Three Basics to INSTANTLY impress your Flight Instructor.
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- čas přidán 15. 08. 2020
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In this flight training video, I will show you three trim, rudder, and yoke techniques that will instantly impress your flight instructor. Use these the next time you fly and airplane it will be instantly obvious to your instructor, check pilot or DPE. Please enjoy The Finer Points!
I've got videos and podcasts coming week over week in 2020. Stay tuned to the Facebook page for all the updates and for more information on The Finer Points visit I've got videos and podcasts coming week over week in 2020. Stay tuned to the Facebook page for all the updates and for more information on The Finer Points visit our website -
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@@TheFinerPoints I hate to disagree, but a horse has a mind of its own, and they don't comply with your commands when you don't want to.
Flying a plane is WAY MORE like driving a car than it is like riding a horse.
A way to consider what I'm saying: 5% of the time the horse won't respond to your inputs at all.
Only way that can happen in a plane is if something is broken, and that only happens WAY LESS than 5% of the time lol..unless you're flying a 1950 seaplane
@@jonslg240 Well, yeah, we disagree but that's ok, I still like you 🙂. A plane has a mind of its own too and will "eat the grass" when you're not looking. Trust me, as a CFI, you'll get A LOT more mileage (ha) out of disconnecting the automobile from the mind of your students. I've been riding since I was 9 years old and teaching flying for the last 20 years -- the analogy has been very powerful for me. In a car when you take your foot off the gas, the car stops. In a car, you need constant inputs to keep it on the road. When a horse is running it's pretty much "hold on loosely and don't let go" with minor adjustments along the way -- that right there is worth the comparison but it goes a lot deeper.
@@jonslg240 I'd think of that like, you'll do what you need to to get the horse to comply, you're the boss, make it happen. It's the same in a plane. When turbulence rolls you and a subtle input won't get it back, make it happen.
Im trying to impress my AI flight instructor in Microsoft Flight Sim 2020.
Nice. Good one man.
Lol same
same fam
Good joke but it actually re-ignited my passion for flying and i will pursue a pilots license, which has been my lifelong dream. Thank you Microsoft Flight Sim 2020
SolidMGSnake same
My instructor asked me, "Do you drive your car with that death grip?" I said that I usually only used two fingers. He said, "Great, do that here." As for level flying, he always preached flying smarter, not harder. Trim became my friend. As for the left-turning tendencies, I was trying to use the yoke instead of the rudder. He cured that in one minute. At times, as we were in the 150 and/or 172, I marveled at the fact that he was an old Vietnam era Navy A-6 Intruder pilot. He had the personality of a porcupine, but damn, he trained me well.
Curious what is porcupine personality
I am highly offended, speaking as a porcupine.
@@drushkyy2017 Prickly
and did he also bang on the side of the plane and ask you, "Hey you hear that? It's the BALL TRYING TO GET BACK IN THE PLANE!"
Describe the instructor’s personality as that of a porcupine, yet your last name is Quillen….👀
🤷🏽♂️🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♂️🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♂️🤷🏽♀️
I can't even drive a car and this comes in my recommendation.
RP-FA TV do you use a simulator?
@@TheFinerPoints no ez
RP-FA TV weird. maybe the algorithm thinks you need a new hobby 😜
@@TheFinerPoints The youtube algorithm are one of the most mysterious thing on earth.
I took off and landed a Cessna before I got my drivers permit.
Wow. As a 40 year CFI and soon to be retired airline guy, I must say this is one of the best and most concise presentations I have seen. I wish I could communicate to students as effectively and to the point as this. Great job.
Thank you! It means a lot to hear that especially from experienced pilots.
Can't wait to be able to get to you guys status. Been watching flight videos since the early 90s. King instructional and love what you do. Especially making sure we as wanna B's have a clear understanding.
Thanks 👍
it also helps to stick the mic into your mouth, some of the amateurs just put it between their lips but for the best sound, inside the mouth is the best.
Wish you a happy retirement. It’s a hard career. Lot of respect for you guys man.
Penuts Thank you. 17-year-old son passed his private check ride yesterday. So excited. Looking forward to watching the next generation’s progressions from the sidelines. 😀
Who else had the .38 Special song playing in their head with "hold on loosely but don't let go"?
Check Six Aviation me. Every time.
@@TheFinerPoints That's it, Jason. As soon as I get the RV-10 built, I'm coming out to Cali and stopping in PSP to say hello.
Besides, I have family in Cali anyway.
