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July 10, 2002 The
Control-Performance Technique for Instrument Flying
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You've upgraded your
airplane from the fixed-gear IFR trainer in which you earned
your instrument ticket. Isn't it time you upgraded your
instrument flying skills? Instead of using techniques designed
for the newly-minted instrument pilot, why not transition to
those developed for more experienced pilots flying faster,
more capable aircraft? Contributor R. Scott Puddy discusses
the benefits and how to make the transition work for you and
your airplane. July 10, 2002
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| About the Author
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R. Scott Puddy was an ATP, CFI, CFI-I, MEI
who taught out of the Buchanan Field Airport
(CCR) in Concord, California. Scott was
type-rated in the Beech/Raytheon King Air 300
series but regularly flew a V35 Bonanza and
practices law in San Francisco.
On the morning of June 18, 2002, Scott
perished doing what he loved: practicing
aerobatics in a Yak-52, in the mountains of
Brentwood, California.
He contributed many articles about flying to
AVweb in recent years and also worked as our
features editor. His enthusiasm for aviation and
his intensity in pursuing it were simply
extraordinary. Even more extraordinary was his
dedication to sharing his passion for flying
with others, by teaching and writing. He touched
a lot of lives, undoubtedly saved many, and his
legacy of written words will continue to do both
for many years to come. Scott's warmth, wit, and
keen intelligence will be missed by all who knew
him and worked with him.
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Having earned your instrument rating several
years ago, you have acquired a fair amount of instrument
experience and a corresponding level of comfort in IMC. You
also purchased an assortment of "dot com" stocks 18 months ago
and cashed out before the Federal Reserve raised interest
rates for the sixth time in 12 months. That venerable C-172
treated you well over the years, but you are flying more long
cross-country flights these days. You have the cash, so you
recently upgraded to Airplane 2.0.
Your new plane has an IO-520 up front (or one on each
wing). It is fast but slippery, a nasty trait that is most
apparent when you are attempting straight-and-level in IMC.
Controllers used to be much more polite when you were flying
your Skyhawk. You were considering requesting block altitudes
for all IMC flights when you discovered that you could keep
the beast more or less under control if you selected 45% power
for cruise. For flights faster than that, you select "Altitude
Hold" on your approach-coupled, three-axis auto-pilot.
The problem is neither you nor your airplane. When you step
up to high-performance airplanes, you need to upgrade to a
high-performance instrument scan. Here's how.
The FAA Way
The Primary/Supporting Scan
If your instrument instructor adhered to FAA guidance, you
initially trained under the FAA's primary/supporting
instrument scan regimen. Under this technique, the FAA
proclaims that all six of the basic flight control instruments
are created equal. Depending on the phase of flight, certain
of those instruments are designated as the "primary"
instruments and are to receive closer scrutiny than the other,
supporting instruments. The FAA acknowledges that the attitude
indicator is the only instrument that gives a direct
indication of the airplane's attitude. However, the attitude
indicator is never designated as a primary instrument for any
single phase of flight.
Just in case you have not recently reviewed the FAA
Instrument Flying Handbook (AC 61-27C), the FAA designates
primary and supporting instruments as follows:
| Flight Regime |
Primary Pitch |
Supporting Pitch |
Primary Bank |
Supporting Bank |
| Straight-And-Level |
ALT |
AI/VSI |
DG |
AI/TC |
| Constant Airspeed
Climb/Descent |
ASI |
AI/VSI |
DG |
AI/TC |
| Constant Rate
Climb/Descent |
VSI |
AI |
DG |
AI/TC |
| Standard Rate Turn |
ALT |
AI/VSI |
TC |
AI |
AI = Attitude Indicator DG =
Directional Gyro ALT = Altimeter VSI = Vertical
Speed Indicator ASI = Airspeed Indicator TC = Turn
Coordinator
Would The FAA Lead You
Astray?
Although this article recommends that experienced
instrument pilots use an alternative scanning technique in
high-performance aircraft, the primary/secondary scanning
technique is appropriate for use by instrument students and
inexperienced instrument pilots and is the method to use when
the attitude indicator is inoperable. The FAA counsels all
beginning instrument students (and the instructors who teach
them) to de-emphasize use of the attitude indicator in order
to develop the student's instrument scan and for reasons of
safety (in case the pilot may be so unlucky as to experience a
vacuum failure in IMC early in his or her instrument-flying
career).
