With Icon Aircraft ramping up deliveries
of its amphibious A5 LSA, the Vacaville, California-based company it putting a
focus on educating its owners and company pilots about low level flying. The
Icon Low-Altitude Guidelines was developed because this type of flying is “the
essence of sport flying and the very reason the A5 was created in the first
place,” said Icon’s founder, chairman and CEO Kirk Hawkins in a note to A5
deposit holders and owners.
The Icon Low-Altitude Guidelines has
been incorporated into Icon’s training curriculum. The training is mandatory
for owners taking possession of their new A5s.
It’s important to stress that experience
and comfort level should determine how low a pilot should fly, and knowledge of
local terrain and obstacles is critical. Icon generally defines low-altitude
flying as flight below 300 feet agl. The area below 300 feet (or whatever
altitude the pilot feels comfortable with) is referred to as the soft deck.
In a discussion with Flying,
Hawkins said it’s critical to “switch modes” when flying in the high-risk
environment lower to the ground or water. This means throttling back, slowing
down, maneuvering gently and putting a greater focus on scanning the
environment for terrain and obstacles.
Icon recommends that pilots who plan to
fly at low altitude begin the flight with a briefing specific to the
low-altitude segment of the flight. Flying above the soft deck to scan the area
for any hazards is recommended. Below the soft deck, Icon recommends maneuvers
with no more than 45 degrees of bank and 10 degrees of pitch up or down.
Icon’s Low-Altitude Guidelines also
include suggested procedures for confined-area operations and box-canyon
reversal. While these procedures are published, pilots should practice them
extensively with an instructor to make sure that the maneuvers become second
nature. Using the wrong procedures for a quick 180-degree turn to get out of a
bad situation at low altitude could be hazardous at best and fatal at worst.
The Icon Low-Altitude Guidelines can be
found on Icon’s website. Icon is also working on an advanced low-altitude
training course to further hone the skills of its pilots. This training focuses
on flight below 100 feet agl.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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