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Longworth[_1_]
March 18th 08, 04:18 AM
We passed our commercial check rides today on St Patrick's Day. It
was probably with a bit of luck from an 'old Irish man', John Morrow,
our affable instructor based at Kingston, NY.

It was a long day with us leaving home at around 7am to fly from
Dutchess County airport in Poughkeepsie NY to Columbia County airport
in Hudson, NY for the check rides. The dual oral exams lasted over 3
hours with Rick and me taking turns answering questions and going
through our cross country trip plans. The most notable questions were
ones regarding recognizing dehydration and motion sickness symptoms
from passengers. I learned that one of the symptoms of motion
sickness was that of the passengers looking down instead of looking
outside.

For the cross-country planning, back in my primary training, I
used to laboriously fill out long cross country forms with check
points, winds, headings, distance, VOR radials, and estimate time en
route. This time I only printed out the AOPA flight planner and DUAT
information. We had the AOPA flight planner information for both VFR
and IFR. We explained that even though it was a VFR trip, since we
are instrument rated, we would bring along IFR information for sudden
weather change. For the AOPA enroute map, I drew in important
waypoints, obstructions, areas to watch for such as Kennebunkport and
important frequencies to call. I told Doug that we typically used
our hand-held GPS to monitor our route but with our Lowrance being in
the shop, I had to mark some check points on the map. While enroute,
I would make check the time to get the landmark and the distance to it
to cross check winds aloft information. We also showed Doug copious
DUAT printouts on weather, NOTAMS etc. along with surface analysis,
winds aloft charts, text etc. I told him that I also checked for
TFRs. He seemed to be satisfied with our planning.

We also took turns taking the practical tests first in our
Cardinal FG then in the DE's Cardinal RG totaling 3.3 hrs. We
finished the practical tests at around 6:15pm and did not get home
until after 7pm.

It was windy and gusty all day which made 8's on pylons a
challenging task. Doug Stewart, the DE commented that it felt as if I
was doing a lazy 8's looping up and down trying to keep up with the
strong wind. Next was the chandelles which had been one of my weaker
maneuvers due to lack of muscle power to keep the nose up but I
managed to get the stall horns blaring and did not drop the nose near
the end. The lazy 8's had been my favorite and best maneuver but I
messed it up a bit by pitching up too steeply in the beginning. Doug
asked me to repeat the lazy 8's and seemed satisfied with my second
try.

Next were the 720 degrees steep turns which had been my worst
maneuver. During practices, I tended to loose altitude in the left
turn and to gain altitude in the right turn. With concentrated
effort, I tried to lock on the horizon using just enough muscle power
and a touch of power. The way Doug wanted us to do the maneuver was
to transition to the right turn immediately after the left turn
without any pause. I caught my own wakes in both turns and was
surprised when Doug said it was a nice job. Next, he asked me to do
the power off stall and power on stall during a left climbing turn.
These maneuvers were over quickly and uneventfully since the
Cardinal's stalls were quite docile.

The reverse was true for the next maneuver which was slow flight.
I had never had any problems with slow flights before. Today was
clearly not a calm day with AWOS reported winds varied 330 to 010 at
around 13 or 14 gusting to 22 or 24kts but I had done slow flights in
similar conditions without much problem. Not sure whether it was my
nerve or not but I felt like I had botched the maneuver by not able to
lock in the airspeed and gained some altitude at the end, but Doug
seemed satisfied and did not ask for a repeat.

Doug asked me to spiral down around a waterfall and a tall tower.
I started the spiral a bit early and was off the one side of the tower
but managed to complete 3 turns and lost around 2000' which brought me
to airport pattern altitude.