During your primary flight
training, you were required to receive merely three hours of
instrument training. This included exposure to straight and
level flight, constant airspeed climbs and descents, turns to
a heading and recovery from unusual flight attitudes solely by
reference to the airplane's instruments. Also included were
radio communications, the use of navigation systems and
facilities and receiving radar services appropriate to
instrument flight. Those subjects necessarily received limited
treatment and the FAA appropriately refers to this initial
instrument work as "emergency flight by reference to
instruments." If you were like most students, you learned to
perform the required maneuvers by fixating on the attitude
indicator as though it were the only instrument on the panel.
Fixating on any one instrument is antithetical to
instrument flying, which requires the development of three
fundamental skills: instrument cross-check, instrument
interpretation, and aircraft control. Flight instruments and
the systems that support them fail from time to time. You must
cross-check the instruments against one another in order to
detect such a failure and to avoid unintended and undesirable
aerobatic flight in IMC. In addition to calling a controller's
unwanted attention to yourself, these are the kind of
maneuvers from which accident reports are made. Your first
task as an instrument student, therefore, was probably to
unlearn the habits developed during your initial "emergency
instrument training."
It is much more
difficult to unlearn and relearn than it is to start from
scratch. In flight-instructor jargon, the problem is called
"negative transfer" or "interference." The practical
implication is that scanning the flight instruments other than
the attitude indicator must be given disproportionate emphasis
during the initial phases of instrument training in order to
overcome the student's established habit of fixating on the
attitude indicator. That is one reason that we use the
primary/supporting instrument scan, which relegates the
attitude indicator to a supporting-actor role.
The second reason for the FAA's primary/supporting
instrument scan relates to the instrument student's
post-certification life expectancy. Vacuum pumps fail about
every 1,000 hours or so. Unfortunately, the low-time
instrument pilot does not know whether the next hour in IMC
will be the hour.
If 1,000 newly minted
instrument pilots were to launch for an hour's flight in the
clouds, the odds are that one of them would probably end up
shooting a partial-panel approach. Provided that all those
pilots were trained in accordance with the FAA's Instrument
Flying Handbook, the pilot who was singled out by fatigued
carbon vanes should do just fine because the failed attitude
indicator was merely a supporting (and not a primary)
instrument. Using the FAA's primary/supporting scan allows the
inexperienced or occasional instrument pilot to use a single
scanning technique for both full panel and partial-panel
situations.
Moving Up; Moving On
If you are moving up, then it
is time to move on. Once you have gotten your wings wet in
IMC, there is no reason to prepare for a
once-in-a-thousand-hour emergency by acting as though the
emergency condition constantly exists. The attitude indicator
sits front-and-center in the standard instrument layout for a
reason. Commentary from countless aviation writers to the
effect that any failure of the attitude indicator should be
treated as an actual emergency exists for another good reason.
Commercial airliners have at least three attitude indicators
installed for the same reason. The reason is this: The
attitude indicator is the most important instrument on the
panel. Ignoring the attitude indicator because it might
someday fail is not quite as bad as setting your plane on fire
to retain currency in forced landings, but ... well, you get
the idea.
Using the primary/supporting scan needlessly forces you to
fly your plane differently in IMC than in VMC. There you go,
motoring along on an instrument flight plan in VMC. You are a
well-trained pilot, so you control the airplane primarily by
reference to the visual horizon. Your attention is outside the
plane at least 80 percent of the time and you only
occasionally glance at the directional gyro and the altimeter
to confirm that you are holding the appropriate heading and
altitude.
Suddenly, you encounter ... a
CLOUD. According to the primary/supporting
method of scanning, you should immediately attempt to control
altitude by focusing primarily on the altimeter and heading by
focusing primarily on the directional gyro, cross-checking the
attitude indicator from time-to-time because it is a
supporting instrument for both pitch and bank in
straight-and-level flight. Why should you cross-check the
altimeter and directional gyro only occasionally in VMC and
rivet your attention on those instruments upon encountering
IMC?
Attitude Instrument Flying
Yet another and more technical reason for upgrading your
technique is that the primary/supporting scan contravenes the
most basic and fundamental concept of instrument flying. The
name of the game you are playing is "Attitude Instrument
Flying." The central rule to the game is:
POWER + ATTITUDE =
PERFORMANCE
That formula guarantees you that, if you select an
appropriate power setting and place the airplane in a constant
attitude in coordinated flight, the airplane will give
predictable future performance. Your capability to predict
(and hence to anticipate and correct) the airplane's future
performance is the key to operating high-performance aircraft
smoothly in IMC. To enforce that rule, you must be able to
hold the plane in a constant attitude. To maintain a constant
attitude you need to focus on the attitude indicator. The
attitude indicator is the only instrument on the panel that
gives instantaneous and direct information about the
airplane's pitch and bank attitudes.
