By this lesson the student has flown circuits (lessons 6–7) and can fly the standard pattern, approach and landing. In addition to more consolidation, this lesson adds two distinct new skills:
1. The flapless approach and landing — a flatter, faster approach flown with power.
2. The go-around and recovery from a baulked landing — abandoning an approach or a poor landing.
The theory brief takes them in that order, which matches the in-flight notes and the order they are flown: consolidation circuit, then flapless, then go-arounds, then the baulked-landing recovery (the most demanding, built on the go-around). That said, there may be opportunity to demonstrate go-arounds throughout the lesson.
Open the lesson on a question that motivates the whole second half (go-arounds). Draw out the student's own list before giving the canonical one — but keep it short; the detailed decision criteria come later, in the go-around section.
Likely answers to draw out:
- The approach is unstable (too high, too low, too fast, not aligned).
- Something is on or near the runway (traffic, animals, vehicle).
- A gust, windshear, or a bounce upsets the landing.
- You are simply not happy with the approach — that is reason enough.
Plant the message: deciding to go around is a normal, well-flown outcome, not a failure. This lesson aims to make a go-around routine.
Emphasise: the option to go around never goes away, but it gets more demanding the lower and slower you are. That is exactly why we practise the late ones (the baulked landing) deliberately, at the end of the lesson.
We'll come back to this. First, the other new skill for today — landing without flap.
Talk through the outline before clicking on the Start to start the timer.
These map to CASA lesson-8 elements A4.3, A4.4, NTS1.1, NTS1.3, NTS2.1 and the underpinning-knowledge list.
Click Direct-To to arrive at Flapless Approach and Landing.
A short recall bridge into the flapless exercise (builds on lesson 6 approach/landing and earlier flap exposure). Keep it brief — it is recall, not new theory.
PHAK Ch 6 / AFH Ch 9 cover flap effect on lift and drag. FIM Ch 12 frames the flapless approach as flatter and best flown with power.
Underpinning knowledge: causes and handling of flap problems; crosswind technique. Note the manufacturer's guidance varies — some light types specify reduced flap in strong crosswinds, others do not. Read the POH for the training aircraft.
FIM Ch 12: flapless used "in gusty or strong cross wind conditions or in the event of mechanical failure of the flaps."
It may be worth discussing *why* less or no flaps are used in strong wind conditionts:
- Reduced go-around performance - longer to accelerate and climbe on the more-likely go around
- Less controllability at lower speeds
- Pitch sensitivity - flaps shift the centre of pressure and change the pitch moment. Gusts will increase those pitches and flaps may make it harder to dampen those pitches.
FIM Ch 12: "The descent path may be flatter, making judgment more difficult and an engine assisted approach should be made... the lowest safe speed during the flapless approach is obtained with power on."
TODO image — generate and save as flapless-vs-normal-profile.png in this lesson's brief-assets dir.
IMAGE PROMPT (for an image generator):
A clean, flat-style instructional aviation diagram in a side-on (profile) view, on a light background suitable for a slide. A runway sits along the bottom. From a single common start point at upper left (same height and distance from the runway) two descent paths run down to the runway: (1) a steeper roughly 3-degree NORMAL approach ending at a near aiming point a short way along the runway, labelled "Normal approach — with flap"; (2) a noticeably shallower, flatter FLAPLESS approach ending at an aiming point further along the runway, labelled "Flapless approach — no flap, with power". Put a small light-aircraft silhouette on each path. Along the runway, show with a bracket/arrow that the flapless path has a longer float and a longer ground roll, labelled "longer float + landing distance". Add a wind arrow showing a headwind from the right. Use simple labelled lines and a restrained blue-and-grey palette, minimal text, no photorealism — like a flight-instructor whiteboard or textbook diagram. Landscape orientation, generous margins so it reads at slide size.
FIM Ch 12: "Point out that there is usually a smaller round out angle and the possibility of a longer float... when the aeroplane has stopped, draw attention to the much longer distance covered."
Emphasise the energy-management consequence: more speed + less drag = more runway used. This is the safety message of the exercise. A flatter, faster approach that isn't working is itself a reason to go around — which is the next topic.
Click Direct-To to arrive at The Go-Around.
CASA NTS1.3 (assess situations and make decisions) is graded across this lesson. The pedagogy: give the student firm, repeatable gates so the decision is rule-based, not a judgement call made under pressure.
AFH Ch 9 (stabilised approach concept). Reinforce that a stabilised-approach standard removes the temptation to "save" a poor approach — including the flatter flapless one.
CASA A4.3 (conduct a missed approach). FIM Ch 12: apply take-off power, hold level until the recommended flaps-down climb speed, raise flap to optimum, then at a safe height/speed raise flap fully and resume a normal climb. Warn of the large trim change.
Sequence the flap retraction with the aircraft type — full flap to a stage, then clean up in steps as speed and height allow.
TODO image — generate and save as go-around-profile.png in this lesson's brief-assets dir.
IMAGE PROMPT (for an image generator):
A clean, flat-style instructional aviation diagram in a side-on (profile) view, on a light background suitable for a slide. A runway sits along the bottom. Draw one continuous flight path of a light aircraft that descends on final approach from the upper left toward the runway, reaches a low decision/level-off point just above the runway (it does NOT touch down), then transitions into a climb that rises away to the upper right along the extended runway centreline. Mark four labelled stages along the path, in order: "1. Full power" at the low point; "2. Attitude — arrest descent, climb" as it levels and starts up; "3. Flap up progressively" a little further along the climb; "4. Climb & re-trim on centreline" near the top. Place a small light-aircraft silhouette at the decision point and again climbing away. Add a wind arrow showing a headwind. Use simple labelled lines and a restrained blue-and-grey palette, minimal text, no photorealism — like a flight-instructor whiteboard or textbook diagram. Landscape orientation, generous margins so it reads at slide size.
A4.3 (e)(f)(g): after-take-off actions, wind allowance, wake-turbulence avoidance. Underpinning knowledge [A1 4(i), A4 4(j)]: prop wash / rotor wash / jet blast and their effect on other aircraft. [A6 4(e)]: prioritising activities during non-normal situations.
A common error is reaching for the radio before the aeroplane is climbing — name it. A busy circuit means a go-around puts you back into traffic, so lookout and the radio call matter (NTS2, situational awareness).
Click Direct-To to arrive at Missed Landing Recovery.
CASA A4.4 (perform recovery from missed landing). FIM Ch 12: "the student must not try to convert a bad landing into a good one but must, without hesitation, go around again... care must be taken not to fly back into the ground in a nose down attitude. A positive rate of climb or at least level flight must be established before flaps are raised."
This is the same go-around actions from the previous section, begun from a worse state — low, slow and possibly unsettled. That is precisely why it is briefed and demonstrated last, once the in-air go-around is solid.
Underpinning knowledge: "causes of loss of control of aeroplane on landing" [A4 4(f)]. Tie back to directional control — weathercocking, drift at touchdown, over-braking. The recovery is the standard go-around, just flown from a worse starting point.
Click Direct-To to arrive at Recap.
Grouped one topic at a time. Each uses a Bloom's action verb with a concrete quantity/anchor, so answers are assessable.
Final round of questions before moving to the pre-flight briefing notes and the flight.