by Nav » Thu Dec 02, 2004 7:59 am
forfun, so difficult guessing if you're fairly new to this or a 1,000-hour veteran :)
Assuming the former, remember 'power first, then pitch'. If you want to climb, the FIRST thing is to add power; only pitch the nose up when you've done that. With low- powered aeroplanes like the default Cessna, you'll need full power to climb in any conditions.
Second, the rate of climb is important - and the achievable rate varies with height, as the air gets thinner. The Cessna will climb out after takeoff at 800 feet/minute, but above about 5,000, 500/minute is about the limit.
At the other end of the scale, a jetliner will climb out at just about any rate you like at first - but above say 20,000, 1,500/minute is about the limit.
Mainly, watch your airspeed - keep it at sensible levels. If it looks like dropping into the danger zone, reduce the rate of climb till it gets back to a safe figure. In fact, holding the right speed is your main concern when climbing - if you look on the 'kneeboard', or in the 'Flight Notes' for the aeroplane you are flying in the Learning Centre, it will tell you the recommended climb speeds.
Hope all that helps :)