With the airport less than 2nm away, I was told to enter the 45
for left down wind runway 3. Doug said I could do whatever approach
that I liked. I glanced at the windsock and found that it had
momentarily stopped flapping about like a crazy cat's tail and decide
to go for a full flap, short field without telling Doug of my
intention. After the touch down at just past the number, I raised
the flap up to 10 degrees, pushed everything in for a touch and go.
Doug told me to abort and head for the next exit. He said it was a
very nice short field and told me to taxi back for a short field take
off following by a soft field landing. I was kind of in a trance
and just followed the order, I sort of remember holding the brake
while pushing in the throttle, doing a left wind correction during
take off, executing a Vx to clear obstacles following by Vy. I did
not even remember whether I had looked at the windsock and just
concentrated on maintaining center line, dropped all the flaps down
for slow speed then added a bit of power before touch down and kept
the power in and the nose up while exiting the runway. Doug said
something like 'beautifully done' and told me the last landing would
be a soft field take off following by a precision 180 degrees power
off approach. The soft field take off also went well with me staying
in the ground effect for a while then pulling up for a Vx up to about
half the runway length before lowering the nose for a Vy. I don't
think Vx is required for soft field but recalling one of my
instructors had stated that it would be a good idea to think of soft
field also being short field.

The last commercial maneuver to do was the 180 degrees precision
approach landing. This had been my 'forte' as Rick often said.
However, I had some apprehensions about doing a power off approach in
gusty and windy crosswind condition. I tuned in the AWOS and vaguely
remembered something like wind 010 at 13kts gusting to 23kts. I had
discussed my concern during the oral exams and Doug said something
like if your engine failed, you did not have a choice. So I thought
to myself, what the heck, I would just do whatever needed to get the
plane down at the right spot. I pulled the throttle to idle abeam the
1000' marker, retracted the 10 degrees flap (which I normally used in
down wind to slow the slippery Cardinal down), trimmed for 85mph
glide, turned base a bit early to have plenty of altitude. On final,
sensing that I was high, I dropped 10 degrees flap, trimmed the nose
more up to slow down. Over the number, I was still high so I dropped
in 20 degrees flap then immediately regretted it. The headwind had
reduced significantly and the descent rate became much faster. I kept
the nose down to maintain airspeed and stayed in ground effect until
getting 10' or so from the 1000' marker. With a touch of flare, I got
the plane to kiss the ground smack on the marker. Doug exclaimed
"Your guys are just too much. Rick touched down on the marker too".
Guess that our flurry of practices the last two weeks finally paid
off.

The last part of the check rides were to fly the complex
portion. Rick went first and struggled a bit in the first pattern
since he had not flown the RG for months. With the check rides
schedules got pulled in early from Thursday to Monday due to weather
and the last minute notice, we just barely had enough time the night
before to plan for the cross country trips and totally forgot to
review the RG power settings etc. We also left the sheet of paper
with the settings at home. When it came to my turn, luckily I had
found a shortcut to memorize the numbers; the manifold pressure
settings were roughly 2 inches higher in the 200 hp RG vs. our 180 hp
FG. The first landing was a go around with imaginary deer on the
runway. The real deer was sleeping in the nearby bushes waiting for
twilights for their daily runway crossing game. I completed the next
two patterns and landings showing Doug that I remembered when to
retract the landing gear and when to lower it doing GUMP checks at
least twice in the pattern (down wind and on final).

Doug said that he had to hurry back to the office with a lot of
typing to be done. I told him that I knew the typing would not be on
pink slips since the cleaning lady had thrown all of them out. Doug
had a big laugh from the joke because earlier on why waiting for Rick
to complete his tests, I had wiped all the muddy tracks in his office
with some paper towels and water. Doug had joked before my flight
test that he could hardly wait to tell his girlfriend how I had mopped
up his office and yet he still gave me a pink slip.

