I'm back from my spin training sessions with Sonny Weller. It was an enlightening, valuable, and exhausting experience!We had a total of three sessions in Sonny's S-2C. One was cut a little short by weather, but the other two lasted until I said, "uncle", which happened at about .9! I feel like I did pretty well, considering it's been several months since the last acro flying for me.
We started with basic upright spins, left and right, and tried both active recoveries and Beggs-Mueller. We also looked at accelerating and flattening the spins. It did not take very much power to significantly flatten the spin. And the rotation rate on the accelerated spin was enough to squeeze an involuntary "holy crap!" past my lips!
Next came the inverted spins. Although it was certainly disorienting, I didn't have quite the level of complete confusion I had anticipated. I would describe it as unusual, but not unnatural looking. It did seem odd that we recovered from a 3-turn spin on the opposite heading, until Sonny reminded my that we had started inverted, and pulled out upright. We also crossed over from upright to inverted, which was the most disorienting maneuver of the whole trip. After the crossover, I would not have known which rudder to push (at least not right away) if it hadn't been for the fact that one leg was straight, and the other wasn't! We also tried accelerating and flattening the inverted spins, although Sonny was not up for more than a turn or so of inverted flat spinning. It was interesting that we seemed to recover more quickly from the inverted spins, due I suppose to the larger non-blanked rudder surface hanging in the breeze.
In the third session, we went back for more inverted spins, and Sonny tested me on emergency recoveries. In this part he went a little too easy on me- I wish he had thrown some tougher stuff at me, like a crossover spin to recover from, or maybe "accidently" leaving a touch of power in. We finished up with some straight acro maneuvers, hoping to have me fall out of something. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to mess up anything badly enough to get us spinning (maybe I should have tried harder!).
All in all, it was a well-spent time getting an introduction to all-attitude spins (well, not really ALL- we didn't have time for any snaps).
Tom P.