DVA10685
First Officer, B737-800
Joined on April 18 2012
Phoenix, AZ
6 legs, 14.3 hours
6 legs,
14.3 hours online 5 legs,
12.7 hours ACARS
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Posted onPost created on
April 25 2012 00:02 ET by Geoff Ballentine
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DVA2701
Senior Captain, B777-200
OLP
Joined on November 21 2005
50 State Club
Everett 500 Club
Million Mile Club
Globetrotter
Online Nine Century
Millennium Club
DVA Fifteen-Year Anniversary
Denver, CO
1,041 legs, 3,309.1 hours
997 legs,
3,153.7 hours online 1,020 legs,
3,263.5 hours ACARS 21 legs,
38.4 hours event
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Posted onPost created on
April 25 2012 00:05 ET by Dean Shultz
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DVA1008
Senior Captain, B757-200
Joined on December 14 2002
B757 100 Club
Everett 250 Club
50 State Club
Six Century Club
Online Six Century Club
DVA Fifteen-Year Anniversary
"Fly 'till the map turns blue" Kokomo, IN
633 legs, 1,731.3 hours
613 legs,
1,689.9 hours online 212 legs,
792.3 hours ACARS 35 legs,
77.7 hours event
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Posted onPost created on
April 25 2012 00:06 ET by Matt Young
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DVA10685
First Officer, B737-800
Joined on April 18 2012
Phoenix, AZ
6 legs, 14.3 hours
6 legs,
14.3 hours online 5 legs,
12.7 hours ACARS
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Posted onPost created on
April 25 2012 02:06 ET by Geoff Ballentine
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DVA7922
Senior Captain, MD-88
OLP
Joined on November 04 2009
50 State Club
Online Century Club
Triple Century Club
Globetrotter
"Student Pilot: "Um, Your controls."" Dallas, GA USA
384 legs, 1,292.5 hours
128 legs,
221.9 hours online 382 legs,
1,281.7 hours ACARS 18 legs,
40.6 hours event
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Posted onPost created on
April 25 2012 08:26 ET by Charles Carter
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Geoff,
There are three regimes of bank: shallow, medium, and steep. In a shallow turn you must keep pressure on the ailerons in the direction of turn to keep the aircraft from rolling back towards wings level. In a steep turn you must use aileron pressure opposite to the direction of turn in order to keep the plane from rolling further into the turn. A medium bank turn is one in which all the forces equal out, and aileron pressure is not necessary once the turn is established. The bank angle ranges vary from one aircraft to another, and they also vary based on the airspeed of the aircraft as well.
No, your yoke is (most likely) not broken.
This should have been taught to you during your PPL training. It should have been a fundamental learning point that later training was built on. It should have been a discussion you had with your instructor when you began practicing steep turns, at the very least.
Charles CarterSenior Captain, MD-88
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DVA10685
First Officer, B737-800
Joined on April 18 2012
Phoenix, AZ
6 legs, 14.3 hours
6 legs,
14.3 hours online 5 legs,
12.7 hours ACARS
|
Posted onPost created on
April 25 2012 13:25 ET by Geoff Ballentine
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