After handing out our temporary commercial certificates, Doug
gave us a brief briefing. He said that we had similar weaknesses. We
both forgot to do a passenger briefing. During our primary training
days, we were drilled to give a passenger briefing on pretty much
every flight. After over 700 hours each and flying mostly with each
other, we only performed this briefing with passengers who were new to
flying. I don't recall whether I gave a passenger briefing to the DE
during my instrument check ride. It was indeed a serious omission
especially for a commercial check rides. Next were our chandelles and
lazy 8s. He said we both rolled out of the turn a bit late in the
last part of the chandelles, and forgot to push the nose down when
rolling out on the 180 on the lazy 8's thus gaining a bit of
altitude. He said the 8's on pylons were acceptable because we both
knew what we were supposedly to be doing in spite of the windy
condition. We both did the steep turns beautifully. About the
stalls, he said that Rick did not push the nose down firmly enough
during the power on stall and almost got into a secondary stall. He
did not comment on the slow flights probably because they were just
passable considering the mild turbulence. He also told us that if we
were to fly a complex or a new plane, we should review all the numbers
etc. Although Doug had said nice things about my landings, the
egotistic part of me wished that he would have commented us again to
balance the unflattering parts of the check rides. Oh what the heck,
he gave us the white slips, what more could we ask for? ;-)

I have no intention of changing my day job to aerial spraying,
banner towing or bird chasing. Getting the commercial pilot
certificate is just a part of my continuing aviation education. It
was a way to get us to sharpen our skills, to fly smoother and with
more precision. We definitely will not continue our weekly practice
of commercial maneuvers. Our next fight will definitely be an
instrument approach practice session. We have not done one in at least
a month. Once we feel that we are back to our previous instrument
skill levels, we will try to improve our lazy 8's, chandelles, steep
turns, slow flights and various kinds of approaches again. We many
never achieve perfection but trying is part of the fun.

Hai Longworth

Steve Foley
March 18th 08, 10:11 AM
"Longworth" > wrote in message
...
>
> We passed our commercial check rides today on St Patrick's Day. It
> was probably with a bit of luck from an 'old Irish man', John Morrow,
> our affable instructor based at Kingston, NY.
>
> It was a long day with us leaving home at around 7am to fly from
> Dutchess County airport in Poughkeepsie NY to Columbia County airport
> in Hudson, NY for the check rides.

Congratulations to both of youse :)

I didn't know you were from Poughkeepsie. My aunt lives there. I flew there
for my first student cross country back in 1996 to visit here. A hurricane
had just past through and her phone wasn't working, and I didn't tell her in
advance that I was coming. I've probably been there a few more times since.

Steve Foley
March 18th 08, 11:37 AM
"Steve Foley" > wrote in message
...
> "Longworth" > wrote in message
> ...
> >
> > We passed our commercial check rides today on St Patrick's Day. It
> > was probably with a bit of luck from an 'old Irish man', John Morrow,
> > our affable instructor based at Kingston, NY.
> >
> > It was a long day with us leaving home at around 7am to fly from
> > Dutchess County airport in Poughkeepsie NY to Columbia County airport
> > in Hudson, NY for the check rides.
>
> Congratulations to both of youse :)
>
> I didn't know you were from Poughkeepsie. My aunt lives there. I flew
there
> for my first student cross country back in 1996 to visit here. A hurricane
> had just past through and her phone wasn't working, and I didn't tell her
in
> advance that I was coming. I've probably been there a few more times
since.
>
>

Sorry about the pre-coffee spelling errors.

B A R R Y[_2_]
March 18th 08, 12:03 PM
Longworth wrote:
> We many
> never achieve perfection but trying is part of the fun.
>
> Hai Longworth
>


Nice!

Congratulations!

Robert A. Barker
March 18th 08, 12:05 PM
"Longworth" > wrote in message
...
>
> We passed our commercial check rides today on St Patrick's Day. It

t of the fun.
>
> Hai Longworth
>
A double congratulations for a double success !!!!!!!!
Very nice write-up,I almost feel like I was there :-)

Bob Barker N8749S
>

Mortimer Schnerd, RN[_2_]
March 18th 08, 04:30 PM
Longworth wrote:
> We passed our commercial check rides today on St Patrick's Day. It
> was probably with a bit of luck from an 'old Irish man', John Morrow,
> our affable instructor based at Kingston, NY.


Congratulations. It's been my experience that one of the greatest benefits of
having the commercial license is that you can get people to ride with you that
otherwise might not. And of course, it is the ticket leading to the pot of gold
as far as flying for a living is concerned. But even if you never fly for a
single dime, my first comment stands.


