THE ROLE OF
AEROBATIC TRAINING & AEROBATICS AT UPSET RECOVERY FLIGHT
SCHOOLS
"The integration of
aerobatic training concepts and carefully selected
aerobatic maneuvers at flight schools
providing upset recovery flight courses are critical to the development of a properly
aware and self-reliant pilot graduate. Aerobatics
schools presenting programs titling them "upset
recovery", "unusual attitude awareness" or
"emergency maneuver training" must properly focus
aerobatics instruction on the aspects of each
aerobatic maneuver pertinent to the development of hands-on
all-attitude recovery skills in real-life upset scenarios".
Paul "BJ" Ransbury, Master
CFI-Aerobatic
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Have you ever been upside down in an
airplane? There are those of us who intentionally fly
aerobatic maneuvers for fun, profit, fulfillment
of the competitive spirit, and even to defend our
country. As an aerobatics flight training instructor
teaching emergency maneuver, unusual attitude and
aerobatics to other pilots,
I see the benefits of such aerobatic training daily. While a
thorough
Emergency Maneuver Training Course will include much more than the basic aerobatic
maneuvers, aerobatics flight training alone is extremely beneficial.
You may have no specific desire to perform a precise
loop or hammerhead, but no matter what you fly or
for what reason, aerobatic instruction, in addition to
being exhilarating, will make you a safer pilot. You
will also fly with increased confidence, because that
vast unknown flight at the edges of the envelope
(whether intentional or not) will not be so vast or
unknown anymore. According to Patty Wagstaff, three-time
US National Aerobatic Champion, Air Show Performer
and Author of Fire and Air: A Life on the Edge:
More and more airlines and flight departments have
recognized that only a small proportion of pilots
have had aerobatic training, and have become aware
that putting pilots into serious unusual attitudes
is one of the best ways to make sure a pilot can successfully
recover when the airplane gets rolled upside down.
Before I move on to the specific
benefits of aerobatics flight training, let me emphasize that
all airplanes, from a Boeing 777 to an F-16, to a
Cessna 150 are essentially all-attitude
aircraft.
That doesnt mean that its smart to intentionally
perform aerobatic maneuvers in a non-aerobatic certified
aircraft, but any airplane can end up upside down,
or vertical, or anywhere in between. You may not have
a choice in the matter, either. Whether due to wake
or other turbulence, wind shear, pilot distraction,
flight into IMC or other conditions beyond a pilots
experience level, mechanical failure, or some other
cause, you may find yourself and your airplane in
an unusual attitude. Airliners and other aircraft
with pitch and bank limiters are not necessarily an
exception. The first time an unusual attitude situation
happens, perhaps with a load of passengers on board
or low to the ground, should not be your first exposure
to aerobatic flight. The margin for error in a non-aerobatic
aircraft is small. According to Master Aerobatic Instructor
Rich Stowell, author of Emergency Maneuver Training;
Controlling Your Airplane During a Crisis:
Nowhere are knowledge and skill more important than
during an in-flight crisis; sadly, nowhere are weaknesses
in these areas more evident, either. So lets look
at what aerobatic training can offer you:
Knowledge: Any good aerobatics
school training
course will include a discussion of the physiological
effects of aerobatic flying, and the aerodynamics
involved. I cant over-emphasize the importance of
a fundamental understanding of aerodynamics specifically
pertaining to turning flight (and a loop is a turn!),
angle of attack, stalls, and spins, as well as a good
understanding of aircraft performance, structural
limits, V-speeds, and what they all mean. Below is
a velocity versus G-loading (V-G) diagram or as the
test pilots call it, the performance envelope of
the aircraft

