Definition
An instantaneous vertical speed indicator is a refined version of the vertical speed indicator that incorporates internal accelerometer-driven vanes (or pumps) to compensate for the lag inherent in a standard VSI. By sensing the initial vertical acceleration of the aircraft, the IVSI displays climb or descent rate almost immediately, rather than waiting the several seconds a conventional VSI requires for differential air pressure to stabilize.
Plain English
It is a climb-and-descent rate gauge that reacts almost instantly when you start going up or down, instead of taking a few seconds to catch up like the standard one.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument flying, instrument panel scans, and discussions of the vertical speed indicator system.
Derivation
Instantaneous comes from Latin instans, meaning 'at this very moment.' The name highlights what makes this instrument different from the standard VSI: it shows the rate of climb or descent at the moment it starts, not several seconds later.
Why Pilots Care
Gives immediate feedback on pitch changes or altitude deviations, allowing faster corrections during instrument flight.
Intuition Check
Do not read “instantaneous” as perfectly immediate or exact. Here it means the instrument reacts much faster than a standard VSI, but it is still an instrument with limits.
Example Sentence 1
As he leveled off at 6,000 feet, the IVSI showed his climb rate dropping to zero almost the moment he lowered the nose.
Example Sentence 2
When the airplane entered turbulence, the IVSI needle moved instantly while the standard VSI lagged behind.