3:28 I was landing like this 11 hours into training adding more back pressure until it stalled and bounced. Then I started transitioning my eyes down the runway and holding it off, slightly nose up, flying it down the runway, letting the plane practically land itself. Really enjoy the external drone shots.
@ryankelley850912 жыл бұрын
I'm a student pilot and I recently figured this out. Just keep slowly bringing the yoke back to to keep the nose at the end of the runway. The less yoke the smoother the landing. When I was flaring at the end, I couldn't get a graceful landing.
@aprendoespanol6833 Жыл бұрын
exactly, it took time for me to find that out too. You are taught to over control and that screws up the landing. In reality, ground effect does most of the job and you have to do very little.
@cryptoslacker-4645 ай бұрын
Do you it any different for a large 747? 🤔 I'm guessing it just looks more extreme because it's suck a long plane 🙂
@CaptainSwoop4 жыл бұрын
For the 54 years I've been involved, the procedure has been called a landing flare. The first landing demonstrated here was an over rotation. If a student hauled the yoke fully back to flare, then the presumed prior demonstration / briefing was inadequate. Rearranging noun's wont resolve an over rotation.
@MrSiciro4 жыл бұрын
I think what he is trying to say is that bad landing start in the brain. I made the mistakes he was talking about many times in the beginning until i starting thinking about it differently
@ramimehyar4814 жыл бұрын
Perfectly said
@zagi20074 жыл бұрын
Very well said. He is redefining the word flare to prove his point. Just keep the word as always has been and explain the right way to do it.
@adoniramvaliente80494 жыл бұрын
I agree
@megadavis53774 жыл бұрын
popee, when you say, "... was an over-rotation" do you actually mean, "...was an over-flare?" If not, then where exactly does the rotation stop and the flare begin? Or is it the other way around: flare first and then rotation?
@AmericanGi3703 жыл бұрын
I have to be honest. I think the point you're making is spot on and you have an incredibly brilliant way of explaining it, but at the same time I think it's not a good choice of words to tell students you're not flaring, what you demonstrated was the correct way to flare.
@MzeroAFlightTraining3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the feedback!
@AMB955Bosbok29 күн бұрын
I agree, the word “transitioning” is never ending. As a 24 year CFMEII that flies jets, light aircraft and warbirds, the OP’s wording is incorrect. You descend, round out and flare. The flare is not an over rotation, it’s a gentle increase of the AOA until the stall. If a flare is done correctly, you will not balloon. I’m sorry but the word “transitioning” has no meaning in this context.
@tyler-zw7yh4 жыл бұрын
Landing really clicked for me when my instructor made me do a no flap landing and said, “the goal is not to land it’s to get into ground effect” and all the floating I did with no flaps really helped me get the feel down.
@aviator_thomas4 жыл бұрын
Good point. You don't decide when to land, the plane does. You just have to offer the ground effect and power to idle. People who decide when the plane has to land end up with a broken front wheel. 🙃
@thomasw.richter5212 Жыл бұрын
Once more. You are absolutely right! „Flaring“ often leads to over rotation. Therefore it‘s quibbling to differentiate between flare and over rotation. Your technic is the best one and flaring is for big airplanes. As student I was told: flare! Now I am usimg you technic for my C182 and everything looks better. It is simply not important whether the nose wheel is 2 inches or 20 inches aboves the ground when the main wheels are touching the ground. But not „flaring“ leads to better control. Thank you.😊
@tomsparks32592 жыл бұрын
When I was in flight training 25 years ago, I did this very thing. It wasn't what I was taught, but it produced smoother landings though at a slightly higher speed. The key was making the transition late enough to get the airplane very close to the runway--two feet or less--so that when the plane sank to the runway it wasn't sinking fast. A little chirp from the tires and it was on the ground. I was taught to transition to level flight over the runway, and as the plane just began to sink, raise the nose juuuust enough to resist the sink while speed decayed. Do that a couple more times and you were on the ground gently. Trouble was it was hard for me to sense the incipient sink and I was not adept at raising the nose juuuust enough but not too much to keep it in level flight. My butt cheeks weren't very attuned to the vertical motions of the airplane so I was always guessing on the sink and making inconsistent, bumpy landings.
@MzeroAFlightTraining2 жыл бұрын
Hey Tom! Sounds like you got the hang of it in the end!
@henrychinaski846 Жыл бұрын
I'm a student pilot in Germany and today I flew to another airport for the first time. Flared to soon and balooned. Scheibe Falke SF25C touring motor glider with a main central gear, tailwheel and additional wheels below the wings. Should have watched your video before...😊 Great content! Thank you!
@Longspout15 Жыл бұрын
Logged 11 landings my last flight and I was happy with about 4 of them… excited to try this mindset next flight.
@mymyrrah7 ай бұрын
How'd it go?
@Longspout157 ай бұрын
@@mymyrrah got my PPL 2 months ago! It all worked out lol
@mymyrrah7 ай бұрын
@@Longspout15 Good to hear! It's all very exciting, I'll hopefully be getting my own PPL in a month or two.
@MrRufust4 жыл бұрын
You filled in the holes in my swiss cheese regarding my historical problem with landings. That is what I will do. That concept of flare has been my problem. Now slow flight to landing using the same references to the horizon at the end of the runway without pulling back. Thank you!
