Definition
A category of flight instruments that operate by measuring the pressure produced by the aircraft's motion through the air. These instruments compare the ram (impact) air pressure entering a forward-facing pitot tube with the static (still) air pressure from a static port, and use the difference to display airspeed, or use related pressure measurements to display altitude and vertical speed.
Plain English
Instruments that work by sensing the pressure of moving air against the aircraft. The faster the aircraft flies, the harder the air pushes into a small forward-facing tube, and that pressure is converted into readings the pilot can use.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument training when studying the airspeed indicator and the pressure system that supplies it.
Derivation
Dynamic' comes from the Greek 'dunamikos,' meaning 'powerful' or 'relating to motion or force.' In physics, dynamic pressure is the pressure created by something moving through a fluid (like air). So these instruments are literally 'instruments that read the pressure of motion.'
Why Pilots Care
These instruments provide essential information for maintaining control and situational awareness during instrument flight, independent of GPS or other electronic systems.
Analogy
It is like holding your hand out of a car window. The faster the car moves, the harder the air pushes on your hand; dynamic pressure type instruments use that same kind of push to help show speed.
Grounding Statement
As the airplane moves faster, the forward-moving air creates more pressure at the inlet feeding the instrument.
Intuition Check
Dynamic does not just mean “changing” here. It means pressure created by motion through the air.
Example Sentence 1
During preflight, the pilot checked the pitot tube and static ports because any blockage would affect every dynamic pressure type instrument on the panel.
Example Sentence 2
Understanding dynamic pressure type instruments is fundamental before learning about gyroscopic instruments in the handbook.