The need to use the attitude
indicator to establish and maintain an attitude can be
clarified by examining the limitations of the flight
instruments. The information they provide differs greatly from
one point in time to the next based on the degree to which the
airplane's attitude is changing. These points in time are: (1)
the past, (2) the present, and (3) the future.
Past, Present And Future...
As discussed above, the pitch control instruments in
straight-and-level flight are:
The altimeter reacts to changes in barometric pressure and
gives instantaneous information about the airplane's current
altitude. The altimeter reflects the
present.
The vertical speed indicator depends upon a "calibrated
leak" for its indications. One result of this design is a
distinct lag between a change in the airplane's attitude and
related information appearing on the instrument. The VSI
reflects the past.
Of the "pitch control instruments," the attitude indicator
is the only one that predicts the future. It
gives instantaneous and direct information about the pitch
attitude of the airplane. By holding power and attitude, you
can control what the resulting performance will be. Hence, if
in straight-and-level flight the airplane were to pitch to a
climb attitude, the attitude indicator is the only instrument
on board that would allow you to correct for an altitude
deviation before the airplane began a climb or a
descent.
...Cruise Control
As the above discussion suggests, the limitations of the
primary/supporting scan in high-performance airplanes are most
evident in controlling altitude. In a Bonanza for example, if
you were to focus on the altimeter as the primary means of
controlling pitch you would constantly be setting off alarms
at the controller's scope as you busted your assigned altitude
by 200 feet or more. This is because a high-performance plane
is capable of departing from its existing altitude quite
rapidly. By the time you detect that an altitude deviation has
occurred, the airplane can be off altitude by hundreds of
feet. Moreover, deviations in altitude will distract your
attention from the directional gyro and lead to deviations in
heading as well.
If you use the altimeter as the
primary instrument for pitch in a high-performance plane, you
will constantly find yourself "behind" the plane. Although the
altimeter gives information about the plane's present
performance, there is a time lag associated with your need to
cross-check and interpret it and the other instruments. You
will constantly be reacting to what the plane has already
done, or "chasing" the airplane. Your reaction, if you are
like many transitioning pilots, may be to use reduced power
settings in actual or simulated IMC. Unable to keep up with a
high-performance plane using the FAA's primary/supporting
scan, you may resort to reducing power and converting your
high-performance airplane to a low-performance airplane to
accommodate the limitations of your technique. That is not the
answer. The answer is to change the way you fly in IMC.
Taking Control
Introducing The Control/Performance Scan
Although neither the FAA nor
your flight instructor told you this, there is another way —
the control/performance scan. At first glance, the
control/performance scan appears remarkably similar to the
primary/supporting scan. Five of the six basic flight control
instruments are treated exactly the same as before. One
instrument, the attitude indicator, is singled out for special
consideration. Although there are substantial similarities
between the two methods, the way you will fly in IMC using the
control scan will be markedly different than before.
The control/performance scan divides the panel instruments
into categories that give credence to the truism that the
airplane's performance is a function of power and attitude.
They are:
Control Instruments...
In the control/performance scan technique, the instruments
that inform the pilot of the airplane's power setting (usually
the manifold pressure gauge) and attitude (the attitude
indicator) are designated as the "Control Instruments" and are
assigned the top tier. Of course, power adjustments in cruise
are relatively infrequent — or certainly should be — so the
practical effect is that the attitude indicator rests alone
atop the heap. You will make all control inputs with reference
to the attitude indicator to maintain an attitude that will
yield the desired indications on the "Performance
Instruments."
...Performance Instruments...
The Performance Instruments
reside in the second tier and consist of the other five
familiar gauges. They are assigned "primary" or "supporting"
status for each flight regime in the same manner as under the
primary/supporting scan. The "primary" instruments are the
ones that reflect the value the pilot is attempting to
maintain. For example, in level flight at 7,500 feet, the
primary pitch instrument is the altimeter, since it is the
only instrument that shows 7,500 feet. In a 500-fpm
constant-rate climb, the primary pitch instrument is the VSI,
as it is the only instrument that shows 500 fpm. By extension,
in a 90-knot constant-rate climb, the primary pitch instrument
is the airspeed indicator because it is the only instrument
that shows 90 knots.