@rallwest4 жыл бұрын
I've just begun my private pilot training and a couple weeks ago did my first few landings, and exactly as you illustrated in your first landing here with the "flare" I noticed that basically we stalled the aircraft during the glide along the runway, and it suddenly dropped. My thought was "that can't be the right technique!" And I thought that the best thing to do would be to transition into level flight along the run way and allow the plane to settle down slowly as it bleeds off speed. I also thought that pulling the nose up to the point where I couldn't see anything in front of me was counter to everything I have been hearing up until that point. Thanks for the great demonstration.I also want to acknowledge that I am proud that I am at the stage I am given how few hours I actually have flown. I'm not saying that I am any further along than the average or anything like that, but I have really been aggressive in my learning and studying, and in being as prepared as possible before I go up in the aircraft. I have actually found that the cfi's that I started with have been way to lackadaisical about my training in particular, and haven't seemed to taken much interest in having me advance as quickly as possible. I think this is a product of our society and creating "followers" and most people just follow the guidelines that they learned without bringing another and higher level of responsibility to the equation. I believe this might be the main reason that the average student pilot takes 65 to 75 hours of flight training to complete their Private Pilot Cert. I think that people must get discouraged or run out of money with what appears to me to be a long drawn out waste of time and an irresponsible administration of the training. (this is how it occurs to me, and may not be how it actually is) I like your training videos and your thoroughness, and i like that you learn and then apply from your experiences instead of "just following the norm." You seem to me to be an innovator, and your innovation and observations that you put into your training will create a newer and more effective set of procedures and guides that will lead to safer more responsible pilots. And that is how all innovation moves the planet forward.
@charleslindsay32014 жыл бұрын
in a tail dragger the stall horn does turn on-noisy landing then hold the stick in your gut.
@FamilyManMoving2 жыл бұрын
I agree that it's up to the student to establish pace. I'm starting out, and already pretty much done with ground work. I'll have the FAA test out of the way before most students even start studying. I look at the training syllabus and plot each lesson, take notes, read and watch videos before I get to the cockpit...you get the idea. I lead myself, so the CFI is working less to teach things I can do myself. We'll see how long it takes, but the 70 hours is off the table. I think it's less about the CFI or school, and more about the student just making the push.
@erl2nd9 ай бұрын
Well written and very thorough I enjoyed contrasting your thoughts with video I think you are spot on as well. I have a much same situation as you I'm a new student pilot just got my plastic and like you very happy I want to wish you all the best in flight ✈️.
@danielgoodson7034 жыл бұрын
Semantics perhaps drive this delightful video. Well produced and well explained. Kudos. Respectfully, IMHO Flair is not a singular action, but a progressive series of control pressures (constantly changing) referencing flight surface/control effectiveness with your corresponding desired HAT. You enter a flair and it slowly progresses to touchdown. Chasing moving targets are never easy (when your inputs must constantly change due to diminishing airspeed, entering ground effect and control effectiveness changes. Learning this feel of continuous control pressures changes to create stability .....tough. As tough as it gets. Mastering the process, however, gets another shirt tail removed with ample smiles and high fives). Keep up the good work. Thanks for being a pilot and a pilot instructor. Best to you and yours.
@bsatchel7052 жыл бұрын
My landings improved when I thought of the flare as "dissipating energy till touchdown". For me, runway contact is not an active control input, it's energy dissipation.
@Keys879 Жыл бұрын
For my students, I teach them to enter the 'round out' phase as if they are trying to accomplish a low fly-by and then to hold that for as long as possible until they feel the aircraft coming to settle down, speed dissipates and drag begins to take over. Then it is as simple as holding the nose slightly high to ensure the main wheels make contact first and not to forget the use of rudder in their longitudinal stability. It makes landing so easy. At least until it's a 19G32 crosswind!
@jakedaum4774 жыл бұрын
Hey that was me in the Bonanza!!!
@nikapls4 жыл бұрын
Hey
@richardrichards50504 жыл бұрын
Hey
@asho17353 жыл бұрын
hey
@onlyjuan73273 жыл бұрын
Hey
@nikapls3 жыл бұрын
@@onlyjuan7327 hey
@prestonmiller95524 жыл бұрын
When I first learned to fly a Cardinal I experienced a drastic shot up and had to add full power and go around. I quickly learned how touchy that stabilator tail could be in the final. This was before Cessna did the modifications on the Cardinal. I'll tell you it was quite a shock. But the cardinal recovered well and eventually I got the feel for it.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! Hope you enjoyed the video!
@TRPGpilot2 жыл бұрын
I love flying the Cardinal RG. My favourite Cessna so far.
@gregoryschlitter957211 ай бұрын
6 for 6 great for my checkride prep. Thank you MZeroA
@erik73114 жыл бұрын
This is absolutely true! The trick that helped me nail my landings is to set the airplane to cruise attitude, with a bit of back pressure, and hold it, keeping the airplane in the ground effect as long as possible. Flaring with nose high attitude like that almost always resulted in hard landings.
@alexandersheppard19974 жыл бұрын
*Sees title. "Ok then, I'll pretend I'm landing on a carrier."
@EasyBreakOven4 жыл бұрын
Go for that 3 wire, even on a grass strip!
@jonathanmoore96614 жыл бұрын
My instructors taught me this way. Both of them had me keeping the aiming point at the same spot on my windscreen, then transitioning to straight and level flight with eyes down the runway and at the correct airspeed, then holding the nose wheel off for as long as possible.
@PandiTheBear2 жыл бұрын
That’s a flare.
@greggpedder4 жыл бұрын
Don't *TRY* and land it. Once you've passed the threshold and reduced the power to idle try to keep it flying as long as possible (obviously that depends on a good approach). Great Vid. I don't advocate a flare either.
@mtpstv944 жыл бұрын
I always thought these things were obvious and I've never taken a single lesson. I guess some people actually believe you want the plane to begin to stall just as the tires touch. To me that's an obvious absolutely not and potentially dangerous as well as preventing a go-around. Though I have flown simulators, but I was never taught anything. It's just one of those things that seemed obvious to me. I always thought of it as lifting the nose just enough to keep it off the ground and then waiting for the nose to drop itself. I mean after all why would you want the nose way up in the air.