Figure 1. V-G Diagram
The airplane will stall if you attempt
flight outside of the curved portions of the envelope
(known as the aerodynamic or lift limits), and it
may bend or break if you attempt flight beyond the
straight portions (known as the structural limit defined
by limiting positive and negative load factor, and
by the never exceed speed, or VNE) You
must also be aware of limitations associated with
asymmetric G loading (the structural limits depicted
on a typical V-G diagram or published in the Pilots
Operating Handbook apply to symmetrical G loadings
only). Asymmetric G loads occur when you are rolling
and pulling at the same time. For instance, if, while
recovering from a graveyard spiral, you roll upright
but simultaneously pull to the limiting load factor
of the aircraft, you could actually exceed the structural
limit of certain parts of the aircraft, such as the
root of the wing with the downward deflected aileron.
You can be an outstanding aerobatic pilot, but if
you dont understand aircraft performance and associated
limitations, or the dynamics of a spin, then someday
your luck may run out. Conversely, all the book
knowledge in the world will be useless, if you dont
get out of your comfort zone, seek quality aerobatic
training, and start building the motor skills and
kinesthetic feel necessary to fly a properly certified
aircraft in all flight attitudes. Unusual attitude
training in an aircraft-specific simulator has value,
but this environment cannot duplicate the physiological
effects of aerobatic flight, nor can one develop a
kinesthetic feel for aerobatic maneuvers or unusual
attitude recoveries in a simulator. Training must
still be accomplished in the air.
Confidence: There is no
substitute for being able to say Ive been there,
done that. If you have never been upside down, or
in some other unusual attitude, you have no idea
what your reaction will actually be. Typically, the
intuitive recovery response will not promote
minimal altitude loss. Remaining within the limits
of the
airframe's structural integrity when you've never
experienced your aircraft's limit-load first-hand is
going to be just a guess. Lack of confidence
and training promotes panic, which will lead to hesitation
and inappropriate control inputs. Such responses can
lead to structural failure or ground impact.
Motor Skills: No amount of
knowledge can replace the motor skills necessary to
roll an airplane smoothly upright whether to perform
a good aileron roll, or for survival following an
aircraft upset. A pilot does not have to be an outstanding
aerobatic pilot to recover an aircraft from a wake
turbulence encounter with minimum altitude loss. However,
I am convinced that an aerobatic pilot will, if faced
with a similar unusual attitude, be able to apply
aerobatic skills to the situation, and recover much
more effectively than a pilot who has not been exposed
to such training. For instance, even a pilot performing
his or her first aileron roll in a controlled environment,
and after a thorough briefing, will most likely commit
such errors as pulling back on the stick or yoke while
rolling, or hesitating or stopping the roll approaching
inverted. Any one of these mistakes, if faced with
an unusual attitude, will decrease the chances of
a successful recovery in a critical situation. To
build the motor skills to perform a proper aileron
roll, as in any other aerobatic maneuver, takes much
practice and repetition. In fact, in the majority
of instances, a pilot without aerobatic or emergency
maneuver training will pull through into a Split-S
type maneuver when faced with an inverted unusual
attitude. That is 100% incorrect and possibly deadly.
According to Rich Stowell,
the better prepared we
are for a crisis, the higher the probability that
well act instinctively to correct it. Physically
practicing procedures for various scenarios develops
a kinesthetic memory
that can give you a critical
edge in an emergency.
Maintaining Orientation: In
low visibility conditions, or in IMC, a pilot must
rely on the instruments to maintain orientation. In
VMC, the horizon is available to assist in orientation,
and is the only completely reliable attitude indicator.
Yet pilots who have not received aerobatic training
typically do not know where to look to find the horizon
when in an extreme unusual attitude. When in an over-banked
unusual attitude, it is important to quickly find
the nearest horizon in order to roll in the shortest
direction to upright, and especially to avoid pulling
the nose down through the vertical and back up to
the horizon which will, in most cases, result in excessive
altitude loss. Yet in my experience as an aerobatic
instructor, I have found many cases where, when performing
ones first aileron roll, the student forgets to even
look outside the cockpit! Visual cues (if available)
are an invaluable tool, because, as any instrument
pilot can tell you, your vestibular system (your inner
ear) can, and will lie to you, whereas your eyes
will tell your brain the real story. For instance,
on recovery from a spin or spiral dive, your inner
ear will tell you that you are still spinning or rotating
(that dizzy feeling), but your eyes will tell you
(upon looking at the horizon, or if thats not available,
looking at the instruments) that you have recovered.
Kinesthetic Feel: You are
likely aware of the limit load factor of your airplane.
But do you know what 2.5 or 3.8 Gs feels like? You
have probably experienced 2 Gs in a 60-degree bank
turn. Following a high speed dive recovery from an
over-banked nose low attitude, with adrenaline flowing
and heart pounding, it would be easy to overstress
the airplane as excessive backpressure is applied.
Most aircraft do not have G meters installed. Aerobatic
training can provide you with the kinesthetic (seat-of-the-pants)
feel for different G loads. But more than that, aerobatic
training can make you more aware of the feeling when
the aircraft is in coordinated flight, and when it
is not. Also, you learn to feel when the airplane
is approaching the stall (or critical angle-of-attack)
regardless of aircraft attitude or airspeed. If an
aerobatics-trained pilot pulls back excessively on
the yoke or stick on the backside of the loop (inverted,
nose low), and the aircraft buffets and stalls, this
is not a big deal anymore, because he or she knows
to instinctively release a small amount of back pressure
to un-stall the wings, then proceed with the remainder
of the loop. When is the last time you fully stalled
an airplane even upright? Were you comfortable with
that situation?
Benefits of Specific Aerobatic
Maneuvers: Even though aerobatics per se isnt
the focus of emergency maneuver and upset training,
a number of standard aerobatic maneuvers are taught
for their high educational value. Below Ive listed
just a few of the unique benefits of specific aerobatic
maneuvers.
Aileron Roll: After pulling
the nose up approximately 30 degrees above the horizon,
you learn to neutralize pitch (elevator) by checking
the stick or yoke before rolling, so that you dont
inadvertently pull aft during the roll. Two detrimental
actions typically result when the pilot fails to check
the stick: first, the pilot does not apply all of
the aileron available to correct the over-banked attitude;
second, any pulling on the elevator subjects the airplane
to unnecessary G-loads and drags the nose down below
the horizon even farther. You also learn how to keep
the horizon in view while rolling or over-banked.

