Definition
The aircraft configuration, airspeed, power setting, and flightpath used during the final segment of flight before touchdown. In stall training, simulating landing approach conditions typically means landing flaps extended, gear down (if retractable), power reduced toward idle, and airspeed slowed to a normal final-approach speed in a descending attitude.
Plain English
The way the airplane is set up just before landing — flaps out, gear down, power back, and slowing down on a descent toward the runway. When practicing stalls in this setup, the airplane is configured exactly as it would be on a real final approach.
Context Anchor
Seen in power-off stall training, where the pilot first sets the airplane up as if approaching to land, then practices recognizing and recovering from the stall.
Why Pilots Care
Stalls practiced in this configuration directly prepare a pilot to recognize and recover from an inadvertent stall during an actual landing approach.
Intuition Check
Do not read “conditions” as weather only. Here it means the airplane’s setup and flight state: power, speed, attitude, and landing equipment position.
Example Sentence 1
The instructor asked the student to establish landing approach conditions before entering the power-off stall, so flaps were extended, the gear was lowered, and power was reduced to idle.
Example Sentence 2
With the airplane in landing approach conditions, the stall occurred at a lower pitch attitude than in the clean configuration.