> It was a long day with us leaving home at around 7am to fly from
> Dutchess County airport in Poughkeepsie NY to Columbia County airport
> in Hudson, NY for the check rides. The dual oral exams lasted over 3
> hours with Rick and me taking turns answering questions and going
> through our cross country trip plans. The most notable questions were
> ones regarding recognizing dehydration and motion sickness symptoms
> from passengers. I learned that one of the symptoms of motion
> sickness was that of the passengers looking down instead of looking
> outside.


Another is when one of them bends over suddenly and there is a sickening smell
in the cabin. I recommend Ozium for your flight bag. Like cash, never leave
home without it.


> I have no intention of changing my day job to aerial spraying,
> banner towing or bird chasing. Getting the commercial pilot
> certificate is just a part of my continuing aviation education. It
> was a way to get us to sharpen our skills, to fly smoother and with
> more precision. We definitely will not continue our weekly practice
> of commercial maneuvers. Our next fight will definitely be an
> instrument approach practice session. We have not done one in at least
> a month. Once we feel that we are back to our previous instrument
> skill levels, we will try to improve our lazy 8's, chandelles, steep
> turns, slow flights and various kinds of approaches again. We many
> never achieve perfection but trying is part of the fun.


First you say you will not continue your weekly practice of commercial maneuvers
and then you say you will. Here's what I think will happen: you will practice
them for the next two or three flights on a kind of hit and miss basis, then
you'll move on. Frankly, you're not going to find 8s on pylons all that useful
as active pilots. You will use your specialty landings and takeoffs; you will
demonstrate slow flight on every check ride you ever take. But that's about it.
The real benefit of the maneuvers is becoming master of your aircraft. You have
bent it to your will (maybe "bent" is a bad choice of words) and between it and
your instrument rating, fly very accurately now.

Now all you have to do is start flying to ATP standards. Seriously. Challenge
yourself at every opportunity to hold heading and altitude. I once caught
myself saying to a buddy, "Did he clear you to 5,020 feet?" The sooner you
start the easier it becomes.

Lastly, passengers are much more impressed (employers too) by smoothness rather
than pulling g and yanking the aircraft around. Many of the passengers who say
they don't mind g are probably lying. Unless you're in an aerobatic act, give
them the airline ride every time.

And if I didn't emphasize it enough, congratulations!



--
Mortimer Schnerd, RN
mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com

Longworth[_1_]
March 18th 08, 04:46 PM
Mortimer,
Thank you for the advices. What I meant was that we were not going
to continue the intensive weekly practices of commercial maneuvers.
We had done 3 or 4 practice sessions per week in the last few weeks
since getting our plane back from the month-long repair in preparation
for the checkrides.

Our focus right now is to regain our instrument proficiency then we
will get back to refining our VFR flying skills (ie the commercial
maneuvers) not on an intensive but on a more frequent basis.

You are absolutely right that smoothness is the key thing for
passenger comfort and not fancy maneuvers. Having done the commercial
training, I firmly believe that mastering these maneuvers can help to
enhance my piloting skills. I have to be constantly in-tune with the
plane's responses. I have to know how, when and how much to provide
the appropriate inputs. I have to be totally coordinated. I have to
learn how to truly fly by the seat of my pants. Smoothness in flying
can not be achieved without these fundamental flying skills. This is
something that a pilot can never achieve just by flying simulators ;-)

Hai Longworth

Mortimer Schnerd, RN[_2_]
March 18th 08, 07:28 PM
Longworth wrote:
> You are absolutely right that smoothness is the key thing for
> passenger comfort and not fancy maneuvers. Having done the commercial
> training, I firmly believe that mastering these maneuvers can help to
> enhance my piloting skills. I have to be constantly in-tune with the
> plane's responses. I have to know how, when and how much to provide
> the appropriate inputs. I have to be totally coordinated. I have to
> learn how to truly fly by the seat of my pants. Smoothness in flying
> can not be achieved without these fundamental flying skills. This is
> something that a pilot can never achieve just by flying simulators ;-)


Heh heh... believe me I know the history of our confused poster from Paris.
Irregardless of what he's said in the past, which you can safely discard as
meaningless, I am going to suggest the simulator is exactly what you ought to
consider before you go for an instrument flight. It'll help you get your scan
back up to speed, plus you can use it for procedure training. As for
smoothness, it ain't gonna do anything for you.

