by Bryan Cotton » Sun Jan 12, 2014 6:44 pm
My first inverted spin was inadvertent. We were doing Immelmanns and mine were rushed and sloppy. He wanted me to pause at the top and make sure I was level inverted before I rolled out. So I paused, looked left and right, and I was nice and level. I had managed to stop with my nose up a few degrees though and my airspeed continued to drop off until it stalled inverted. With full power on, it went into a spin. Tom said "this is an inverted spin." For those of low skill like me, both inverted and upright spins look the same - straight down, even though they are not. I said "this is an inverted spin?" Tom's reply was "yes, and now it's a full blown one." None of my recovery tactics were working, and Tom said "you will never recover if you don't pull the power off." I did as he instructed, but more thrashing about did not improve things. "Look for the heavy pedal." On the ground Tom had told me that upright or inverted, the rudder tended to trail in the direction of the spin, and an anti-spin input would take more force. I switched feet (having been previously convinced I knew which way we were spinning), the pedal forces went up, and out we popped into an inverted stall. My overwhelmed, positive G brain knew we were stalled but muscle memory had me pushing forward to break the stall, which of course held us nicely in it. "I got it." He recovered after talking me through my attempts, a 4000' altitude loss with a recovery at 2000' AGL. "Next time out we will do inverted spins." On that next time out, we did a lot of gentle entries from a straight ahead inverted stall. The last one we entered upright at 80, stick full forward and full pedal. That is the most violent thing I have ever done in the air. I held it in for 3 turns, it never settled down but it did pop right out when I wanted it to.
I miss the good old days sometimes.
Bryan Cotton
Poplar Grove, IL C77
Waiex 191 N191YX
Taildragger, Aerovee, acro ailerons
dual sticks with sport trainer controls
Prebuilt spars and machined angle kit
Year 2 flying and approaching 200 hours December 23