The thing about outside loops is, if you start at the top and go down, the plane will tend to neutralize the controls as it descends--you have to keep feeding it more "down" thru the first half of the loop.
It's easier to learn from inverted, starting at the bottom; or from the backside of a lazy eight.
In a very perverse way, knowing that had a big role in the crash.
Why?
Because for the
very first time,
ever, I was trying to make my way through a pattern -- the beginner's pattern, in this case. I had intended to do 3-1/2 inside loops, exit inverted, then do 3-1/2 outside loops and go on. But I only did 3 inside loops. Instead of flying around, doing half an inside loop, then flying around and doing three outside loops from level, I tried three outside loops from 45 degrees.
I did several things wrong:
- I got flustered
- I didn't just stop and fly level laps until I was unflustered
- I'd never tried an outside loop from 45 degrees before
And I'm not sure if I was all the way up to 45 degrees -- flying with no horizon reference, plus my allergies, was making me a bit dizzy.
What really did it was getting off plan (three and a
half loops), and not either aborting the flight entirely and just flying level (or noodling) until the tank ran out or doing something (a half loop) to get back on plan before I tried something drastic.
And... boom.