...And Navigation Instruments
Within the third tier there are
the "Navigation Instruments" (e.g., VOR/LOC/GS, ADF, GPS), but
a discussion of this instrument group is beyond the scope of
this article. Of course, if you don't know that these
instruments indicate where the aircraft is and how it can get
where it's going, then a quick call to your CFII to schedule
some instruction is probably in order.
In sum, the control/performance concept recognizes that
there is a cause-and-effect relationship between the
indications maintained on the instruments in the higher tiers
and the values that will result on the instruments in the
lower tiers. You will use the Control Instruments to achieve
the desired indications on the Performance Instruments. You
will choose target indications on the Performance Instruments
that will yield the desired indications on the Navigation
Instruments.
Control/Performance Flying
Straight-And-Level...
That all that sounds pretty
technical, so let's consider what it means in conjunction with
the most usual flight regime: straight-and-level flight. Here
you go again, motoring along on an instrument flight plan in
VMC. You are controlling the airplane primarily by reference
to the visual horizon and only occasionally glance at the
panel to confirm that you are maintaining the appropriate
altitude and heading.
Suddenly, you again encounter ... a CLOUD,
but this time you continue to fly the airplane exactly as
before. You merely substitute the visual cues of the
"artificial horizon" for the visual cues of the visual
horizon. You maintain a cruise power setting. You hold the
airplane in a constant attitude by reference to the horizon
(attitude indicator). You periodically cross-check the
directional gyro — and the turn coordinator on a supporting
basis — to confirm that you are maintaining the appropriate
heading. You also cross-check the altimeter and the VSI — on a
supporting basis — to confirm that you are holding the desired
altitude.
When you upgrade to a more
high-tech panel, you will devote even more of your attention
to the attitude indicator. For example, a flight director is a
common option in the general-aviation fleet. The altitude-hold
and heading-hold features of the flight director eliminate the
need to cross-check the altimeter and directional gyro to
confirm that you are maintaining altitude and heading. With
all that information available on one instrument, the
cross-check serves simply to assure that the thing is not
broken.
...Turns...
Later in the flight, you are still in IMC when the time
comes to turn 90 degrees to the left. That will require a
transition from one phase of flight (straight-and-level) to
another (standard-rate level turn). The transition will take
only two to three seconds. Just as your attention should be
focused outside the airplane in a transition to a turn in VMC,
your attention should be focused solely on the attitude
indicator during the transition in IMC. This is not the time
to be scanning the engine gauges. The attitude indicator is
the only instrument on the panel that gives
instantaneous indications of both pitch and bank. By looking
at the attitude indicator while you roll into a turn, you can
assure that you maintain the appropriate pitch attitude while
you change the bank from 0 degrees to the 15 degrees or so
required for a standard-rate turn.
It requires discipline to
fixate on the attitude indicator during transitions and you
may be surprised how much trouble you have in remembering to
focus on a single instrument during a two-to-three-second time
period. Other than lack of discipline, the problems again are
"negative transfer" and "interference." Having been taught for
years to scan all the instruments on the panel, you may have
trouble fixating on one instrument, even if it is for only two
to three seconds.
A failure to use the attitude indicator for transitions is
easy enough to detect: If you depart the assigned altitude
while rolling into a turn or leave an assigned heading while
changing pitch, it is a sure sign that you were not looking at
the attitude indicator during the transition.
The other bugaboo that
frequently arises with transitions to turns is the heading
bug. When assigned a new heading, some instrument pilots have
a habit of adjusting the heading bug to the new heading as
they roll the airplane into a bank to initiate the turn. The
heading bug is attached to the directional gyro. If you are
resetting the heading bug, you are looking at the directional
gyro — not the attitude indicator. The answer is
to reset the heading bug first, and then to transition into
the turn using the attitude indicator.
Once established in the turn, you once again control the
airplane by holding it in a constant attitude, primarily by
reference to the attitude indicator. You occasionally
cross-check the altimeter — and the VSI on a supporting basis
— to confirm that you are holding altitude, and cross-check
the turn coordinator to confirm that you are turning at a
standard rate. Fifteen seconds or so into the 90-degree turn,
you begin to cross-check the directional gyro to avoid
overshooting your new heading. About eight degrees (half the
angle of bank) before reaching the new heading, you roll to
straight-and-level using the attitude indicator.
