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Beyond Proficient: IFR Series | Stabilized IFR Approach 

Air Safety Institute
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Become a better, safer pilot with the AOPA Air Safety Institute’s Beyond Proficient: IFR video series. Whether you’re instrument-rated or recently enrolled in instrument training, you’ll learn tips and tricks to master complex instrument flying aspects. This video reviews the importance of flying a stabilized instrument approach. You’ll get insights into how to recapture situational awareness and identify and deal with task saturation during an IFR approach.
PART TWO: • Beyond Proficient: IFR...
Check out FlightInsight (Dan’s) channel: / @flightinsight9111
Click here for the PDF version of the sample SOP profile: bit.ly/BP-IFRStabilizedApproach
The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA) is the largest community of pilots in the world, providing aviation advocacy, education & inspiration. AOPA has represented the freedom to fly for all pilots since 1939. To learn more about becoming a member visit www.aopa.org/jointoday.
Check out the Air Safety Institute Website:
www.aopa.org/training-and-saf...
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/ aopa
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/ flywithaopa
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#aopa #flywithaopa #aviation #pilot #flying

Опубликовано:

 

8 фев 2023

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Комментарии : 79   
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
Click here for the PDF version of the sample SOP profile: bit.ly/BP-IFRStabilizedApproach
@thomasmennella5501
@thomasmennella5501 Год назад
I guess AOPA realized what the rest of us already knew: that Dan at FlightInsight is producing some of the best aviation tutorials currently on RU-vid. Thank you Dan and AOPA - two of my favorite aviation resources (with Juan in a very very close third place!)
@joesillamanrs7189
@joesillamanrs7189 Год назад
Dan is literally The Man with these videos.
@arctain1
@arctain1 Год назад
Agreed - Dan sets the bar for every other Electronic Ground School - and very, very few live up to his standard
@perfectimpulsivity9348
@perfectimpulsivity9348 Год назад
This is very true!!
@mwp1088
@mwp1088 Год назад
Couldn’t agree more. I’m training for my instrument and love all these tips. Thanks Dan and AOPA!
@davidrivera7069
@davidrivera7069 10 месяцев назад
He is the reason to pay for RU-vid. I am re watching all his IFR videos.
@YourFriendlyGApilot
@YourFriendlyGApilot Год назад
Ha, i started the video and thought "wait, this is not the Flight insight channel what's happening?!" LOL. Well done AirSafety Institute you've picked the very best RU-vid Flight instruction channel!
@bcd5024
@bcd5024 Год назад
Great content Dan! Glad you linked up with the safety institute!
@newdistrictmedia6034
@newdistrictmedia6034 Год назад
Dan is my old CFI. This is awesome!
@ingramleedy
@ingramleedy Год назад
Dan provides a clear, simple, but yet detailed approach to teaching. I've taken all his courses for my own pilot journey!
@antiquehealbot6543
@antiquehealbot6543 Год назад
Great to see Dan here. I love it.
@thomasyuhas
@thomasyuhas Год назад
Dan your content is always spot on! Flightinsight has been my number one resource for this IFR student pilot. Thank you for your time and effort.
@jimjernigan3670
@jimjernigan3670 Год назад
FlightInsight videos are awesome. Very detailed, yet clear and easy to understand. AOPA would do well to have you make many more!
@ronsflightsimlab9512
@ronsflightsimlab9512 Месяц назад
Great to hear you're at the ASI!
@drewmyers4241
@drewmyers4241 Год назад
As an instrument rated pilot who doesn't fly approaches as often as I would like to, I needed to see this. Thanks for another great video!
@flyinandjammin
@flyinandjammin Год назад
Great work as always, Dan! And congrats on ASI recognizing your fantastic teaching chops. Hopefully they're paying you! :)
@karlsandin4515
@karlsandin4515 Год назад
Dan is the real deal.
@ramonj.hontanon7720
@ramonj.hontanon7720 Год назад
Great move by the ASI. FlightInsight is the gold standard in one-line ground school content right now. Nobody goes as deep, but yet, explains concepts with such a structured, intuitive delivery. Dan is making aviation safer with his work, which lines up perfectly with ASI's charter. Kudos!
@everettengineers4603
@everettengineers4603 Год назад
Is that FlightInsight?! Please do more with him!
@panthros7395
@panthros7395 Год назад
FlightInsight is amazing as always! It is great to see the collaboration with AOPA!!! I hope there is more to come in the series.
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
More to come!
@luciaguilera7068
@luciaguilera7068 Год назад
Excellent! Thanks!! I like how you can see the runway on the PFD👏
@freddyfreeloader1200
@freddyfreeloader1200 Год назад
Thanks for the structure to take it to the next level. I’m in the middle of IFR training now with no autopilot so this is great.
@r3kthoops750
@r3kthoops750 Год назад
Great video and excited for the series 👍
@hannibaltexter
@hannibaltexter Год назад
This guy is a great teacher. AOPA, please bring back case studies.
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