Frankly, keeping my scan up is the *only* thing I use the sim for. The rest of
it (MSFS) is just a toy.

And our friend? He has issues.



--
Mortimer Schnerd, RN
mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com

Longworth[_1_]
March 18th 08, 08:27 PM
On Mar 18, 3:28*pm, "Mortimer Schnerd, RN" <mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com>
wrote:
>
> Frankly, keeping my scan up is the *only* thing I use the sim for. *The rest of
> it (MSFS) is just a toy.
>
Mort,
For instrument practice, I used Elite flight simulator program.
Not sure whether you had come across my postings on instrument
training but my self-study with Elite in conjunction with actual
instrument flying practice in my plane helped to prepare for my
accelerated instrument training. I also had an excellent instructor,
Bill Zaleski in Schenectady NY who got us quite a bit of actual time
during our 5 days of IFR training. Rick and I had just talked about
our instrument vs. commercial training yesterday. While we had great
fun with the commercial training, the instrument training was much
more thrilling and exciting. There is no way that one would get the
real IMC sensation just by playing with the simulator.

The instrument flying skills are also very valuable especially
for long cross country trips. I still fondly remember of the solid
2.5 hrs IMC flight I took late last fall from KHIE back to KPOU. It
was intense with scattered thunderstorms in the areas. Albany approach
vectored us around some cells. Even in the cloud, we still could see
some dark cloud areas ahead and asked for additional deviations from
our route. Without not even a jolt, I glanced at my altimeter and saw
that I had lost 500' and sinking. I added full throttle trying not
being pushed lower for fear of lurking mountain tops below. Then
within less than a minute, we were out of the downdraft and got a
1000' uplift again without not even a jolt. It was as if the entire
plane was pushed down and lifted up uniformly. Albany approach asked
us whether we had trouble maintaing our altitude and Rick informed
them of the situation. The rest of the trip was smooth as silk in the
soup all the way until we approached our destination. The ceiling was
high enough so I asked for a VOR approach rwy 24 for favorable wind
instead of ILS runway 6. There is no way that I could recreate this
trip using a simulator. It was intense and a bit nerve-racking but
also exciting. I still remember the extreme tiredness mixing with
pure exhiliration as the wheels touched the ground. It was an
incredible trip.

I had been using the Elite program to practice approaches before
embarking on a real cross country trips. I have not done much
instrument flying either on the Elite simulator or actual during the
winter but will get back to these activities real soon. Ever since
getting the Elite program, I have not touched MSFS. MSFS sceneries
were nice but Google Earth gives me much better visual information so
there is no point of playing with MSFS.

I feel incredible lucky for being able to afford to fly, to have a
spouse who share the passion. I am quite grateful for having the
opportunities to learn from quite a few of great instructors from the
brand new, enthusiastic ones to the highly skilled CFI and CFIIs, and
seasoned pilots with quite a few from the rec.aviation forums.

Hai Longworth

Jay Maynard
March 18th 08, 09:46 PM
On 2008-03-18, Mortimer Schnerd, RN <> wrote:
> The real benefit of the maneuvers is becoming master of your aircraft.
> You have bent it to your will (maybe "bent" is a bad choice of words)

This was what I'd always understood as the true goal of the commercial
meneuvers. However, I'll definitely say that you could have picked a much
better way to put it, especially since (even though I'll never hold a second
class medical) I do plan to work to that level of proficiency in the
Zodiac...
--
Jay Maynard, K5ZC http://www.conmicro.com
http://jmaynard.livejournal.com http://www.tronguy.net
Fairmont, MN (FRM) (Yes, that's me!)
AMD Zodiac CH601XLi N55ZC (ordered 17 March, delivery 2 June)

Mortimer Schnerd, RN[_2_]
March 18th 08, 11:00 PM
Longworth wrote:
> Rick and I had just talked about
> our instrument vs. commercial training yesterday. While we had great
> fun with the commercial training, the instrument training was much
> more thrilling and exciting. There is no way that one would get the
> real IMC sensation just by playing with the simulator.


