Today I went flying. We did steep turns and spiral dives.
When I got to the Aeroclub, the airport was already busy, Dash 8's coming and going, the Tecnams sitting out front, and Cessna 172's ever present. I preflighted RJF and noted that we had 48 litres of fuel in our tanks. Minus 1L of unuseable and 45 minutes club reserves, that means we had 32 litres left for flying, enough for nearly 2 hours.
I got talked through steep turns, what to do, and how to recover from a spiral dive, should we ever get into one unintentionally etc.
I started up (and forgot my after-start checks AGAIN
). We got our taxi clearance and taxied to Hold point Delta for runway 20. We did our run-up and DVA's, and lined up (after recieving our clearance to the west, 2500ft and below). I took off well and we established ourselves westbound to the Mapua Training area. We climbed to 2000ft, and tracked along Rabbit Island. Upon reaching Mapua we changed to 119.1 to state our intentions. That went ok and we continued along the coast for the mapua training area. As soon as we reached it, we found the club 172 doing turns in the training area, so it became unsuitable for steep turns. We tracked a few minutes south to the Upper Moutere training area instead.The instructor showed me a steep turn at 2000ft, and then I did it. It was great fun!I barely lost or gained any height, and the G forces felt really cool. A steep turn is done usually up to 45* of bank. To do one, you basically roll your wings and increase your power 100rpm when you pass 30* of bank. This allows you to gain more lift by having more airspeed.
We did a few of these, then she showed me a spiral dive. She rolled the wings to 45*, then kept going a little bit, and didn't use any back pressure. Our nose slowly went down and we banked more and more, and the G's got higher and higher. Higher G loading is a really cool feeling! After she had recovered from her dive, I tried one, which was successful, and we didn't crash and die. Yay!
After this, we rejoined the Nelson Circuit, did a Touch and go on the grass (not so smooth), and then a full stop on the grass. By this stage the wind had changed and we were on runway 02. My second landing on the grass (the full stop) was smooth. We taxied to the club after giving way to a Dash 8 (the pilot waved to me!
B) )
We shut down, and that was that. One of my most enjoyeable flights, and all in .6 of an hour.




(way better than any roller coaster!)