Love your videos Jason. Thank you for what you do. You without a doubt have helped make me a better pilot.
"If you cling to tightly, you might lose control."
Totally!
I love how quick and to the point your videos are. I didn't have to watch you eat breakfast, drive to the airport, pump gas, check into a hotel room, nothing. Just jumped right into the topic.
That whole "death grip" thing applies to cars too.
In his memoirs the racing driver Fangio said he never won anything till a friend told him to hold the steering wheel just with a finger and thumb from each hand. Instantly his control of the car improved and he became a champion.
Same thing with dirtbikes, the bike will go where it wants to go, just like with everything else. You can power through mistakes with a death grip, but again that's with everything else as well.
@@echooutdoors2149 I'd say it's even more important on street bikes, in a way. A dirt bike kind of trains you pretty quick not to death grip the bars, but on a street bike you can ride for YEARS and not get the memo. But once something does go awry on the street, man does that death grip put you down fast. Rather than "powering through" the pothole or whatever, the death grip turns what would be a quick steering wiggle into a whole-bike death wobble that ends with you landing on your neck. I've had a couple wobbles that I just allowed to pass, which I'm absolutely sure would have been a crash if I hadn't started on the dirt and learned to go with the flow. Even with blown shocks on a vintage tractor, bikes usually do the right thing when you just leave them alone.
Yes, but you need to have a good hold of the wheel when you are on the track. I went to car racing school and they told me both hands on the 9 and 3 on the wheel. Hard to explain. But you had to have a good hold of the wheel to make the turn into the apex and out of the apex. You had to look ahead also.
@Echo Outdoors All bikes in general. Understanding the physics operating on every movement of the motorcycle, be it cruising, accelerating, braking, leaning, swerving, etc will help you command the bike to do what you want instead of fighting to force it. Obviously the type of bike and terrain plays a role too but the basics are the same.
@@kimberlywentworth9160 yeahhhh i agree, idt that'd work racing. that shit wears out your forearms sometimes
"Pitch Power and Trim, say it with me brothers and sisters. Like father, son and holy spirit, pitch power and trim." My flight instructor from 35 years ago still haunts me.
Just found this channel. Love how there is a camera pointing at him that makes me feel like I'm actually in the plane and he's instructing me. The angle makes it look just like it really does during a flight lesson
When it comes to vehicle tutorials or instructions like these and using cameras, I find that people who put them in the passenger seat, or at least close to it, makes you feel more like you're there rather than just watching from afar. Definitely makes it more personal.
Instructor is the one who really makes you perfect, I really enjoy my journey with my instructor, I have passed my checkride. Thank you for your three basics.
So I had a light bulb moment during my last flight. We've all heard "trim to relieve pressure" but it never really clicked to me until I released that death grip. Hold on loosely and feel what the airplane is telling you! I like the riding a horse analogy, on point!
Bang-on 👍
He has a stripper pole in his Cessna, dope
LMAO i was thinking similar, going ''what the hell is that for??'' 'wait, no, no, never-mind, i dont wanna know'' rofl
@@Shannonbarnesdr1 where is it?
F-16s don’t actually require a “death grip”, but we understand what you mean.
👍🙌I’m going to switch that analogy. Maybe a “DC-3 death grip” ... still doesn’t sounds as good tho
The Finer Points, Hah! Great vid though. As I throw a pencil to my new students, I always wonder “who came up with that idea?”, but it really does help them ease up on their controls
DC-3s flew themselves.
Earl Barker perhaps but I have a bit of DC-3 time and you must admit, they are heavy on the controls
I was going to say, the F-16 is probably the last plane you'd ever want to death-grip because of that non-moving pressure sensitive stick.
*Me, watching this intently knowing damn well I'm too poor to get my pilot's license*
We are what we think we deserve. Visualize it and go after it. You can get whatever you want, the secret is deciding what that is. Good luck, friend.
Ramsey Adam Clark how that been working for ya
You can do it! It just takes a lot of work, but its worth it in the end if its your dream. I spent 5 years total in the oilfield saving money for my training, and now have a great career in aviation at 33. My education funds were zero out of highschool and I came from a lower income family.
Im 16 and my family is definitely not middle class, but im goin for it, and Ill get there, you should do the same if thats what you want
Join the airforce. It’s free :)
I'm a "that guy" in tip 2..... Glad to finally know what I've been not doing correctly!
