One of the advantages of flying twice a day, four days a week is...well, you fly a lot. And when you fly a lot, you learn a lot—especially if your flight instructor spent 20 years in the Navy doing crazy things like landing on aircraft carriers and riding around with suicidal low-flying Germans and thumping Russian bombers.
Don't even act like you don't know what "thumping" is. Trade secret. Nonstandard navy fighter procedure during the Cold War. The trick is to come up beneath a Russian airplane—bomber, preferably—pile on some thrust, and rocket straight up, right in front of him. This has the twofold benefit of (a) scaring the living daylights out of the Commie bastard and (b) forcing him to fly through your shock wave. (Hence the "thump" part.) It's a ticklish business. You've got to leave enough space between yourself (going relatively slow, climbing straight up) and the oncoming Russian bomber (still flying at 450 knots)...or else, WHAM. You can't leave too much space, either, or the "thump" will be more of a "kerpuff."
Spud wasn't the first instructor I landed a Mooney with (that was actually Mr. Mooney); but it was with Spud that I truly refined my technique. All last week he taught me the finer points of landing, and I think I've finally got it down. Let's get the mechanics out of the way. You'll want to be at 100 miles per hour on the downwind leg of the pattern, and on base—
Aw, crap. I haven't explained landing patterns yet, have I? Here:
As I've mentioned before, you'll want to land into the wind. Therefore, when you're flying past the runway (before you make that 180 degree turn to land), you're going downwind, and are therefore on the appropriately-named downwind leg of the pattern. After the downwind, you turn base: 90 degrees to the left (or right, depending). Then you turn final, and land. From the time you're on downwind, abeam of the numbers on the end of the runway, you should be descending steadily.
Got that? Good. Now where was I?
Oh yes. So, in a Mooney, you want to be going 100 miles per hour on downwind; 90 on base; and 80 on final. You'll touch down at about 65. Gear speed (the point at which it's safe to lower the landing gear) is 120 miles or less. Flap speed (the point at which it's safe to lower the—well, you know) is 100 miles or less. Pattern altitude at Apple Valley Airport is 4,000 feet (because the airport itself is at 3,000 feet; pattern altitude is 1,000 feet AGL in this case). It's left traffic for Runway 18 (which means all the turns you make in the pattern will be left turns).
You might want to write some of this down. It'll come in handy later.
You can lower the gear whenever the heck you want. Mooney pilots know a neat little trick that greatly aids them during landings: the Mooney's landing gear can be used as an air brake. Having those big clunky wheels sticking out into the slipstream slows you down something righteous. This is how it's supposed to go: enter the pattern on the downwind leg at 4,000 feet, preferably at 100 miles per hour; lower the gear to help slow yourself down and lose altitude; once you pass the numbers, pump in some flaps (which slow you down more, and also help you stay aloft at slow speeds).
When you reach 3,800 feet MSL, turn your base leg. Keep the speed at 90. Look around carefully to make sure there aren't any fiery airplanes streaking in from the north to land on the runway you're trying to land on. Then turn final. Pump in full flaps. Keep speed at 80. Pull the throttle all the way out. This is so the plane will actually come down to the ground instead of floating forever 100 feet off the deck. If you've judged the distance and altitude right, the plane will just drift on down to the runway (with you keeping an assiduous eye on the airspeed indicator, keeping the plane at 80). When you get to the ground, flare. (That means raise the nose so (a) the plane slows down; (b) the plane touches down on the runway; and (c) the plane touches down on its two main wheels and not the poor little nose wheel.)
I had a dickens of a time getting all this down. For one thing, the airplane I took most of my flight lessons in didn't have retractable landing gear. The gear was always down; I didn't need to worry about it when I was coming in to land. In my complex Mooney, I've got about three more gauges to watch and a few more steps to take. Not to mention that I have to really yank on that Johnson bar to get the gear down. This Johnson, apparently, is even more stiff than the one in Mr. Mooney's plane...
Gradually I nailed it, though. One of my landings with Spud was so good that he said he wanted to patent it. I just sort of floated down, hardly had to flare at all, and touched down so smoothly that you couldn't tell we were on the ground. That's right. Me. The Postman. I landed a Mooney smoothly. Don't you forget it.
Today, during my landing with Mr. Mooney, I did everything right except pulling out all the power. The flaps were down, the gear was down, the speed was perfect...we were just floating forever 50 feet in the air. It was another gentle landing, though, let me tell you. Grandma could've been sitting in the backseat buttering toast, and never would've spilled a crumb.
Now, if I could only figure out how to trim the dang thing properly, I'd be on Cloud 9. Literally.
14 comments:
So let me get this straight...you have to yank the Johnson hard to land the Mooney?
Yes. Very hard. Only it's stiff, see. A lot stiffer than any other Mooney I've yanked a Johnson in.
You have to yank it to take off, too. Unsurprisingly.
LOL. I'm reading Smithy's comment, and your response, and wondering . .
My dirty mind, I guess. I just have to visit Smithy after his comment.
I seem to recall that you were going to walk to the end of the flight line and snap us a pix of your world, and post it here for us to admire.
I won't forget. In fact; I'm already forming the questions I will ask of you for a character in my novel. He's flying to Mexico in a small plane to pick up a load of premium Hashish.
You, my favorite pilot, have just become my insider resource.
Soon, my pretty, soon; I'll have all my questions.
In the mean time: I took your Joumbaba recipe to my local bar over the weekend. Did I mention I live in Numfuck USA?
