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My text descriptions of the glide angle visualizerw were well under 1000 words, and even if they were so long, they still wouldn't have replaced a couple of pictures. ... so here they are.
These angles are measured with my hands and my eyeballs. To figure out the angles you'll see, stand in a long hallway and look at a spot at eye level on the far wall. Assume the appropriate hand position, with the top edge of your finger even with your level sightline. Note the farthest spot you can see under your finger on the floor. Measure the distances to the spot and the height of your eyeball above the floor. That ratio is the "glide ratio" of the sightline at the bottom of your finger.
You can also count fingers below the horizon at arms length, but most cockpits don't have enough room for waving your arms in many directions.
I like this method, because it's free, doesn't clutter up the cockpit, works in
any aircraft, is always with me, and won't blow away if I open the window.
With all due respect for the gadget freaks, I kinda think the split-mirror optical inclinometer is kinda like the flap position indicator in an LNC2 -- not as easy or as reliable as simply looking out the window.
ps - if you have a big prop with flat pitch windmilling on a high-compression engine with the throttle closed, you may want to use an open hand covering both eyes.
-bob mackey
Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Yahoo! Messenger with Voice.
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