@marka79034 жыл бұрын
@@mtpstv94 You want the aircraft to stall just as the main wheels touch the ground...attempting to land with excess energy is what will get you into trouble
@carlosenriquezegarra4 жыл бұрын
Such a difference man! no more flares! transition from now on! thanks for your advice.
@SnglCoil4 жыл бұрын
Beautiful flare on that second landing! Well done!
@LayneBenofsky2 жыл бұрын
hehehehe. ;D
@blainepetsupplies5354 Жыл бұрын
Whoops better not call it a flare lol
@EricHaskins71 Жыл бұрын
Thank You!!!! This helped me immensely ..... my CFI did a ton of slow flight over the runway before but I still felt like i was making too many movements and pedaling a bike to land. This helped me just click on landings. Hoping to fly my little ol light sport back to FL before winter from up here in Oregon.
@beastdrent98374 жыл бұрын
You flared in both these landings just you intentionally did the first one wrong And expecting a student pilot to do properly it on their first landings is not a good example But i dont mind using the "now think of it as transitioning to slow flight" as a way to help people to think differently instead of just saying now flare
@fdfischer4 жыл бұрын
Well as a someone who was told to flare before getting my private i visually thought of just pulling up but that lead to floating and stalling over the runway. When i thought of it as a transition things became smoother
@77Avadon774 жыл бұрын
Every aircraft flares on landing. His first landing was ballooning (over flared) which lead to a small climb, stalling, then landing hard on the gear. We've all done it. That doesn't mean you don't flare, you just don't balloon (not too much power and not to much AOA.
@jaromirandel5436 ай бұрын
@@fdfischer Try that with tail dragger. ;)
@jaromirandel5436 ай бұрын
In my opinion the guy means the full stall landing and not the flare.
@ulyssesotero13794 жыл бұрын
I usually do not comment on videos, I just watch them but this one hits close to home. I actually "Flared" on one of my landings during my check ride and slammed into the ground. Luckily I was able to give it another go and the second landing was better. I went on to pass my check ride but walked away thinking..."how did that happen, I know better". Thank you Jason for this eye opening video. I plan to fly this Sunday and I cant wait to "transition" for a smooth landing. I have learned a great deal about being a better pilot by watching your videos and I will continue to watch them #keeplearning
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Great to hear, and congratulations on your check ride.
@jairobosch55344 жыл бұрын
Hey Jasón, your video about “transitioning” instead of “flaring” cleared the way I have been approaching all runways. I still am a student pilot waiting my chance to take the final check ride. I will put your teaching into practice this weekend to see if my landings will improve.
@aprendoespanol6833 Жыл бұрын
how did it go?
@AkagiRedSun2 жыл бұрын
I also hated when FI asking for flare when I was learning. When I fly solo or in check ride I did the best landing since I was able to feel the plane and land the plane with the feeling the air but flare always made me over correct and headwind end up pitch the nose too high.
@AnonyMous-jf4lc2 жыл бұрын
This is the method my CFI taught me. It works great across a wide range of conditions. I can come in with full flaps or no flaps and this method gives me a soft touch every time. I can also come in faster to bust through drafts and wind, it just floats a foot above the runway before the speed bleeds off.
@jeremyrotalsky89694 жыл бұрын
“You always want to see down the runway” ::tailwheel pilots have entered the chat::
@davidmerullo5514 жыл бұрын
Jeremy Rotalsky his Teaching style says he should go back to the basics. Perhaps retake his PPL check ride and try to say that to an examiner.
@calvinnickel99954 жыл бұрын
Not all tail wheels are created equal. A Citabria has the forward visibility of a Cessna 182.
@jeremyrotalsky89694 жыл бұрын
Calvin Nickel I’ve yet to pilot a Citabria. I hear they’re fun!
@fazole4 жыл бұрын
@@jeremyrotalsky8969 They are excellent. Kind of like the motorcycle version of an airplane. Sitting on centerline with great rudder authority really gives u the seat of the pants feel that's missing in something like a C-172.
@SVSky4 жыл бұрын
@@calvinnickel9995 Way way way better than a 182. I feel practically blind sitting in a 182 esp in landing attitude.
@alanmiller53804 жыл бұрын
Jason, nice video. I think you nailed it when you referred to slow flight. IMO we don't (really) do slow flight anymore, and as a result many pilots are not familiar with how the wing reacts at the proper landing speed. Slow flight skills are essential to go arounds, landings, stall recoveries, etc. I have found very few pilots that are confident at true slow flight that don't make consistent safe landings on target, both power on and power off.
@scottamolinari4 жыл бұрын
Awesome explanation and demonstration. I look at it or explain it to myself a bit differently though or rather, I see the reasoning a bit differently. The bigger planes "flare", because they are already at a positive angle of attack when they are in a landing descent. A 737 or a 747, A350, all of these bigger jets all have a positive angle of attack when they land, due to their swept wings. These swept wings have poorer lift capabilities at slower speed, but are much more efficient at higher speeds. That means, to make sure the stall point moves back, they add flaps, but at the same time, keep their nose "up". Thus, at the point of landing they flare the last bit just to arrest the speed of descent a bit to make the landing softer. With a small plane, the wings are straighter and thus, when flaps are added, the angle of attack will be negative. The nose is pointing at the ground during landing descent. Because of this nose down attitude, you have to transition to slow flight and let the aircraft loose more energy to get the nose up and then land. It's still a "flaring" action though for sure. It's just that it is much more elongated and needs to be a smoother transition from a nose-down attitude to a nose up attitude. One could try to fly like an airliner with a Cessna and descend with a more nose up attitude, but they'd be very close to a stall and thus why it's not done. Again, that is just how I see it. :)
@theforce1194 жыл бұрын
Even with a small plane I find it really hard to believe you'll have a negative angle of attack, unless you're overspeeding with full flaps. With a 3 degree glide slope, that would mean you have to fly with your nose pitched 4-5 degrees down while still maintaining a 3 degree glide slope. If you look at the video, you'll see the attitude indicator indicating he's pointing towards the horizon before he starts transitioning, while he's still descending. I flew a small aircraft simulator in Airforce selection program. The way they told us to descend was to fix the attitude and then adjust power to stay on the correct glide path. In simulators I'm also perfectly able to maintain a 2 degrees nose up attitude while descending for short field landings. P.S. Not a certified pilot, so please correct me if I'm wrong.
