the right side, it moves up and down, look for it.
How to control the aircraft speed, and how slow is too slow?
the airspeed indicator has colors, try to maintain the speed on the green band
How might I determine a good angle of attack?
it depends on the speed, and configuration, but a good indication is the rate of descent and constant speed, aim for 500 fpm descent maintaining speed on the green band
safe flights
answered 3 hours ago
Carlos Norena
511
511
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
Similar question (but not necessarily a duplicate): Pilot passed out in a small GA plane. What can a passenger do?
– Tanner Swett
8 hours ago
Welcome to aviation.SE! As Tanner said, we have a very similar question already; it would probably be helpful if you could add something about how your question is different, otherwise people may vote to close yours as a duplicate.
– Pondlife
4 hours ago
Thanks to @TannerSwett for pointing that out — it's definitely close! Whereas that question was intended for somebody familiar with planes (e.g. "initiated to fly a plane" and "100s of hours on flight sims"), my question is intended for somebody with essentially zero experience with planes: I don't know how to turn an engine on/off, or how to operate the radio. I expect that the answer for these questions would be different based on the different levels of familiarity with aircraft. I'm also interested what people would consider most immediately important.
– jvriesem
3 hours ago
@jvriesem You have to assume some familiarity and knowledge, not least because there is no single standardised cockpit layout when it comes to knobs and switches. Many knobs and switches have labels, but they are very abbreviated or technical. Unlike cars where you have almost (but not entirely) identical controls laid out relative to the driver which are sufficient for complete control; the only familiar controls in the pilot's seat that are (almost) always in the same position are the yoke, throttle and pedals, but those alone are not sufficient if you hope to land in one piece.
– aerobot
10 mins ago
You may find this question relevant: Why are the cockpit controls of airplanes so complicated?
– aerobot
7 mins ago