...Climbs, Descents And Takeoffs
Executing climbs and descents, and transitions to and from
climbs and descents using the control/performance scan, adds
another requirement. In addition to using the
control/performance scanning technique for instrument
cross-check and instrument interpretation, you must also use
the correct inputs for aircraft control. Visible moisture does
not negate the fundamental principles of aerodynamics and you
may have become a little lazy over the years. To fly
high-performance airplanes smoothly in IMC, you need to fly
correctly.
A common problem is the failure
to maintain coordinated flight. Coordinated flight is
essential to keeping your passengers comfortable and also to
assure that the attitude you hold will yield the performance
you desire. The attitude indicator reflects only pitch and
bank; it does not reflect yaw. Therefore, you could maintain a
wings-level (straight) attitude and nevertheless make an
uncoordinated, skidding turn to the left by applying left
rudder.
Excessive left rudder is the equivalent of insufficient
right rudder. A high-performance single will likewise yaw to
the left if you fail to input sufficient right rudder pressure
when it is required due to the sometimes-ignored left-turning
tendencies: 1) asymmetrical disc loading, 2) torque, and 3)
prop wash. If your high-performance plane has a single IO-520
under the cowl, it has left-turning tendencies in spades in a
climb. If you maintain wings-level in a climb and leave your
feet on the floor, your plane will yaw dramatically to the
left. In a climb, to hold a constant heading using the
attitude indicator, you must center the ball with right
rudder. In a descent you need left rudder, but to a lesser
extent.
The left-turning
tendencies are also a factor during low visibility takeoffs.
On the runway, as the airplane attempts to veer into the left
hedgerow, you will receive ample feedback through the right
rudder pedal. The airplane will not turn left unless the nose
wheel also turns left. The nose wheel is connected to the
rudder pedal which tells you that the plane is attempting a
left turn. You instinctively counteract with right rudder
pressure to hold the airplane straight.
Upon rotation you will lose that feedback when the nose
wheel breaks ground. The tendency therefore is to reduce right
rudder pressure upon rotation. At the same time that the
sensation of a need for right rudder pressure decreases, the
actual need for right rudder pressure increases.
The rotation increases the angle of attack and exacerbates the
airplane's left-turning tendencies. In order to maintain
coordinated flight (and a constant heading using a wings-level
attitude) you need to increase right rudder input upon
rotation. Otherwise, your high-performance single will turn
(yaw) dramatically to the left.
Transitions
You now can fly level and perform climbs and descents using
the control/performance scan. But, in order to transition
smoothly between those phases of flight, we need to review yet
another aerodynamic principle that you learned during your
primary training: static longitudinal stability.
Certification requirements compel airplane manufacturers to
demonstrate that control forces will vary proportionately with
changes in airspeed. As airspeed increases, you will feel the
need for a proportionately greater "pitch-down" control input
in order to maintain level flight. As airspeed decreases, you
will feel the need for a proportionately greater "pitch-up"
control input to maintain altitude. The means by which
manufacturers meet the static longitudinal stability
requirement is a lengthy subject that will have to wait for
another article.
Meanwhile, the ramifications of immediate significance to
you for flight in IMC are:
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Required pitch inputs will
vary proportionately with changes in airspeed; and,
-
Required pitch inputs will
continue to change so long as airspeed is changing.
Accelerating...
Static longitudinal stability will present a problem to you
when you upgrade to high-performance planes capable of
operating over a greater speed range than the instrument
trainer in which you earned your rating. In an instrument
trainer you might cruise climb at an airspeed of 95-100 KIAS.
When you push the nose down to a level flight attitude at
8,000 feet MSL or so, indicated airspeed will increase in a
short time to 105-110 KIAS, an increase of about 10 knots or
about 10 percent.
In a Bonanza or other Airplane Version 2.0, you will cruise
climb at around 105 KIAS and your indicated airspeed at 8,000
will be around 145-150 KIAS, an increase of 40 knots and about
40 percent. The acceleration will persist for a longer time in
a high-performance airplane and there will be a corresponding
increase in your workload during the transition as the
required control forces constantly change.
You could partially
circumvent this increased workload by selecting a lower cruise
power setting. That would decrease the airspeed range (and
hence the range of required pitch control inputs). It would
also shorten the process of accelerating from climb speed to
cruise speed (because cruise speed will be lower). Once again,
there is a tendency to select lower cruise power settings in
order to convert your high-performance plane to a
low-performance plane so that it will fly more like the
aircraft you are accustomed to piloting. Of course, reducing
power for cruise is not the reason you bought Airplane 2.0:
Cruising at a lower power setting could be done just as well —
and probably much more cheaply — in Airplane 1.0.