@guyejumz69364 жыл бұрын
What do you mean by "negative angle of attack"? Quite literally if the AoA is negative then you have negative G's and are accelerating into the ground.
@scottamolinari4 жыл бұрын
@@theforce119 In a small plane, you definitely have a nose down attitude when landing. The term "angle of attack" might be misused by myself here. But for sure, flaps are actually used to give the plane that negative attitude. i.e. to be able to drop altitude with a nose down attitude and not gain airspeed (energy).
@scottamolinari4 жыл бұрын
@@guyejumz6936 I mentioned in my reply above, I probably am misusing the term. I mean attitude of the nose compared to the ground. It's not AoA. I know that. :o :)
@mytech67794 жыл бұрын
@@scottamolinari its called pitch angle. Aside from that your analysis is partly on the wrong path, jet aircraft maintain much more thrust at flight idle than piston aircraft and they keep that thrust right until the point where a go-around cannot be performed, which is when the wheels touchdown and spoilers extend. This is largely because turbine engines are very slow to change from a very low power to a high power. Flight idle is a medium power of around 30%(varies somewhat with the make and model), it is not a low power like they use for taxi. The large jets are also making final approach in slow flight, the normal approach speed of a c172 is well above slow flight.
@MJ-is3wd4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for everything you do! Your an excellent teacher and love your craft. It consistently shows in the quality content of MzeroA!
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 😊
@danielgreen58034 жыл бұрын
It doesn't matter how you call it but how you execute it. if you pull sharply you will gain more lift lose speed and fall down so instead you do it slowly trading the speed for lift gradually in order to smooth the touch down.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Good input! Thanks for watching!
@hoouwit14 жыл бұрын
Yeah a transition.
@Ripper13F1V4 жыл бұрын
My first checkride I failed. Because I didn't put down on the numbers. Transitioning and dissipating speed until you touch down makes sense. But I'd never be able to predictably hit the numbers without a big flare for that checkride. I always thought that was dumb, and that it was more important to touch down safely in the first 1/3rd of the runway.
@ethanzajac22202 ай бұрын
This video taught me how to land! Thank you so much for simplifying it and explaining it the way you did!
@fazole4 жыл бұрын
The speed at which u transition to a flare is directly related to your sink rate which is directly related to your airspeed. Typically new students are not focusing on the end of the runway and instead are looking right in front of the nose, like new drivers. The sudden rising of the runway from their perspective startles them and they yank back on the controls.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Great point. Thanks for watching!
@saleasylum2 жыл бұрын
If you're looking at the nose and not down the runway you are gonna bounce and go around.
@rayster574 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! I could never understand why the flare was taught in Flight School, when ground effect gives you so much lift, not to mention losing sight of the runway. Thank you, I wish you had been my flight instructor 42 years ago.
@dnkayto2 жыл бұрын
I’m definitely trying this my next flight, im in atp in the private phase, and have been struggling with this exact thing. In my head at some point im suppose to pitch up after round out for the “flare” which results in mea gaining altitude and dropping, or if i do it too low i bounce. I’ve had a few smooth landing but have been trying to pinpoint what I’ve been doing wrong. I feel like this will help me A LOT.
@jeremyarnold6353 Жыл бұрын
I’m in my PPL stage at the AACA and struggling with the flare as well. Did going to the “transition” system in this video help you?
@jimmysalt8825 Жыл бұрын
@@jeremyarnold6353sounds like you all have rather average instructors. Unfortunate. They should be teaching you this stuff. Some are just there because it is their job.
@corentindockx4 жыл бұрын
Well first thing was a stall and second was a flare. Thank you.
@adoniramvaliente80494 жыл бұрын
I agree
@megadavis53774 жыл бұрын
But what actually set up the stall situation in the first place? Was it an over-rotation or an over-flare without correction?
@ramimehyar4814 жыл бұрын
@@megadavis5377 Abrupt loss of lift, caused by a higher angle of attack, high descent rate (relative wing at an angle already), and bad dissipation of energy.
@casilasgoaler4 жыл бұрын
@@megadavis5377 Pulled the yoke too much, hence climbed and lost airspeed simultaneously, resulting in a sudden loss of altitude and then bounced. Typical 10 hour student pilot mistake. I don't know what he was trying to explain here. Second landing was just a normal landing, just that he didn't level off and made it look like a continuous "transition" as he calls it.
@saleasylum2 жыл бұрын
Since I've been doing this my landings have been very smooth. Thank you for this good tutorial.
@MzeroAFlightTraining2 жыл бұрын
Glad it helped!
