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Impress your friends on your aviation knowledge. Landing a plane is the most important part of a flight. Fly safe! These instructions assume you are approaching a towered airport for landing in a left traffic pattern, and the winds are calm and visibility is good.

  1. Get the ATIS (Automatic Terminal Information Service) and tell the control tower what happened (if it's an emergency) 10 miles (16 km) out from entry into the airspace. [1] ATIS will give you a code such as "Information alpha" to give to tower. Contact the control tower or approach control for that airport, and state the following:
    • " tower/approach name, aircraft tail number, location, altitude, Landing with information whatever "ATIS" code you received above." The tower will give you instructions. This guide assumes they instructed you to take left (or right) traffic for Runway X and to report on 45 (45 degree downwind entry to runway being used). (This is a rough guideline, it's missing some specific information that tower sometimes asks for)

  2. Brakes checked, undercarriage down & locked, Mixture fully rich, Fuel selector on both, Flaps as required, (Propeller pitch fixed), Suction indicating, Oil Temps. and Press. (Ts&Ps) in green, Master on, Mags on both, (Carb. heat to HOT if RPM is below 1500RPM) Hatches & Harness' locked and latched, Landing lights on. PLANE CLEAR TO LAND. [2]
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  3. Heat and make your descent to where you reach pattern altitude for that airport by the time you reach the 45° entry leg. You can be a little higher on the 45. Let's assume the pattern altitude is 1,200 feet (365.8 m) MSL. Try to descend at 500 feet (150 m) per minute. That will be easier on your ear drums.
  4. The tower might clear you to land or will acknowledge.
  5. [3] By now the tower should have cleared you to land. You should have slowed the plane to 80 to 85 knots and powered the engine to around 2000 rpms.
  6. Hold the nose level until the airspeed drops into the white arc, then extend 10 degrees of flaps. Pitch for 75 knots using outside visual reference, then confirm with the airspeed indicator. Make sure you coordinate your turns with the rudder pedals. Be especially careful not to use excessive inside rudder however: skid + stall = spin!
  7. This should bring your airspeed down to 70 knots. Do not add flaps while in the turn; only after turn is complete. You are now perpendicular to the runway. Be especially careful not to overshoot your final turn at an airport with parallel runways, because the parallel runway might have landing traffic. [4]
  8. When the field is made (you would reach it even if the engine were to quit), extend the next 10 degrees of flaps (again, after the turn is complete). The spot on the ground where you will land will appear stationary. Use pitch to maintain approach speed (usually 60-70KIAS). Use power to control altitude. Be careful to keep airspeed above 60KIAS, but do not fixate on the airspeed indicator. Use the ailerons to correct for any crosswind and the rudder pedals to keep the plane aligned with the runway center-line.
  9. Keeping level will require increasing amounts of back pressure on the yoke, and (increasing amounts of aileron in a crosswind). After touchdown keep the yoke pulled all the way back and to whichever side is needed for crosswind. Only apply the brakes if necessary (for field length or to avoid holding up other landing traffic). Continue on the runway centerline until you reach taxi speed (a fast walking pace), then turn off at the nearest taxiway and do not stop until you have passed the hold short line. [5]
  10. [6]
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    What is a standard turn?
    Community Answer
    A standard turn is one with a bank angle, and one that will take you 2 minutes to complete a full 360 degree circle.
  • Question
    I took 5 yrs off after 220 hrs flight time. My check off instructor demonstrated an engine out (power to idle) on downwind. He put it into a slip and maintained it to landing, flared and a smooth landing. I tried it and my landing was not as smooth. Is this a safe maneuver?
    Community Answer
    A slip landing should not be necessary if your approach is normal. Some use the slip to lose altitude when their approach is too high. A slip is dangerous because you could stall the aircraft. A go-around might be safer if you're too high.
  • Question
    How do I note the AGL with the altimeter?
    Community Answer
    The altimeter, if properly adjusted for barometric pressure, indicates mean sea level altitude. AGL is the difference between the altimeter indication and surface elevation.
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      Tips

      • If you don't have at least a student pilot certificate, you can only go up with a flight instructor. Even then, you will need endorsements from a flight instructor on the back of your certificate and in your logbook stating you are qualified to fly solo.
      • Have fun.
      • If you are overshooting the runway, don't be afraid to go around. Apply full power and push to keep the airspeed up and the nose from coming up too high. Establish a positive rate of climb and clean up the airplane, flaps in stages. The difference between a good pilot and a fool is the willingness to make a go around.
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      Reader Success Stories

      • Aaron Nanou

        May 18, 2016

        "The whole chapter is very helpful, the landing procedures and all steps."
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