Definition
The light, steady forces a pilot applies to the flight controls (yoke or stick, and rudder pedals) to maneuver the airplane, rather than large or abrupt movements of those controls.
Plain English
Instead of pushing or pulling the controls through big motions, the pilot uses gentle, measured force. The airplane responds to how firmly you press, not how far you move the controls.
Context Anchor
You will notice control pressures during basic maneuvers, turns, climbs, descents, takeoffs, and landings.
Derivation
Pressure comes from a word meaning “to press.” In this aviation use, it does not mean air pressure; it means the physical push or pull force felt through the controls.
Why Pilots Care
Correct control pressures produce smooth, coordinated flight, reduce the risk of overcontrolling, and help maintain positive aircraft control throughout all maneuvers.
Analogy
Like steering a car with light fingertip pressure on the wheel instead of gripping and yanking it hard.
Intuition Check
Do not read “control pressures” as air pressure or system pressure. Here it means the push, pull, or holding force on the airplane’s controls.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor reminded the student to fly with light control pressures rather than gripping and yanking the yoke during the turn.
Example Sentence 2
Maintaining coordinated flight requires small, continuous rudder control pressures to keep the ball centered.