The local bar was celebrating its move into a new building; complete with carpet on the dance floor, and a DJ dressed straight from the 80's (I love eighties rock by the way) and a hot new bar tender pretty enough the melt any aeronaughts sensibilities.
Before he (she) ordered a drink.
She (bartender thing) had no clue what a Cape Cod was. I ordered this after she said they had no wine (got any zinfendel? What's that?).
Blush? Nope.
Burgundy? Is that wine? No; no wine at all.
And no grapefruit juice. Nobody drinks anything with that in it.
It's been a long time since I was a coctail waitress; but I could have tended bar better than her. I noted all her bottled beer customers had their favorites sitting in front of them.
I guess it was their favorites, and not just what the establishment served.
Then I asked for a slo-comfortable screw. Vodka, orange and grenedine.
OK; fruity enough, or go home.
I showed my friends your recipie, promised I was willing to buy at least two of "those". (I cannot drink tequila, you remember) Nothing stirred the owners to find the grapefruit juice. (I risked DUI at 1:30a to find the grapefruit juice; no luck at the only all night open convenience store).
The bouncer/bar tender/owner caught me everytime I took my tennies off to dance a tush push on the carpet though. Yow baby; he's tuned into his customers.
OK. Next time; we go to my house where I'll have two or three boxes of Peter Vella, U-tube on the computer for the picking, a bottle of grapefruit juice, your recipe; and anything else the girls desire.
You got a plane. Need an invite to play bartender? Male entertainment? Come on payday; we'll have lots of one's.
...........dhole
Oh dear, Postman, my cheeks are burning. I'm all aflutter. Tell me more.
Seriously, you make it sound so easy. And fun. And not a fearful thing at all.
Easy and fun would not be a part of my experience. Fearful would.
"This Johnson, apparently, is even more stiff than the one in Mr. Mooney's..."
It took me 3 tries to read past this line. I know I'm totally a teenager. Giggle, Blush! :)
DH: You'll love Smithy. His above comment doesn't even begin to cover what a funny, witty, excising fellow and superb writer he is. You'll get a kick out of him if you have anything resembling a sense of humor.
Glad somebody picked up on our dirty double-entendre...
I WAS going to get youse all a picture of my world. I missed the perfect opportunity, too. It was last Friday and it seemed like everybody and their brother was flying in from everywhere to have breakfast at my airport. There were Mooneys out on the flight line, and a Cirrus, and a Diamond, and some kind of high-class T-tail Piper, and that lovely taildragging Cessna 170 came back, and...it was gorgeous. And then yesterday I was out walking when (of course) a Gulfstream Jet shinier than Satan's watch fob comes winging in from nowhere. And I missed it. Hmph!
Next time I'll remember to bring my camera.
Ask your hash-running pilot how he intends to get past the ADIZ (Air Defense Identification Zone, at the U.S.-Mexico border).
I'm your favorite pilot??? Awww...I'm all blushy and weepy all of a sudden.
No Cape Cods? No zinfandel? No burgundy? Do they know that if I got ONE SINGLE WINE QUESTION WRONG on my bartender's test I would've failed it? Numbfuck indeed.
So sorry you didn't have much success, friend. Evenings in are definitely the way to go here. You can lay in all the grapefruit juice you want and not have to deal with iggerant barkeeps. Your parties sound just like the ones I had at my cocktail bar in Korea - YouTube on the laptop, a recipe book, a bunch of good friends. Best of times.
I'd love to play bartender. Private parties are where the REAL money is, I hear. Don't know how good I'd be at male entertainment, but I now have an endless stock of Johnson-related stories...heh heh. You flatter me.
propinquity: Glad to hear you say so, friend. I'm worried that I'm boring everyone to tears with this stuff. It is INCREDIBLY fun; and relatively easy once you get the hang of it. Or perhaps I should say "simple"; not necessarily "easy." It's miraculous how soon Fear crawls into the backseat when you know what you're doing. Have you taken/thought about taking flight lessons?
Claire: [evil laugh] Smithy and Postman's Surprise Innuendo Service strikes again!
Oh yeah, well tell me how to make and fly a good paper airplane smart guy!
YAY! Way to go, Postman! You did it! I'm checking out Smithy, too. You guys are downright dirty...lol!
Oh wow I'm so glad I'm not the only person commenting who has a dirty mind. That plane-landing business sounds terribly complicated, but I'm sure it gets easier with practice. Way to go a smooth landing!
WTWA: You've got me there, sir.
Rebel: Thanks! I'm still working on it. It's a work in progress, landing a Mooney. First I wasn't landing straight-on to the runway (scary!). Then I was coming in too steeply. This last landing today I flared a bit early, bounced off the runway, and started pointing her DOWN instead of FORWARD again (great way to hit the propeller on the ground). Yikes...
Jane: That's it exactly. You have to get a feel for it is all. Thanks for the encouragement.
There are SO many airplane-related dirty jokes you can make. I should post a list.
I've always heard that landing is a controlled crash. I think you are dispelling that notion -- it is a well planned, highly executed, tuned, precision, crash on a couple of wheels.
Jerry: Exactly. The trick is just to crash as slowly, gently, and straightly as possible. On the wheels. Thank you for stopping in, sir.
Where does the picture of the crane landing come from?
That was originally from the Guardian:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/gallery/2009/feb/25/sony-photography-natural-history
I don't think I got it from there, though. I think I picked up an attribution-free copy of it someplace. I suppose I should cite the Guardian before they nail me, no?
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