Home About ATC Exam Library Kudos Contact
menu


We Help You Pass
Our free online study guide really works. You can study for your FAA private pilot ground school exam right now. For more info about the 4VFR.COM project, click here. You can find a daily update log here.

Live ATC Audio Streams
Tune into live air traffic control frequencies from North America. This feature requires Real player. Start listening to ATC now!

Reference Library
Our glossary lists and databases have grown quickly. I am working to create an on-line reference library to tie together all the loose ends. You can check out what is currently available in the library

FAA Practice Exam - New!
Introducing our newly enhanced practice exam. Now with figures!. Take a test a day for a week, and I guarantee you will do better on your exam. Get Started Now!

Show your support for 4VFR.COM - Link us. Bookmark us. Tell your mother about us. Press CTRL-D to bookmark this site now!. Check out one of our proposed T-Shirt Designs.

.
.||||||.
exams to date

Feature Article: Sources of Inadvertent Stalls Becoming Spins

1. Inadequate rudder application in steep climbs. Climb power raises nose, decreases airspeed and increases P-factor.
2. False concept of air speed when on base due to a tailwind. Peripheral vision can sense the illusion and send it to the brain.
3. Letting nose pitch up and airspeed drop when applying power.
4. Having aircraft enter 'reverse command' area in pattern. A speed so slow and power so high that the only recourse is to lower the nose for flying speed.
5. Use of rudder to increase rate of turn from base to final. Keep ball centered during turns.
6. Distractions from primary purpose of aircraft control. This is now a required part of the flight test.
7. Trying to stretch a glide at a speed below best glide speed. If you don't know best glide, use best climb. It will be close.
8. Attempting to return to runway after engine failure. Practice at altitude and then add 50% fudge factor.

Stalls do not cause spins. A spin is initiated where the pilot includes or fails to include, rudder, aileron, or power individually or in combination during a stall. Auto rotation occurs from an asymmetrical stall and a sideslip. There is an abrupt loss of control when leaving the stall and entering the spin. The untrained pilot will always react instinctively and apply controls incorrectly thus aggravating the spin entry.

An incipient phase occurs when the foregoing stall is accompanied by uncoordinated yawing. The yaw induces a roll due to increased asymmetric lift on the wing opposite to the applied rudder. The aerodynamic differences from uncoordinated stalled flight causes the nose to drop. The autorotation to follow is quite varied as long as the dynamic and inertial forces are unbalanced. Airspeed will be changing but the faster the entry the longer it takes to stabilize the spin. By the second turn we may be in a developed (stabilized) spin. IAS will be pegged a few miles above 1G stall speed. Descent will vary but can reach 7500' fpm.

Know how to recognize the beginning of a spin. Quickly apply the proper control input. Get out of the incipient spin before it has a chance to develop. In a developed spin an aircraft prohibited for spins may be unrecoverable. To prevent this development from occurring the recognition and recovery from an incipient spin is a desirable training goal. The first turn of a spin causes the greatest loss of altitude, as much as 800' to 1000'. High-density altitude causes faster rate of spin and greater loss of altitude.

Recovery: Immediately, power off, opposite rudder, forward on yoke always in this sequence. If rudder is effective yoke forward may not be necessary. Otherwise, hold full application of controls until recovery. Check turn coordinator for direction if in doubt. The proper recovery from the incipient spin must be initiated at once or the yaw rate will become faster and the nose more toward the vertical.


Last Modified March 10, ©2026 TAGE.COM

Related Links
Featured Articles
  • Service Difficulty Reports (SDRs)
  • Crash Survival
  • Trim Tab Inventor
  • Engine Logs
  • Where's The Problem?
  • FAR 61.39(a)(5) Completion of Prerequisites for PT
  • Smoking
  • Getting the ATIS
  • Buchannan Field (at Concord, California)
  • Performance Sheet ASEL
  • What You Know, Gets In The Way of What You Don't Know
  • Illusions - Natural Illusions
  • Illusions - IFR for VFR pilots
  • FAR 61.35(a)(f) and 61 105(a) Aeronautical knowledge
  • Decisions, Decisions, Decisions

    More Flight Training Articles...

  • Student Kudos
    "Wow! Thank you for this wonderful website! I am so thriled to have found it! I am a college student also, and like most students, I am forever short on cash. You have no idea how much this is helping me, I will be a frequent visitor. Thanks again, KO."
    - K O

    Powered By: TAGE.COM HOME | BUG REPORT | CONTACT