Loop: A loop teaches you the
following: to fly the airplane effectively at extreme
pitch attitudes, and to remain below critical angle
of attack; to disassociate angle of attack with pitch
attitude (you can stall the aircraft in any conceivable
attitude); to be able to find the horizon while in
any pitch attitude. For instance, at the beginning
of the loop, the pilot sees the horizon over the nose.
As the loop progresses, the horizon disappears under
the nose. The pilot looks left (or right) to find
the horizon, until the aircraft approaches the inverted
position at the top of the loop, at which point the
pilot transitions his view straight back to find the
horizon, then keeps it in view throughout the rest
of the maneuver.

Inverted Flight: Flying inverted
gives you an appreciation for the stick forces required
to hold the nose up in inverted flight. Also, you
develop an appreciation for how the nose will drop
aggressively toward the ground while over-banked if
you do not apply some forward pressure (or at least
release back pressure) for the length of time that
you are inverted (which hopefully would not be too
long if in an unusual attitude, assuming you can find
the nearest horizon and quickly initiate a roll towards
it.)
Cuban Eight: After pulling
to an inverted 45-degree nose low attitude from the
first part of a loop, you learn to halt the downward
trend by checking the nose with forward elevator pressure,
and then to roll upright.

Split S: A split-S gives you
an appreciation for how much altitude you would lose
if you pulled through from an over-banked or inverted
unusual attitude versus checking with forward elevator
and then rolling. You also develop a feel for flying
the aircraft just below critical angle of attack to
minimize altitude loss in a dive recovery. Here you
manage the G loading versus airspeed, increasing Gs
as airspeed increases while staying below critical
angle-of-attack (and the structural limits of the
aircraft.).

