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How To Time Your Flare For A Perfect Landing

Have you ever felt like you can't figure out when you should flare?

Flaring is by far the hardest part of your landing to master, and it takes the most finesse. But if your airspeed is on target and your glide path steady, it's pretty simple.

To execute a good flare and landing, you need to have a couple of things under control as you approach the runway: airspeed, and flare height.

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Step 1: Get Your Airspeed Under Control

Let's start with airspeed. Your final approach airspeed depends on two things: your landing weight, and your flap configuration.

For most aircraft, you'll find the published final approach speed in your Pilot's Operating Handbook or Airplane Flight Manual. It's often in Section Five, next to your landing distance information, or in Section Four, in your landing procedures.

Cessna recommends 60-70 knots with full flaps on final, and 61 knots across the threshold for a short field landing distance for the 172. Again, that's the speed required to achieve the POH published landing performance.

For our SR-22T, Cirrus recommends that we fly final at 80-85 knots with full flaps. And as we cross the runway threshold, we should be at 79 knots. That's the speed required to achieve the published short field landing performance.

Remember that these speeds are published for maximum gross weight. If you're lighter than max gross, you should fly a few knots slower. If you don't, you'll be too fast for your weight, and you'll float your landing.

If you're lighter than max gross and you're still floating down the runway when you flare, continue taking a couple knots off each time you cross the threshold, until you find the speed that works for you. Small changes in airspeed can make a big difference.

If your aircraft's manufacturer doesn't recommend a final approach speed, the FAA recommends that you use 1.3 x VS0.

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Step 2: When Should I Start Flaring?

Now that you're on speed for the flare, you need to judge the right altitude to start pulling the aircraft's nose up for the flare and landing.

For almost all general aviation aircraft, you should start the flare at about 10 feet above the runway. Unfortunately, 10 feet isn't very useful to any of us. That's because your altimeter isn't sensitive enough for you to pick out 10 feet above the runway.

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Fortunately, there's a better way to judge your flare, which leads us to the video below...

When The Runway Zooms In Size...

Watching for the runway to expand in your windscreen is the perfect way to judge your flare. As you fly down final, the runway grows steadily in your windscreen. But then, as you get about 10 feet above the ground, the runway grows at a rate of nearly 10 times faster than before. When you see the runway "zoom" in your windscreen, it's time to flare.

So what does the zoom look like, exactly? Watch the video below. We've mapped the runway width from short final to touchdown.

Airspeed And Altitude: The Combination For A Perfect Landing

Airspeed and altitude control are the recipe for great landings. If you fly the published speed on final approach, and start your flare when the runway starts zooming in your windscreen, you're setting yourself up for a smooth, soft landing.

When you put it all together, you'll impress your passengers, and yourself.

Improve your landings for less than the cost of a flight lesson.

Do you have a perfect takeoff and landing every time? Neither do we. That's why we built our Mastering Takeoffs and Landings online course.

You'll learn strategies, tactics, and fundamental principles that you can use on your next flight, and just about any takeoff or landing scenario you'll experience as a pilot.

Plus, for less than the cost of a flight lesson, you get lifetime access to tools that increase your confidence and make your landings more consistent.

Ready to get started? Click here to purchase Mastering Takeoffs and Landings now.


$139.99
Colin Cutler

Colin Cutler

Colin is a Boldmethod co-founder and lifelong pilot. He's been a flight instructor at the University of North Dakota, an airline pilot on the CRJ-200, and has directed the development of numerous commercial and military training systems. You can reach him at colin@boldmethod.com.

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