@craigdavis74 жыл бұрын
Jason, for the love of everything aviation, please use your resources when you build your videos. The reason you’re probably getting a lot of flak should be an indicator that you need to research what you’re teaching to ensure you are teaching correctly. Flare is mentioned no less than 50 times in the airplane flying handbook, A resource tefrenced in the ACS standards.If you tell your viewers to ditch this word from their vocabulary they will not fare so well during a check ride. By the way that first thing you did to drop the airplane so hard on the runway is called in over rotation not a flare. Your second landing illustrated what a flair is so please call it what it is. If your student does not learn to properly flare on the landing or understand what they’re doing this could lead to future problems or accidents . If they are attempting to land on a short field but do not reduce their speed sufficiently before touchdown in the flare, their roll out will be extended. Now I need to tell all my students to avoid this video as well as some of your others.
@skyhawkpm24694 жыл бұрын
I’m a private pilot and I get what Jason is saying. It’s something a lot of student pilots struggle with. The transition makes sense. I can tell that you are precisely the type of instructor I avoided at the club.
@abbieamavi Жыл бұрын
Agree, I love the way you teach. Keep up the great work and thank you for these videos!
@jamesordwayultralightpilot2 жыл бұрын
Nice to know I've been doing it right for a few months now. You can see on my videos every hard landing I make is due to an attempt at a flare which leads to a stall and my mains slamming the ground. But I've been landing with pitch slightly up and easily backing off throttle until I can feel it settling down and I just wait for the wheels to start spinning.
@hotrodray68024 жыл бұрын
50 yrs ago old timers taught us.... Trim and Back pressure... Not pull the controls, move the controls, pitch up xx, etc. When you learn to fly by control FEEL and smoothness of movement, ALL manouvering is easier. Best advice I ever got, 1968.... "You can do all the snappy manouvers, now you have to learn to fly like you have 40 people in the back". #2 pilot induced "turbulence" fighting the contols to keep it level, instead of just letting it boince.
@flycatchful4 жыл бұрын
I apply the same technique while flying model radio control airplanes and I'm not afforded the opportunity to sit in the cockpit. It is all about depth perception and airspeed when flying a model. When learning to fly a model whether fixed or rotary wing you go through three stages. The first stage is behind the vehicle, the second stage is in the vehicle and finally the third stage is in front of the vehicle. These stages apply to both full scale and models.
@Zalaniar4 жыл бұрын
I don't know anyone who has ever advocated for a "flare" that means what you demonstrated at 3:25. Most people use the term flare to mean exactly what you would normally do, lift the nose slightly and just hold it off the runway until the plane wants to land.
@Banshee3654 жыл бұрын
Depending where you look flare is usually defined as the transition between the approach phase and touchdown phase of a landing. It’s all the same stuff, different word. The ballooning thing wasn’t because he called it a ‘flare’. It was an over-controller flare, transition or whatever you want to call it. When I used to fly CRJ’s the 700/900 had a pronounced ‘flare’ or ‘round out’ or whatever prior to touch down. The 200 touches down at nearly the same pitch attitude as it approaches at. Does one ‘flare’ and one not?
@aarongarcia20044 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for the video Jason! I just started landings my last flight. Will definitely implement this. Can you make that vid on explaining no flaps during turns? I thought it was okay to have flaps turning base and final
@diegus0123 жыл бұрын
You prolly figured this one out already hahah but it's ok to have the flaps out during the turn, the issue is extending them during the turn. If you have a malfunction and have only one side move while you are in a bank it could really put you in a pickle. Maybe even flip you over.
@willissutherland14944 жыл бұрын
Ocala Jason...I enjoyed your DO KNOT Flare video...So I went to Venice Airport and turned final for runway 5 over the Ocean and I practiced my DON'T FLARE LANDING...Sadly I crunched the Nose...I will wait for the Transistion Video....Sarasota Bob
@susanbechtol44812 жыл бұрын
Hi Jason. I am new to your videos and wondered if there is one somewhere on Trimming! I am a student with only about 20 hours but can’t seem to get landing nor trimming down. Thanks again. I love watching your landing videos.
@Frankestein01nl4 жыл бұрын
As an armchair- (simulator, i'm actually quite scared of the flying motions due to an oversensitive inner ear) pilot, It's fun to see differences in the approaches of people. Yours seems quite low and steady, focusing on the start of the runway, whereas others look like they are divebombing the runway (high, nearing stall glide) to pull up in the last second to get the aircraft to level and slow down, where their focuspoint is about 100 past the numbers. I'm definately somewhere in between. I guess it all depends on how well you know your aircraft and the runway. This runway seems to be nice and clear of anything hazardous on approach. (and... i have only one hour of actual piloting a C172 with instructor, to try and get over my fear of flying, but he let me do all the flying, where he handled comms. He took over last minute as there was someone faster behind us and he didn't want that pilot to have to go around... i had it nailed at 65 knots, trimmed and ready for landing ;) ) Nice watching your video's, thank you very much!
@stuntmanhn4 жыл бұрын
Great info! Care to explain the two watches?
@brianbrotherson55296 ай бұрын
I suppose the moral of the story here is that some people interpret things differently and need things to be explained in a different way, that's up the CFI to find that method and make it "sink in." IMHO in both landings he "flared" it's just that in the first one he "flared" too high and dropped it in, that same technique would have worked fine if he were just above the runway. And 747s aren't flying anymore? Huh? This is 3 years after this was posted, and they still fly in and out of my home airport literally every day. (Atlas Air)
@ShortFinal4 жыл бұрын
Im pretty sure the second one is a flare. I use the exact same technique when I fly and I almost always get super smooth landings. Yes its called a transition but really you flare the aircraft gently and fly it to the pavement meeting the stallhorn at touchdown.
@highseize30775 ай бұрын
Let be clear, you flared both times, you just did it improperly the first time. Why reinvent the wheel?