Static longitudinal stability is also a factor during
transitions from level flight to a descent. In an instrument
trainer, if you push the nose forward you will experience a
modest gain in airspeed and the plane will reach terminal
velocity fairly quickly. If you push the nose over in a
Bonanza, you will gain lots of speed over a prolonged time
period. As long as airspeed is increasing, you will need to
increase the "pitch-down" control input — and subsequently
"pitch-down" trim — to counteract the airplane's static
longitudinal stability. If you neglect to steadily increase
the "pitch-down" control input, the Bonanza will dutifully
level off — just as its designers intended.
Once again, you could avoid the need for protracted changes
in pitch control inputs by drastically reducing power in the
descent or by lowering the gear. Most of the time, however,
you would prefer to fly gradual descents at higher speeds.
Bonanzas are made to go fast.
...Decelerating...
Transitions involving deceleration (such as leveling off
from a descent at cruise power) present a similar problem in
high-performance planes. A Bonanza is much more slippery than
a C-172 and will consume more time in decelerating from
descent airspeed to cruise airspeed. Throughout the
transition, the required "pitch-up" control force will be
increasing.
...And Putting It All Together
Each of the above situations involving protracted changes
in airspeed represents a prolonged transition between phases
of flight. Just as you must fixate on the attitude indicator
during the two-to-three seconds that it takes to transition
from straight-and-level to a standard rate turn, you must more
or less fixate on the attitude indicator throughout the one to
two minutes that it takes to transition from climb to cruise,
from cruise to descent, or from descent to cruise.
During these
transitions, you must fly by sight, not by feel. The moment
you take your eyes off the attitude indicator you will
literally lose sight of the small incremental changes in
attitude and will instinctively, by feel, attempt to hold
altitude by maintaining the same control pressures that were
"correct" moments ago. As your airspeed changes, those control
pressures will become incrementally incorrect and you will
deviate from your desired flight path.
The fundamental concept of the control/performance scan is
to focus on the attitude indicator. The requisite near
fixation on the attitude indicator during prolonged
transitions is much easier using the control/performance
instrument scan because that is more consistent with the
general manner in which you are flying the airplane.
Other than using the control/performance scan, the two
skills that will help you minimize the increased workload
inherent in transitions involving speed changes in
high-performance planes are anticipation and trim. Each of the
above scenarios is a consequence of the fundamental principles
of flight. It is therefore completely predictable, for
example, that required "pitch-down" forces will increase for a
minute and a half or so when you level off to cruise airspeed.
That should not catch you by surprise. Instead, you should
plan on it.
As pitch forces increase during a prolonged transition, do
not tolerate them — eliminate them with trim. It requires
energy to exert force. Moreover, you cannot fly smoothly using
substantial control forces because the muscle groups capable
of generating those forces are not the ones you use for fine
motor movements. Instead, once you have eliminated substantial
control pressures, you can use your fine motor skills to
achieve precise attitude control.
Wrapping Up
The instrument rating, like any other FAA certificate, is a
license to learn. For good reason, you were initially trained
to use the FAA's primary/supporting scan. However, once you
have mastered the fundamental skill of "instrument
cross-check," you should consider upgrading to the
control/performance scan.
The control/performance
instrument-scanning technique is for accomplished instrument
pilots. If you are flying or intend to fly high-performance
planes in IMC, it is the technique for you because you need to
be an accomplished instrument pilot to fly powerful, slippery
airplanes on instruments. The technique also works well for
accomplished instrument pilots flying low-performance planes.
Changing from the FAA primary/supporting scan to the
control/performance scan is not learning something new, it is
relearning something old. If the primary/supporting scan
requires you to fly in IMC as though you were partial panel,
the control/performance scan requires you to fly in IMC as
though you were in VMC. The initial feeling is very
reminiscent of the first few primary training flights when you
learned to keep your head outside the cockpit and to control
the airplane primarily by reference to the visual horizon.
Once you acclimate to the change, you will fly the airplane
more naturally in IMC, using the same cruise power settings
you select in VMC and without having to request a block
altitude.
Whether your are being propelled by an IO-520, a pair of
TSIO-360s, or an O-320, if you switch to the
control/performance instrument scan you will also need to
preserve your primary/secondary scanning skills. You will need
them to fly partial panel when — not if — the attitude
indicator or vacuum pump fails you.
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