Definition
A category in instrument flight training that identifies the typical mistakes pilots make when recognizing and recovering from unusual attitudes — flight conditions where the aircraft is unintentionally in a steep bank, extreme pitch, or rapidly changing airspeed. Common errors include failure to recognize the unusual attitude promptly, misreading the attitude indicator, applying control inputs in the wrong sequence, over-controlling during recovery, and failing to maintain instrument cross-check throughout the maneuver.
Plain English
The standard list of mistakes pilots tend to make when the aircraft ends up in an unexpected position — like a steep bank or nose-high or nose-low attitude — and they have to use the instruments to get it back to normal flight.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument training during unusual-attitude recognition and recovery practice, especially when outside visual references are limited or unavailable.
Derivation
Error comes from a Latin word meaning “to wander” or “go astray.” Attitude originally referred to posture or position. In aviation, it means the airplane’s posture in the air: where the nose and wings are pointing. That helps because these errors are ways a pilot can “go astray” while correcting the airplane’s position.
Why Pilots Care
Recognizing these errors reduces the chance of losing control or worsening spatial disorientation during actual instrument recoveries.
Grounding Statement
Picture looking at the instrument panel with no clear outside horizon and realizing the airplane is nose-high, nose-low, or steeply banked; the common errors are the mistakes that can happen during the correction.
Intuition Check
“Attitude” does not mean the pilot’s mood here. It means the airplane’s position in the air: nose up or down, wings level or banked. “Unusual” does not just mean rare. It means outside the normal or intended flight attitude and requiring prompt correction.
Example Sentence 1
During the debrief, the instructor reviewed the common errors in unusual attitudes and pointed out that the student had moved the controls in the wrong order during the nose-low recovery.
Example Sentence 2
Reviewing common errors in unusual attitudes helped the student apply correct recovery inputs on the next practice maneuver.