No sensation at all, in fact. The closest you can come is to simulate a flight
in thick stratus, since that gives you a smooth ride anyway. As for flying in
the bumpies, no sim that you or I could afford can come close to a real IFR
trip.

Nope, but I never suggested it would. I only said it would help you get your
scan back up to speed. It will, too. Why do people always say it's easier to
fly a real aircraft IFR than a sim with your instructor breathing over your
shoulder? Because your scan is the first to go when you get rusty. You tend to
fixate and the next thing you know, your altitude or your heading is off. What
is it about real IFR flight which makes it easier? Shadows sliding across the
panel... the feeling in the pit of your gut when you hit an updraft or
downdraft... the difference in the sound of the prop as it tries to maintain its
rpm by varying its pitch. Lots of visceral clues that we say we should ignore
but nobody does. You don't ignore them so much as you take them with a grain of
salt.

I feel an updraft so I glance at the VSI and the altimeter. Do they support the
feeling? If so, I correct. If not, I ignore. But it's the feeling that gets
me to even glance in that first instance.

If you don't fly enough hard IFR to really keep the rust off your skills, then
flying a practice flight of the route on the sim can be useful. At your busiest
moments you will be able to recall a heading or a frequency without having to
look; maybe while turbulence is shaking the teeth out of your head.

Scan and procedures is all the sim is good for, IMO. They are no substitute for
regular flight in a real airplane. They just help out. Just another tool.



--
Mortimer Schnerd, RN
mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com

Jack Allison
March 19th 08, 05:03 AM
Way to go Hai. Congrats to both you and Rick. I just passed my CP
written and am hoping to start the flying portion in late April. Thanks
for the great writeup.


--
Jack Allison
PP-ASEL-Instrument Airplane
Student - CP-ASEL

"To become a Jedi knight, you must master a single force. To become
a private pilot you must strive to master four of them"
- Rod Machado

(Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail)

Longworth[_1_]
March 20th 08, 01:33 AM
On Mar 19, 1:03*am, Jack Allison >
wrote:
> Way to go Hai. *Congrats to both you and Rick. *I just passed my CP
> written and am hoping to start the flying portion in late April. *Thanks

Jack,
Congratulations on passing your CP written exams. IMO, this is the
hardest part of the training not so much because of the materials but
because it is so darn tedious and boring. It was like eating 100%
whole bran cereals without any milk ;-).
For my flight training, I found two books being quite useful. One
is the ASA visualized flight maneuvers handbook. It's good to have it
as a reference to review just before doing each maneuver. Another one
is the "Flying the Commercial Flight Test" by Ron Fowler. I bought
this book used by searching through www.campusi.com for something like
$5 including shipping and handling.
If you can get an instructor to give you an introductory
commerical maneuver training session, you can go out and do some
practices either on your own or with another pilot. This will give
you a feel for those maneuvers before starting the official training.
Some portions of the maneuvers are just review or improvements of
'regular' stuffs like stalls, slow flights, short field, soft field
take off and landing. The 180 degrees off approach is just a standard
power off landing with precision.
Have fun with your training. The

Jack Allison
March 22nd 08, 03:32 AM
Thanks for the book recommendations Hai. I'll have to check into them.

As for the maneuvers, one advantage I have is that one of my airplane
partners passed his commercial check ride about 4-5 months back so I can
learn some of the basics in our plane from him. I'm looking forward to
the flying part. Everyone I've talked to says it's a ton of fun.


--
Jack Allison
PP-ASEL-Instrument Airplane
Student - CP-ASEL

"To become a Jedi knight, you must master a single force. To become
a private pilot you must strive to master four of them"
- Rod Machado

(Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail)

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