@daviator47204 жыл бұрын
A good instructor will teach using a variety of linguistic tools. Sometimes that means exchanging on word ( flare ) for another ( transition ). I remember 20,000 hours ago, as a young student I did not get immediately the concept of "flare" until my instructor ( 1971 ) had me "transition" to the final landing attitude, like into slow flight. The transition technique worked on Airbuses, Boeings and many others. It is by definition of course a "flare", but sometimes that terms imparts a need for a rapid pitching up to a nose high attitude. Your technique worked really good for wheel landing Beech-18s, and Dc3s. ( Still flying now corporate )
@nickalan45164 жыл бұрын
I have a question for you Jason... how do you legally fly the drone so close to the runway like that? As a private pilot and drone pilot I’m just curious how that works. Those drone shots of the airplane are awesome!!
@blake9908 Жыл бұрын
Class G airspace is wild haha
@edgrigsby86104 жыл бұрын
For those who are stuck on verbage, I saw another CFI simple state to simply let the airplane bleed off energy and touch down. That CFI and this CFI are demonstrating the same concept of a proper landing. I did appreciate this demonstration of what happens if you pull back to far. A hard landing.
@johnpro28474 жыл бұрын
depends on your speed ...I have done many high nose up landings without issue ...however the speed was very slow and close to stall.
@SuperExplorer0074 жыл бұрын
My friend what you did the 2nd time which u r calling transition! That is what a flare is . What you did in the first landing I don't know what the hell that was but that wasn't flare or if it was then it was tooooo high flare . So I'm sorry to say but u are flaring so don't mess up people buy sayin that u aren't flaring. You may make some inexperienced pilot or student pilot to neglect flare and he would definitely end up in a tough spot. So pls for god sake don't use the terminology like don't flare . Say if u must "flare right" .And come on from a student u expect to flare like this? Come on ......! He is going to flare high in the beginning and then eventually he will be where u are in ur second landing. Ya their are exceptions but those are borne pilots who make a landing so smooth being student that u can hardly believe yourselves that is he the student or me? O and by the way it's a proper check that when ever you come in for landing and you go into flare, you announce "looking at the end of the runway" and only then do u get the felling of the sink and you are able to land the aircraft where even the aircraft doesn't know that its wheels are on the ground. For a good landing always look at the end of the runway while flaring!
@Notinserviceij4 жыл бұрын
It's a mentality he is talking about, most people yank bank including me when told to flare, but in reality it's a transition it's not a step it's a process
@stephenrich30294 жыл бұрын
So basically we have too many people jumping in to aircraft who “think” they know what to do but in reality they have no clue of what they should be doing. Sounds like everything else in society these days. Take the time, learn it right, and put in the work.
@chadgriffith58194 жыл бұрын
@@Notinserviceij I like the way you worded it. Call it what you want its a process not a step.
@eddiev7374 жыл бұрын
I agree. Instead of thinking the flare is bad because someone did it wrong, define what an actual flare is to the student that messed it up.
@SuperExplorer0074 жыл бұрын
Notinserviceij indeed my friend it's a process from flying the plan to landing it. But what you need to do to put it down on the runway is that you have to flair the right way where you cushion to land, feeling that bubble beneath your aircraft and the wind flow depleting at your wings. That all is done in a flair. When you are holding the controls nice and easy only then will you feel this all. He is flaring , and saying don't flair to a person who know little about flying may take a wrong impression of his words and just transition from fly in air to putting the aircraft in the same speed and configurations on ground. Resulting in a hard landing or a crash landing. We aviators have to understand the consequences of the words we use . Its was a flair It is a flair and will always be flair till we don't have engine which may cushion are landing as in raptor.
@pilotintraining23912 жыл бұрын
On my third Flight lesson I had controls on landing as I was progressing fairly quick in my instructors eyes, I ended up flaring just before touching down and was told if I did that again I would potentially lose my life. Never did that again !
@Barabyk4 жыл бұрын
I prefer to think of transition and hold-off, no flare.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@Barabyk4 жыл бұрын
@@MzeroAFlightTraining Thank you! This concept helped me a lot in my training a couple years ago. I stick to it. Just remembering that Cessnas don't flare makes the world of difference.
@chrisrose55034 жыл бұрын
So he ends by making a nice flare and smooth landing, but don’t call it a flare. I think all he needs to tell his students is that the flare (oops I said it) is a gradual and smooth process of changing the aircraft attitude.
@petesmith94722 жыл бұрын
I think you are missing the point being made.
@robertbrandywine2 жыл бұрын
@@petesmith9472 What was the point? If you explain that a flare is not extreme, it seems all right to use that term. No?
@scotdouglas96132 жыл бұрын
This video provides empirical, concrete evidence that words have no meaning. “Words have usages” and it’s obvious that the usage the instructor intended was not comprehended by the student. The remedy for this is establishing a thorough and comprehensive understanding of the words usage. how the instructor use the word flair was in sharp contrast with the students understanding of that word.
@ruthlessadmin4 жыл бұрын
I agree w/ the people saying you're still doing a flare, but being self-taught in only a simulator, this is more in line with how I think about a landing. At all stages of flight, I use pitch to control speed and throttle to control altitude - physics does the rest no matter how the aircraft is configured. There really is no "flare" or "transition" in the way I've learned so far. I'm aware that the last little bit of speed I'm bleeding off just before the wheels touch the ground is a flare, but I'm not thinking about it like that. I don't stop flying until physics won't allow it any more, and only then do I become taxi service.
@mattanderson70894 жыл бұрын
I agree with this! I also dislike the term "rotate" on takeoff for GA airplanes.
@marktwain3531 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, you know what that's called when you transition and pull the nose up for landing? Can't quite find the word for it.
