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I'm recently received my IFR ticket and flew in actual a couple weeks
ago for only the 2nd time. I picked up some rime ice at 9000' in a calm stratus layer. Scared the &#&((*@# out of me! I promptly turned back for home. I just didn't feel like I got any real training for this in the IFR work. Yes, I know the ground school stuff and I scored high on the written, but that's wholly different. I received Weather Flying by Buck from Amazon yesterday. And although I'm only through chapter 2, it seems to be an outstanding book. I highly recommend it. |
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#3
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On Wed, 02 Nov 2005 11:25:57 -0600, Mitty wrote:
The hood is not actual. Fly actual whenever you can. Get a CFII or a good instrument pilot to go with you and fly approaches whenever ceilings get low. Or go alone if you are not in a TRACON environment as we are in Minneapolis. My target range is 700-900 because my home airport doesn't have an ILS. My goal is to stay current on a 3 month basis (not 6) strictly by flying actual, though I can't always achieve this. I strongly agree with Mitty above. Like Mitty, I long for those low ceiling days, and like Mitty, because my home airport only has a VOR approach, I cannot leave unless I am assured ceilings are 900 or higher for my return home. I had a great instructor who lived and breathed hard IFR and I took several days off so I could get as much actual in. There was one lesson where we ended up doing three missed approaches for the real reasons it was designed for and diverting to another airport nearby that had an ILS. We went right down to the ILS minimums. This was the absolute best thing that happened to me as when I did my first solo in IMC, I did an ILS broke out at 1000 feet and felt like I had tons of time. I fly at minimum once a month instrument approaches. I'd like to do it twice a month. Even on a severe clear day when I do not log it as an approach, I still want to fly approaches so that I can maintain that precise feeling needed on approaches. Yes. Re ice, my CFII and I flew in ice a couple of times during training (very benign, above freezing below the clouds, good ceilings, and the layer only 2000 feet thick) and I have always been grateful to have gotten the experience, regardless of what the FARs might say about it. Never had icing, however, one lesson my CFI and I were in clouds right at 32 degrees. Water was beading up the windscreen, so as long as that was happening, we were reasonably safe. Allen |
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A Lieberman wrote:
Never had icing, however, one lesson my CFI and I were in clouds right at 32 degrees. Water was beading up the windscreen, so as long as that was happening, we were reasonably safe. I wouldn't trust that at all. The collection efficiency for ice increases as the surface gets narrower (towards the wind), so you can have ice on your antennas when there's still water on your tail; ice on your tail when there's still water on your wings; and ice on your wings when there's still water on your windshield. Fortunately, my Warrior (like most or all Piper PA-28 models) has an outside air temperature gauge with a long metal probe sticking straight out into the airstream from the middle of the windshield. Because the probe is so narrow, ice will form on it before just about anything else (except maybe the antennas, which I cannot see). I use it as my early-warning device, and divert to warmer and/or dryer conditions as soon as the first tiny piece of ice forms on the end of the probe. All the best, David |
#5
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![]() On 11/2/2005 6:18 PM, A Lieberman wrote the following: Never had icing, however, one lesson my CFI and I were in clouds right at 32 degrees. Water was beading up the windscreen, so as long as that was happening, we were reasonably safe. Not if you have the defroster turned on. The windshield will be the warmest surface on the airplane. Happened to me on Monday this week, water beading and running on the windshield, ice beginning to form on the OAT probe and the leading edges. Nothing dangerous, but you can bet I requested an altitude change. |
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FWIW, I agree with all of Mitty's three books as very good; I have all
three. However, I have found that Machado's two books -on basic pilot training (I forget the title) and "The Instrument Pilot's Survival Handbook"- to be right up there with them. |
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Fortunately, my Warrior (like most or all Piper PA-28 models) has an
outside air temperature gauge with a long metal probe sticking straight out into the airstream from the middle of the windshield. Because the probe is so narrow, ice will form on it before just about anything else (except maybe the antennas, which I cannot see). I use it as my early-warning device, and divert to warmer and/or dryer conditions as soon as the first tiny piece of ice forms on the end of the probe. Don't count on it. I flew into ice in the Blue Ridge mountains; I was keeping a good eye on that temperature probe and other things sticking out, but the wings got what I now in retrospect realize was a nice coating of clear ice while the probe stayed clean as a whistle. Then all of a sudden the windshield iced up - bang. I declared an emergency and got vectors to warmer air and an ILS. It took a while for the ice to come off, but it did before I landed. Jose -- Money: what you need when you run out of brains. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
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#9
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![]() Matt Whiting wrote: Yes, ice will form first on small radius surfaces, but not until at or below freezing temperatures. If you still have water on your wings or tail, then you won't have ice on your OAT probe. From what I've observed so far, there's a zone of ambiguity between about 1 degC and -5 degC where supercooled droplets may or may not stick to the airframe as ice. I've seen ice form on the tip of my OAT probe while there were still drops of water running down its sides, as well as over the rest of the airframe. Freezing is not an all-or-nothing proposition. All the best, David |
#10
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Have not yet read Buck's Weather Flying, but I've heard so many glowing
recommendations - this one being just the most recent - that I now know what to ask for for Christmas. |
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