We just released one! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-QdbR3Jba7A4.html
@jdl2327
@jdl2327 6 месяцев назад
So cool! I fly to GVL pretty often, cool to see you’re around there too!
@GyrocopterGirl
@GyrocopterGirl Год назад
Great Video :-)
@raccoonair
@raccoonair Год назад
Well presented; thanks for sharing.
@Vejitasei
@Vejitasei Год назад
Thanks, good refresher and repeat or core concepts. Just got my Instrument rating in Oct 2021 and I really (and I mean really) love hand flying approaches. Not sure why, just fun. Live in the Seattle area so lots of good practice conditions during the fall (before the freezing level drops, keeping me grounded).
@ThomasSmartt
@ThomasSmartt 7 месяцев назад
Dan!!!! Love your stuff man.
@paulkorpas9988
@paulkorpas9988 Год назад
Outstanding info!!!👍👍
@MTBAviator
@MTBAviator 8 дней назад
Great video…
@Maynardtkrebs
@Maynardtkrebs Год назад
Excellent !
@jakew9887
@jakew9887 Год назад
Great video. Thanks
@rnelson299
@rnelson299 Год назад
Great video, nicely timed given that I’ll be working on my CFII in the near future.
@paultemple3859
@paultemple3859 Год назад
I thought I recognized that voice from when I was prepping for my check ride. Thanks for putting this together, it was really informative and insightful.
@av8ionUSMC
@av8ionUSMC Год назад
Not a pilot, seasoned controller though. Great video! Like the advice to ask for delay vector or be boxed back around to buy some more time for whatever reason. That could save your life. Don’t ever hesitate to ask, even if controller may sound annoyed (but hopefully not). Doesn’t happen often but occasionally my turn to final/intercept is not good and I’d rather set someone up for the safest approach possible.
@airplanegeek893
@airplanegeek893 Год назад
This is great content. Great move by ASI. Thanks for making this interesting videos.
@JustSayN2O
@JustSayN2O Год назад
What's the deal with that 2+ story apartment building right before the approach end of RWY 8 ???
@mxcollin95
@mxcollin95 10 месяцев назад
Great stuff!!! 🤙
@andik2329
@andik2329 Год назад
As a retired military pilot I suggest to do one step at a time, ie read the clearance back then turn, once rolled out decent. In other words: Don't make a descending turn while talking to ATC.
@M0ToR
@M0ToR 10 месяцев назад
thank you
@loupitou06fl
@loupitou06fl Год назад
Excellent video. Question: at the FAF, you mention reducing power and maintaining the pitch up to bleed up airspeed in order to pu the flaps. But with the autopilot activated and in approach mode, how do you hold the pitch ? Isn't the autopilot going to trim to keep the vertical speed you entered ?
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
With the autopilot activated, the autopilot will pitch the aircraft as appropriate to either maintain level flight or follow the glide slope down.
@HectorWPadilla
@HectorWPadilla Год назад
👏👏👏
@timothyearnest131
@timothyearnest131 6 месяцев назад
At (7:15) it is saying to set missed approach top altitude. It is probably best to set first altitude constraint. Reference KTEB ILS 19 missed approach instructions. Cross BUBGE at 1500’ then climb 3000. Not very common but there’s a reason! Setting top altitude you will fly through 1500’ maybe before the fix. Altitude bust and possibly traffic separation problems with KEWR (jet airliners). Also ref. Missed approaches for KSEA ILS 16 L,C,R have crossing at or below. Otherwise good video.
@Hanna144
@Hanna144 Год назад
Great video, very similar to things I was doing on the multi for my IFR fligth test - and very useful now that's done and I'm back to flying approaches in a Warrior. Is that graphic available as a PDF?
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
Hey there! We got you covered. bit.ly/BP-IFRStabilizedApproach
@Hanna144
@Hanna144 Год назад
@@AirSafetyInstitute Thanks!
@rbrt2130
@rbrt2130 Год назад
Thanks for the video! What Flight SIM did you use for this demonstration?
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020
@alk672
@alk672 Год назад
On the missed, do we want to maintain the final approach course heading or the heading that autopilot used to maintain the localizer course like you recommend? What's the legal meaning of "climb straight ahead"?
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
From an instrument flying handbook point of view, we want to be on that course. What ever heading allowed you to hold the localizer is the one you want outbound. Drift is a bad thing when you can’t see obstacles in the clouds.
@lyingcat9022
@lyingcat9022 Год назад
I believe the missed portion of the approach is equally important and easily as challenging probably more so(whole lot happening in a short period of time). I’m wondering why you guys chose to omit that section of your SOP in this video?
@N1611n
@N1611n Год назад
Always have a map in your head on approach.
@jamesbraun7709
@jamesbraun7709 Год назад
In a 172 with standard instrument radios I made a few IFR approach and landings . I requested vectors to the localizer , entered the clouds at 4,500 , was guided to the localizer , entered the outer marker , kept my glide slope needles squared and at 400 feet popped out of the clouds on final and landed . It really isn't that hard at least for me .