@megadavis53774 жыл бұрын
Hello. Well, at first I was skeptical. I had never known the landing transition to be called anything else but its common term: "Flare." However, I think your term, "transition" is much more accurate. To "begin the transition" equates to "begin the process." To begin the process of what? What process? To begin the process of transitioning from flight vehicle to ground vehicle. That process takes longer than just one simple maneuver would take. When flying a large jet, like the 757, 767 or 321, you do flare. You cross the threshold almost in the landing attitude already. At around twenty feet AGL (measured from the lowest tire), you smoothly and conscientiously reduce power to idle and simply increase your nose up attitude by about two degrees - while correcting for wind drift, always... THAT's a flare; it puts you immediately into the landing attitude. And you pretty much hold that flare attitude because, trying to "hold her off", as in a Cessna, may very well lead to a tail strike. So, in a large aircraft you flare. But in your small airplane you are not trying to land it so much as you are trying to fly it until it simply won't fly anymore. This, my friend is your process of "Transition." And it takes time. Several seconds. A flare takes maybe two to three seconds - at most, and your nose is already way up when you flare in an airplane which has to be flared. (I know because I have over 24,000 hours in many types of large jets). However, now that I have begun flying GA again after many years, I see that the landing flare doesn't work in either the Merlin III nor the Cessna 206 I am flying (unless I want to admit that the "flare" takes anywhere from 5 to 10 seconds). I must "transition" them each gradually from flight vehicle to ground vehicle. I have to try to fly them until they won't fly anymore - just like we were taught back in the sixties... I think you are absolutely correct in your terminology, my friend, and I hope you will move ahead with it. Stick to it. You are right.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Thanks,
@reecerich52794 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a variation of the flair new students will inevitably land flat. The flair window gives a safe opportunity to initiate a go around at a slightly higher altitude. Landing flat will “Usually” results in pitch oscillations and loss of directional control. In an older 182, 207 and 206 it’s a great way to buy a new fire wall. Or even a prop strike in a 182Q.
@JabariHunt Жыл бұрын
As a student pilot, I appreciate looking at this topic from a different perspective. That said, when we transition into slow flight as you state, don't we flare in order to maintain altitude? We definitely don't want to over rotate, but during my first few landings I don't think it would have mattered if my instructor said "flare" or "transition", I still could have pulled all the way back on the yoke. I guess "lightly flare" would work better?!?!? These are all just thoughts...
@aronbechiom5654 жыл бұрын
My initial instructor, and subsequent ones since then..have preached to flare..hear the stall horn. I RARELY ever hear the horn...and always being mindful to protect the nosewheel... This method you teach, I think is safer, and more controllable...than nose high view blocking type landings. BTW... I learned in a Skyhawk... but land, as if flying a Warrior.
@mytech67794 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I think they want to teach touchdown at the slowest speed, which is max AOA. But very hard to judge wheel height or direction alignment with a very high pitch (side loading makes as many rough landings as firm set downs), and with the approach speeds they teach you just float forever unless loaded up to max gross.
@mkgaming2192 Жыл бұрын
i fly a piper warrior and my instructor told me to watch this and im curious on what your left hand is holding onto
@dennisharrington60554 жыл бұрын
Thanks. I classify my landings as Captain (yay!), F.O. (nyeh.) And Stewardess (Aaaggh!). My go around cue is, if I’m lined up on final and hear myself say, “a. ..it (rhymes with shah it). For the longest time I thought it was necessary to put the mains exactly on a preselected spot - occasionally interesting results. Now I’m a little more relaxed, having serendipitously stumbled upon the method you describe as “transitioning”. I leave the spot landings to the fat tire guys
@TamTam-pu7ed Жыл бұрын
Cool That is so cool Thank you so much for sharing.
@SmittySmithsonite4 жыл бұрын
Great video Jason! Wasn't expecting a drone point-of-view there - that was fantastic! Got a perfect picture of what was happening during that first hard landing. Thanks! 👍🍻
@dogwoodservicesinc.29722 жыл бұрын
Great video. Extremely helpful
@killinegos49874 жыл бұрын
I'm no CFI, I'm speaking only from my experience. Months ago I was working on my private in a Mooney, first instructor, taught me this exact way (ALTHOUGH) he called it: Flair. Second instructor, we go out, over the runway he pulls the yokes so far back that all I could see was the tip-tops of tress. I taxed over to the FBO and literally said: Get the F*CK out!!
@jacbob58244 жыл бұрын
You shouldn't really be able to see much of the runway in a tailwheel or even in a c182. I was taught gently raise the nose as you start to sink. Sink a bit more, raise a bit more. Finding the balance between flare and balloon. I don't like this guy much, there are definitely way better CFIs out there
@aaronbrown62664 жыл бұрын
@@jacbob5824 I have been taught that the first demonstration is a balloon. My CFI instructed me to add power, stabilize, and try again if you have enough runway. Otherwise, go around. Not going to bash the struts just for the sake of getting on the ground.
@jacbob58244 жыл бұрын
@@aaronbrown6266 when in doubt, go around. Yeah hold ground effect till stabilise and start again. Just be aware of how much runway you have to use. Get in there an do a tonne of circuits and just get as many landings as you can. I was told by a good instructor there will be a time where there will be some regression but persevere through it, don't give up
@markfbutler40254 жыл бұрын
Very good presentation
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@cob92802 жыл бұрын
Appreciate the explanation of what the flare really is
@ramimehyar4814 жыл бұрын
In order to always see down the runway you need a gradual flare, but you need to flare!!! Use the lindberg reference.
@SVSky4 жыл бұрын
Lindberg.
