Definition
The forward or aft forces a pilot applies to the control yoke or stick to change or hold the airplane's pitch attitude. In a steep turn, increased back pressure on the controls is required to raise the nose and maintain altitude as the vertical component of lift decreases with bank angle.
Plain English
How hard the pilot pushes or pulls on the yoke to point the nose up or down, or to keep it where it is. In a steep turn, the pilot has to pull back harder than usual to stop the nose from dropping.
Context Anchor
Encountered during steep-turn training, especially when the pilot must adjust pull pressure to keep altitude from changing as the bank becomes steeper.
Derivation
Pitch has long been used to mean a forward-and-backward tilt or slope. In aviation, it points to the airplane’s nose moving up or down, so pitch control pressures are the control forces used to manage that nose-up or nose-down position.
Why Pilots Care
Maintaining proper pitch control pressures prevents unintended altitude changes during coordinated turns.
Intuition Check
Pitch does not mean sound here. It means the airplane’s nose-up or nose-down position. Control pressure does not mean hydraulic pressure; it means the force the pilot feels and applies on the controls.
Example Sentence 1
As the bank steepened through 45 degrees, the instructor reminded the student to add back pitch control pressure to hold altitude.
Example Sentence 2
Proper pitch control pressures ensure the aircraft maintains a constant altitude throughout the 360-degree turn.