Also I think you should do a systems review! I also always thought the big fan on the front of the aircraft was to pull us through the air (thrust) and create a relative wind over the wings.... I was informed by a senior pilot friend in his 70's that was not correct. Its actually the aircraft's air conditioning system, I implored him for an explanation! He simply said regardless of the outside air temp (January or August). When that big fan in the front stops in flight the pilot starts to sweat! 🤔😂
Student pilot here - can totally relate to the "one finger underneath" pain during my earlier parts of training 😂
How about doing a 4 G, negative dive (ideally with a Mig 28 if you can find one)
I would think that impresses the IP a lot more.
I would assume that you don t know what youvare doing and yell at you very loudly i think.
Only if you’re inverted.
@@auxencefromont1989 whoosh
By Mig 28 you mean an F5, right? There's no MiG-28 in the real world.
Dan Slotea it’s a reference to the movie topgun.
Just found your videos and I believe I struck gold. I was a student pilot back in the late 70s, early 80s. Life got in the way and I had to stop just shy of my private. I also had 3 years at Embry Riddle followed by 30 years of enlisted aircrew in the National Guard. I joined a flying club recently and hope to become a flight instructor. At 61 I realize it's late in the game but some dreamed never die.
Never too late! Hi m glad you found us 🙌
It's not late in the game for those who will flourish under your instruction. Hats off to you Sir!
As Steve Hay, one of Australia’s finest woodworkers says, “Don’t do it till you get it right, do it till you can’t get it wrong”. Great tips as usual mate, thank you for your wisdom and great work, 11 out of 10 😎👍
Level Off = ASP(T): Attitude, Speed, Power then Trim. Climb and Descent = P.A.S.T: Power, Attitude, Speed, Trim
During cruise flight, your primary flight control is trim. You will be regularly adjusting trim to maintain constant altitude as your plane’s balance changes due to fuel consumption. To maintain constant altitude, I frequently check the VSI (vertical speed indicator) and trim the plane to help keep it at zero with zero grip force. On bumpy days you have to accept some fluctuations in altitude. But on smooth days, its quite easy to maintain constant altitude this way.
Thanks for the tips, I just had my first flight today and thanks to you the instructor said something like "you don't fly like a new student" referring to me not having a death grip on the yoke!
I've just started my PPL journey. On the first flight, my CFI told me to use throttle to control altitude, and yoke to control speed. Completely changed my understanding and flight controlling.
Even in MSFS, my flying dramatically improved.
Think of it as energy management. The plane has the kind of energy: speed, altitude and fuel. You lose energy due to drag, you gain energy by refueling (or possibly from a strong updraft giving you altitude). The engine concerts the energy stored in the fuel into thrust. If the thrust exactly matches the drag, the plane will fly level. If it exceeds the drag, it will either accelerate or climb. Since you pitch for speed, the plane will accelerate a bit, then start climbing.
Same for approach and landing. You slowly bleed off energy in the form of altitude and airspeed until you touch down.
Gotta say that my first trick to impress my instructor would be a barrel roll lol
bring back memory's of my training days back in the 90's...
These 3 tips were the ones my two instructors insisted the most about.
Same here. My instructor had me flying with just two fingers on the corner of the yoke.
Boy, you’re reminding me of things that dominated my mind 40 yrs ago. Nice
Love these videos Jason. Keep em coming
Great tips, great reminders too!!
Huge! Thanks Jason.
Great advice, as per usual. Thanks Jason!
Thanks! These are great tips!
Great practial tips! thanks.
THANK YOU!
Thank you Jason for sharing those tips, it's always great to watch Your videos and always something to learn.
thank you so much , a perfect video
Tip #2 is extremely helpful. Thank you!
You're a brilliant man! Thanks
Excellent.
Thank you.
Great video and great tips many thanks
What a joy to watch, thanks for the vid 👍
I was the 700th "like". It has been a decade since I have piloted a plane. Discovered your channel today and have binge watched this morning and am finding myself sensing or rather remembering sensations of stalls, turns, etc. from just watching. Thank you.
Tip #2 rocks, thanks Jason
Very cool points. Thanks
Great stuff. Number 2 was new to me!
Brilliant!!!
Superb video. Thanks for doing it.
Thanks a lot!
Excellent tips and loving your app as well. Thanks for posting!
Thank you for those tips, I’ll definitely try them out
Great video. The problem with leveling off is something I struggle with so can't wait to try this. Thank you for the tips. Also, other comments, really appreciate the insight from other pilots as well.