@ramimehyar4814 жыл бұрын
@@SVSky thanks, I had autocorrect on and I live in Limburg :D
@darrelllee21073 жыл бұрын
This was helpful. I am certainly a rusty pilot. I has been 9 years but I am just getting back into it. I think that I have the "in the air" stuff down but I have been flaring on my landings. (I am having a hard time getting those landings back, actually, but after 9 years, I guess that isn't too surprising.)
@MzeroAFlightTraining3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching, Darrell! Glad to hear you are getting back into flying! Keep on practicing and you will master those landings again!
@AprilThompson.13 Жыл бұрын
Great videos. Confused with your 747 comment - husband currently is flying 747! Many still operating!
@nyrubin Жыл бұрын
Imagine going for a checkride and on short final the dpe tells you, do not flare on ur landing 🛬 😂
@Steven-rn6yz2 жыл бұрын
I like your PHRASE TRANSITION, Makes Sense
@landen994 жыл бұрын
I hate watching someone bouncing a perfectly good airplane too. Breaks my heart too. But thanks for showing us the difference so that everyone can learn better..
@Yeager1231234 жыл бұрын
First I've ever seen this concept. Thank you
@mikecarlozzi69303 жыл бұрын
Drone shots were awesome.
@MzeroAFlightTraining3 жыл бұрын
Glad you like them! Thanks for watching, Mike!
@mikecarlozzi69303 жыл бұрын
@@MzeroAFlightTraining Just got back from my second solo, made some adjustments that my instructor taught me plus added the no flare idea... seven butter landings.
@crohr10004 жыл бұрын
Hi please tell me where is the video your talk about flaps in the turn. I would like to see that. Was wondering about that every time i add flaps in a turn
@jas90213 жыл бұрын
I’m trying to implement this as well. For me it has been 22! years ( Wife, kids, family, the usual…). I got the maneuvers down, but I’m really struggling with my landings ( and I used to be good at it ). Find myself either too high or too low, slamming it in or even bouncing. Will try to do it Monday again. BTW my instructor told me the same thing: TRANSITION the aircraft to a landing. Hope I can grasp this the next time.
@MzeroAFlightTraining3 жыл бұрын
You can do it! Thanks for watching and good luck!
@jas90213 жыл бұрын
@@MzeroAFlightTraining Hi Jason, it went amazingly well! I got it back. After some maneuvers, we did touch and go’s! Almost the whole program! No flaps, fwd slip, 180 pwr off, one where she blacked out my airspeed indicator with a piece of paper ( this one was new for me ) and a normal one. Greased every single one of them! Thanks for the great video. On a side note: my CFI, she must have been a student of yours! She literally said and I quote”… forget the word “flare” in your landings…”.
@samuelmckenzie1218 Жыл бұрын
What do you call a landing when the wheels on one side touches down before the other side touches down
@whiskeyd74 жыл бұрын
Great video. I agree with that technique.
@Jsprinzl4 жыл бұрын
Completely agree with your rational. Great video.
@spencerobrien39854 жыл бұрын
That first landing it seemed like you were not in ground effect long enough and you flared too early which causes the air craft to balloon and you have to add power to stabilize that.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
What was trying to be shown in the first landing is if you pitch up the nose too high. In the second video we transition, bring the nose slowly up and then hold it at a smaller pitch angle as the airspeed bleeds off.
@ashform20914 жыл бұрын
I find this very interesting. We are taught to flare which I find is an easy way for a new pilot to smack the runway. From what I gathered from the video over the threshold you stabilize and then slowly pitch up?
@pdquestions7673 Жыл бұрын
nice technique and concept
@peoplesambassadordm82794 жыл бұрын
So who took that phrase from who??? "A GOOD PILOT IS ALWAYS LEARNING" ... If I'm not mistaken @captainjoe has the same catch phrase!! lol... but Very good analysis of how to land in transitioning as opposed to flaring!!
@flyingdaytrader4 жыл бұрын
If there is one thing I have always and forever will disagree with jason on it is this. A flare is where your back wheels touch before your front. The issue Jason is trying to address is people flaring too high. This is where we as pilots need to practice our sight picture for our planes so we know when we are close enough to the ground to then pull back slightly and hold until touchdown. If I didn’t flare when flying my SR-20 then I would have prop strike after prop strike. In that video Jason wasn’t flaring he was pulling up and stalling. Flaring is increasing the pitch to use areodynamic braking to slow the plane down in a controlled fashion (which means you are holding a pitch attitude not pulling up more and more) and then using power to control your touchdown point. If you fly in at your approach speed for your plane, aim for the numbers then pitch your attitude slightly up when your in ground effect then cut the power right before your touchdown point and you will have buttery landings.
@MzeroAFlightTraining4 жыл бұрын
Disagreements make us better! If everyone agreed I wouldn't be able to grow and get better as well!! Think of this more as a video for student pilots who have only seen the "flare" of a 747. They might think (and I can tell you most low hour students do) that their 172 should do the same! This video is geared towards that pilot helping them understand what not to do and giving them a new word to use and a new mindset....transition to slow flight attitude...from there the same bleed off and roundout occurs. It's nothing more than a vocabulary change and mindset shift.
@alexandermyrthue19872 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure you can protect the nose wheel on a Cessna 182 and still see the runway in front of you like the way you Jason do it in the 172
@christiancruz4533Ай бұрын
Dyam... im amaze. Thks so helpfull.!!!
@mikebell.32862 жыл бұрын
Thank you great work
@danielwu36753 жыл бұрын
I believe what he want to express is to correct the mindset of flare for some of the students. Some people will try to make it "stall(as flare)" for landing.
@MzeroAFlightTraining3 жыл бұрын
Hi Daniel! Yes, it is a good idea to see it as more of transition to landing to help avoid the assumption that you need to pull back on the yoke like a 747 to "flare". Thanks for the feedback!