@restrepo88
@restrepo88 Год назад
Watch out for top gun over here
@Mr_Bones.
@Mr_Bones. 11 месяцев назад
Thanks for letting us know, Maverick. We’ll let you take all the ILS approaches in to North Korea.
@jamesbraun7709
@jamesbraun7709 11 месяцев назад
@@Mr_Bones. My call sign was dipstick .
@smudent2010
@smudent2010 Год назад
I want some McDonalds now...
@swolepilot
@swolepilot Год назад
thought I was the only who saw it also
@JimAllen-Persona
@JimAllen-Persona Год назад
"You make a Big Mac the same way in California and Maryland" Not true. One gets mustard, one doesnt.😀
@ItsAllAboutGuitar
@ItsAllAboutGuitar Год назад
@@JimAllen-Persona Which one gets mustard?
@JimAllen-Persona
@JimAllen-Persona Год назад
Not a pilot here... so there's no downwind leg required on an IFR clearance? Sorry to be so obtuse. Also, why turn off the autopilot? Great video, thanks.
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute Год назад
Correct, most instrument approaches are straight-in to a runway. It is important to turn off the autopilot before landing because almost all general aviation autopilots are unable to fully land the aircraft.
@edcew8236
@edcew8236 Год назад
A holding pattern will take a lot of attention and not necessarily give you breathing room to figure out the first problem. Also, "ARM" isn't well-defined in all the manuals. You might have stated what ARM does in this system. And at many airports with jet traffic, ATC may appreciate a decelerating approach. On an ILS, is it decision altitude or decision height?
@Mr_Bones.
@Mr_Bones. 11 месяцев назад
Student instrument pilot here. Would someone kindly explain why Dan used 80 knots IAS for the final approach when the TPS and approach plate use 90 ground speed as standard? Is it a personal minimum preference or advanced technique? I also understand that 90GS is for non precision MAP timing, but I thought it also applied in general for all approaches.
@AirSafetyInstitute
@AirSafetyInstitute 11 месяцев назад
Hey there, There is no requirement to fly the approach at 90 knots. Dan chose 80 knots since it allows a little bit more time to get fully configured if you break out at minimums.
@ryanlegrand141
@ryanlegrand141 Год назад
Why not have the aircraft fully configured and on speed for landing by 1000'? The aircraft I've trained on has a final approach speed of 65kt, and I always thought it bizarre to be taught to fly an approach at flaps 10°, 90kt all the way to mins then make a last minute configuration and speed change which to me is the definition of an unstabalized approach
@JimMork
@JimMork 11 месяцев назад
This is interesting. At a very young age I thought being a flyboy would be the best. But years teach a person maybe those youthful enthusiasm reflect an imperfect understanding who you really are. That being said, the comment that answering ATC with its rapid fire quality may add to workload saturation. So hearing that, my instant question is, hey, this is the computer age. Can't software just emulate this forcing pilots to PRACTICE absorbing this and let the mind respond in a safe way? In the 1950s-60s, there really wasn't a substitute than learning on the job. But 70 years later, simulators and even personal computer software can "program" the pilot brain to slide into exactly what normally happens. Heck, controllers can WRITE the software!
@Tom-tk3du
@Tom-tk3du Год назад
IFR pilots take notice...please. Let me tell you something about spatial disorientation that I NEVER hear anyone talk about, but it was enough to convince me to never get my instrument rating. Many years ago I was at Universal City in LA taking a tram ride through the park. We stopped inside this round tunnel that was painted white with a black helical stripe painted through the length of the tunnel. The tram was dead still. Then the tunnel began rotating around us. Within seconds my head was slammed hard over onto my left shoulder and with all my strength I could not raise my head to the vertical. I was effectively paralyzed. The tram was right side up and stationary the entire time!! I believe this probably occurs in many such accidents attributed to spatial disorientation....one can become completely physically incapacitated and unable to manipulate the controls. Imho, single pilot IFR is simply too dangerous, especially if one is not aware of this risk. It's not simply a matter of flying the instruments. If one is paralyzed, you're probably going to die.
@lyingcat9022
@lyingcat9022 Год назад
Don’t do anything dumb, different or dangerous. I like to emphasize the “different” aspect. It’s very easy to F up when doing something different from anything you’ve trained before. Everything is way harder to first time around.
@danielking104
@danielking104 Год назад
Accountability is tough when you are by yourself. Airline is much easier than a 172.
@rinzler9775
@rinzler9775 Год назад
Or a old 152 with no autopilot or MFD.
@Dg-zj6jo
@Dg-zj6jo Год назад
i think you need to have ifr to fly period
@jamesbraun7709
@jamesbraun7709 11 месяцев назад
N. Korea would be the easiest. . If the rocket misses just follow trail down to the launch site . From there on you are on your own , don't expect to see happy people .
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