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Hello, Goodbye: Going Around

Half of all general aviation accidents, and more than half of all transport category accidents (according to a 1992 Logistics and Transportation Review study), occur during landing. The irony is that most of these could be avoided if pilots dusted off their go around skills. Yes, an airliner going around isn’t exactly good publicity for an already nervous flying public, but neither is an airliner running off the end of a runway. The truth is, if you’re not prepared to go-around, you’re not prepared to fly the approach.

EXPECTATION AND NEGLECT
As demonstrated by the link above, this problem isn’t limited to students or low-time pilots. The more we’ve been flying, the more we expect to land — every time. I’m always shaking my head in bemused (but annoyed) disapproval every time I hear someone make a radio call like “Cherokee 87 Tango, left base to final, one-six, and this’ll be a full-stop.” How do they know? Of the hundreds of go-around errors, and dozens of go-around accidents, less than one-fifth are made by student pilots. Student pilots are used to going around, and they don’t have the high landing expectation that pilots tend to develop once they’ve logged a few hundred hours. Paradoxically, the more time you have, the more you should remind yourself that you really never know if your next landing will be a full stop. Whether you call them “balked landings”, wave-offs, missed approaches… the more you practice them, the safer you’ll be. It’s already built into your pre-landing checklist; those prop and mixture knobs aren’t full forward for engine cooling — they’re full forward so that they’ll be just where you need them if you suddenly have to go around.

OVERCOMING OBSTACLES — you…

OVERCOMING OBSTACLES — the airplane…

OVERCOMING OBSTACLES — You & The Airplane…

DEFENSE
There are several things we need to do. Here they are, right out of the FAA-S-8081-14A, the ASEL Practical Test Standards, Section I, Area IV, item L. (Note: This isn’t going to be effective until 8/1/2002.)


BOTTOM LINE: If you’re too fast, too far, too high, too far left and getting farther, if you’ve just bounced eight feet back into the air, or a rip-snorting gusty crosswind got you spooked, or you just noticed some jay-walking geese, or you see ice and you’re starting to slide sideways, or you notice the windsock now shows a tailwind, or another airplane just taxied out in front of you; or if you don’t have three greens, or the runway just disappeared in a fog bank, or the tower just asked you to land and hold short and you can’t — WHATEVER — GO AROUND. (You can always tell your friends you were just practicing.
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