Definition
An instantaneous vertical speed indicator is a refined version of the vertical speed indicator that uses an internal accelerometer-driven pump to compensate for the lag normally found in a standard VSI. By sensing the aircraft's vertical acceleration at the moment a climb or descent begins, it produces an immediate and accurate indication of the rate of climb or descent in feet per minute, rather than waiting several seconds for the pressure differential in the instrument case to develop.
Plain English
It is a vertical speed indicator that shows you your climb or descent rate right away, instead of taking a few seconds to catch up like a regular one does.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument panel and instrument flying discussions where the pilot is using the vertical speed indication to monitor climbs, descents, and level-offs.
Derivation
Instantaneous comes from the Latin instans, meaning 'at the present moment.' The name highlights the instrument's main improvement over a standard VSI: it responds at the moment a pitch change occurs, rather than after a delay.
Why Pilots Care
Immediate vertical speed information lets the pilot make precise altitude corrections without the over-control that lag can cause.
Intuition Check
“Instantaneous” does not mean the instrument is perfect or has no delay at all. Here it means the instrument is designed to respond much faster than a standard VSI when vertical movement begins.
Example Sentence 1
As the pilot raised the nose, the IVSI showed the climb rate immediately, without the usual delay seen on a standard VSI.
Example Sentence 2
The IVSI showed an immediate 800 feet per minute descent the moment the nose was lowered.