Hammerhead: A hammerhead illustrates
how an aircraft flies very well below critical angle-of-attack,
even at extremely low airspeed (well below the 1G
stall speed) and with heavy rudder inputs. (An aircraft,
for instance will not spin, even in uncoordinated
flight if the wings remain below critical angle-of-attack).

Immelman or Half Loop: In
both of these maneuvers, you learn how to roll from
inverted to upright without losing altitude and at
a very slow airspeed, just above the 1G stall speed.
This could help in recovering from an over-banked
unusual attitude on final approach (a wake turbulence
encounter for instance).

Other Benefits of aerobatic training:
In the course of aerobatic training at your selected
aerobatics flight school, you should experience
many botched, or incorrectly flown maneuvers. You
must learn to finesse an airplane out of an accelerated
stall in the second quarter of a loop, or to control
an incipient spin entry while rolling upright at the
top of an Immelman. When faced with a high-speed,
over-banked nose low unusual attitude, you will learn
to reduce power, check the nose, find the nearest
horizon and roll to it, then recover smoothly to the
horizon. Botched maneuver recoveries should actually
be a planned part of a good all-attitude training
program. These situations can develop quickly, and
you will learn to recognize and avoid potential unusual
attitudes with correct and smooth control responses
with little effort. The advantage of an emergency
maneuver training course over a true basic aerobatic
course is that more real world unusual attitude
scenarios are incorporated, with more emphasis on
how the procedures taught apply to your aircraft and
your environment. And, versus an emphasis on precision
aerobatic maneuvering, emergency maneuver training
emphasizes recognition, avoidance, and if an unusual
attitude develops, correct recovery procedures that
apply to the entire spectrum of aircraft. While an
aerobatic-specific course teaches you to perform within
the limits of the aerobatic aircraft, a well-designed
emergency maneuver training course will teach you
how to recover within the limits of the aircraft that
you actually fly.
Can aerobatic training benefit
you? If you have never been upside down in an
airplane, are nervous of stalls, or are afraid of
spins, then you would definitely benefit from aerobatic
training alone, or as part of an emergency maneuver
or unusual attitude training course at an aerobatics
flight school that understands and integrates the
teach principles outlined here. No other training
can duplicate the physiological effects of flight
in all attitudes, nor can provide the advantages of
repetitive exercises to reinforce proper recovery
procedures. This type of aerobatic training will not only make
you a safer pilot, but also a more confident pilot!
Closing
Comments and Recommendations:
What is your best defense
in aircraft unusual attitude or upset conditions?
- First, attempt to avoid conditions that can
induce unusual attitudes in the first place.
Steer clear of thunderstorms and wake turbulence.
Avoid IMC or flight into low visibility conditions
if not properly certificated and trained. Avoid
distractions.
- Second, get the proper aerobatics
instruction from a flight school that
understands the differences between aerobatics
training and upset recovery training. According
to an article over 10 years ago in AW&ST (May 8, 1995 issue):
"Upset Recovery Training should include flights in aerobatic
aircraft to practice recovery techniques because
no simulator can model the disorientation of actually
being upside down... recurrent training every
two years, with time in an actual aircraft, would
be a good start." Regardless of the aircraft that
you fly, proper training will enable you to learn
to react decisively in a high-pressure environment,
and to learn proper recovery techniques to avoid
a "panic" response that could worsen the situation.
- Contact an APS Emergency Maneuver Training
representative. Certainly, we would like to
take this opportunity to recommend our program
at APS which offers
several
course layouts to choose from. Please give
us a call a 1-866-FLY-HARD and ask to speak with
a flight training specialist or submit this
online
form for more information today!
Get this training somewhere.
The life you save may be more than just your own.
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Performance Solutions (APS) Emergency Maneuver
Training program is far more comprehensive
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are especially well-suited to the corporate
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Rich
Stowell - NAFI Master CFI - Aerobatic
Author: Emergency Maneuver Training:
Controlling Your Airplane During a Crisis |
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