How to impress your flight instructor
Step 1: fly with no hands
Thank You!!!! CFI Mac
Thank you for putting this up.
My pleasure!
Excellent presentation! After many years as a B727-200 flight engineer, I have decided to go full blown flight training for my commercial license package. Your tutorial was great! Thansk a lot!
Great video, definitely three things I use with my students, especially the first tip!
Great explanation, thanks!
Very helpful
Fabulous video.
Thank you sir
That was helpful
Great lesson Sir! Thanks
Love the 38 Special reference!
Very interesting tips for improving pilots skills ! 👍🏼 thanks for sharing !
Thanks, will help keep some of the rust off, also answer some questions I never ask.
Loved the level off after climb tips.
Really nice tips! I didn't think about the one to maintain the altitude before. Amazing!
Tip #2 was very helpful. Can't wait to put it into practice.
So good. Thank you, Jason!
🙌
Very cool
Amazing tips 👌
Just did my first solo today had to come back here to say thanks for the vids!
Thanks
really nice video!!
Keep up the great work, Jason! Best regards to SFO
Great tips! You weren’t joking about all 3. I had issues with death grip first 2 lessons then started using finger tips, so helpful. They other 2 I’m still working on. Only 8.0 hours deep but loving all the maneuvers I’m learning!
Thanks for the help! It will probably be very useful! 😄😊
this definitely is filling the missing part in all other pilot training videos. 50.9K subscribers only? i just subscribed. way to go mr awesome instructor. i gotta watch this again to sink in the wisdom.
Thanks for the information, I went up in my first flight some days ago would of helped to know but I’m glad my cfi taught me in the air
Great points! Thanks.
FS2020 will become easier to master now.
Awesome
Good tips. Nice presentation. Much appreciated. Liked and subscribed. BIG THANKS
Finger has you pointing at the altimeter if I'm correct and I clicked thinking that's really basic and if it's things like that I'll probably know all 3. Turned out it was not things like that, instead really good tips. Thank you for this video! Can't wait to have money someday and be able to fly
The number 2 point is me every time. I will try your tip next time.
I developed some bad trim habits with my training aircraft because it had no fairings, and Vy was very close to level cruise speed. If you have access to different aircraft, try flying something a bit more capable with a constant speed prop and cowl flaps, basically something that cruises at a different speed than it climbs. After initially leveling off with elevator and trim, the plane will continue to accelerate in level flight and you'll have to retrim several times to keep from climbing hands off-- watch the VSI for an early indication this is happening. If the aircraft is trimmed correctly for level flight with the cowl flaps open, you can watch the VSI as it loses drag and again starts a slow climb once you close the cowl flaps. Think about why that's happening. It's very good practice, and will break you of this bad habit quickly.
In Canada we are trained to remember APT for climbing, and I found it very helpful. When entering into the clime, first adjust Attitude, then add Power, and finally Trim nose up. When leveling off, we do APT again, but trim the other way.
I like it good to know.
Jason - Great to see you back in the air!
It's great to be back up there!
I really like the pen trick! I had a death grip in my early hours, it was a habit that was hard to break. Now studying my instructor rating I may use this trick, so thank you.
Cool pen. I have one just like it!
Teach me high altitude stuff on the way to key west..
To have lunch!
Erik was impressed!!!
this is actually a usefull reccomendation for once
Just started my PPL and everything you discussed in the video I am currently working on. Getting level trimmed flight and learning my site picture out the window without relying on my instruments.
I have realized that left turns are different than right and I usually have to add a little back pressure to keep the nose from dropping. I don't have the issue on right turns.
I am also learning to not use the death grip. As this was only my second flight I have already started to improve and am learning to not fight the plane. It can be tiring if you do it for an hour!
Oh hay, CZcams brought you back to me! I was listening to your TFP podcast a decade ago while I got my PPL.
These days I only fly FPV quads. The crashes hurt a lot less.
My CFI already thanks you - and we haven't flown yet since this video!!!
Awesome tips! You got yourself a sub good sir!
best advise ever thank you
Glad it was helpful!
althought thee best form of travel i have is A1 bike, its nice to see you giving tips here to the people that fly
62 here, and don't intend to fly, but love this short INFORMATIVE clip! Disorientation crashes I have seen seem to show a fair amount of peeps NOT using the Lindbergh View, so it can't be stressed enough.
thinking of flight school sooner or later so i can fly as a hobby so this video really helped
The video is clear and concise. This is how all CZcams videos should be. Thank you 🤙🏼