Definition
In the lazy eight maneuver, the 135° reference point is the visual point on the horizon that is 135 degrees from the original entry heading, marking the position where the airplane reaches the lowest pitch attitude, the steepest bank (approximately 30°), and the slowest airspeed before rolling out at the 180° point.
Plain English
It is the point three-quarters of the way through one half of a lazy eight, where the nose is at its lowest, the bank is at its steepest, and the airplane is flying at its slowest. The pilot uses a chosen spot on the horizon out at this angle as a target to fly toward.
Context Anchor
Used while flying the lazy eight maneuver to keep the turn, climb, descent, and rollout timed correctly against outside visual points.
Derivation
The number 135 comes from degrees of arc. A lazy eight sweeps 180° of heading change in each half. The 135° point is three-quarters of the way through that half-turn — the precise spot where pitch is lowest and bank is steepest before the airplane rolls level on the new heading.
Why Pilots Care
Allows the pilot to verify the maneuver remains symmetrical and that proper attitude and airspeed are maintained before rolling out on the reciprocal heading.
Grounding Statement
Picture starting a turn toward a point ahead of you, then using another outside point three-quarters of the way to the opposite direction to check that the maneuver is still unfolding smoothly.
Intuition Check
The 135° reference point is not necessarily a heading to hold. It is an outside visual checkpoint used to judge your position and timing during the maneuver.
Example Sentence 1
As the airplane passed the 135° reference point, the instructor noted the bank was at its steepest and the nose at its lowest, just as the maneuver requires.
Example Sentence 2
The pilot glances at the attitude indicator and airspeed at the 135° reference point to confirm the nose-low attitude is correct before continuing the rollout.