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As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess
all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! Margy |
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In article ,
Margy Natalie wrote: As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! congrats!! -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#3
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Congrats!
Now remember, IFR in a light plane can only really safely go in about 20% of the instrument weather mother nature can throw at you. However, an instrument rated pilot can go in about 40% of the VFR weather that would have been too risky for a VFR-only pilot to attempt, due to the the risk of weather closing in being too great. Therefore paradoxically, by getting an instrument rating you will find yourself flying a lot more VFR than you had before :-) Margy Natalie wrote: As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! Margy |
#4
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![]() "Margy Natalie" wrote in message m... As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! Concrats to Ron. Of course, a lot of "excuses" have just vanished. :~) -- Matt --------------------- Matthew W. Barrow Site-Fill Homes, LLC. Montrose, CO (MTJ) |
#5
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"M" wrote in news:1159126950.376577.321490
@e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com: Now remember, IFR in a light plane can only really safely go in about 20% of the instrument weather mother nature can throw at you. However, an instrument rated pilot can go in about 40% of the VFR weather that would have been too risky for a VFR-only pilot to attempt, due to the the risk of weather closing in being too great. Really, sure hope you are saying the above "tongue in cheek"???? If not, where are you getting your statistics as my own personal experiences sure contradict what you say above??? Since getting my instrument ticket, I have only scrubbed two XC flights due to thunderstorms in which one was this past friday from the long cold front pushing through. Where I live, icing is a very rare encounter (KMBO - Madison MS) though it does happen, just I have not had to scrub a flight due to icing conditions. Can't speak for the northern folks. Before my instrument ticket, I can't tell you how many XC flights I have scrubbed due to benign IMC conditions. One was too many, but if I had to guess it was between 7 and 10 flights. Therefore paradoxically, by getting an instrument rating you will find yourself flying a lot more VFR than you had before :-) Nope, what happens is that you find yourself flying towards VFR conditions, by getting on top of the cloud deck. The IA rating gives you an expanded oppurtunity to getting to visual conditions rather then having to scud run and the such. Allen |
#6
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M wrote:
Congrats! Now remember, IFR in a light plane can only really safely go in about 20% of the instrument weather mother nature can throw at you. However, an instrument rated pilot can go in about 40% of the VFR weather that would have been too risky for a VFR-only pilot to attempt, due to the the risk of weather closing in being too great. Therefore paradoxically, by getting an instrument rating you will find yourself flying a lot more VFR than you had before :-) Uh, ok. That's not the case for me, nor most of the pilots I know. Congratulations to Ron anyway. But...why isn't he posting all about the ride? |
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On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 16:43:19 -0500, Emily
wrote: M wrote: Congrats! Therefore paradoxically, by getting an instrument rating you will find yourself flying a lot more VFR than you had before :-) Uh, ok. That's not the case for me, nor most of the pilots I know. That may refer to the fact that most IFR flights are flown in VMC. After a few minutes of climbing through IMC, you're in sunshine for the rest of the flight. Considering that you'd be at home watching television otherwise, you do more VFR flying. RK Henry |
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Yea Ron! (and Margy for helping/waiting!)!
Jer/ In rec.aviation.student Margy Natalie wrote: As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! Margy Best regards, Jer/ "Flight instruction and mountain flying are my vocations!" -- Jer/ (Slash) Eberhard, Mountain Flying Aviation, LTD, Ft Collins, CO CELL 970 231-6325 EMAIL jeratfrii.com http://users.frii.com/jer/ C-206 N9513G, CFII Airplane&Glider FAA-DEN Aviation Safety Counselor CAP-CO Mission&Aircraft CheckPilot BM218 HAM N0FZD 240 Young Eagles! |
#9
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M wrote:
Congrats! Now remember, IFR in a light plane can only really safely go in about 20% of the instrument weather mother nature can throw at you. However, an instrument rated pilot can go in about 40% of the VFR weather that would have been too risky for a VFR-only pilot to attempt, due to the the risk of weather closing in being too great. Therefore paradoxically, by getting an instrument rating you will find yourself flying a lot more VFR than you had before :-) Margy Natalie wrote: As of this morning Ron Natalie is an instrument rated pilot!! I guess all those impromptu extra vacation days due to haze are over :-). This is great! Margy We tend to spend lots of time in the mountains of WVA (often when other folks are plowing through VFR) not sure if the haze, clouds, mountains and us will all meet at the same time. We tend to be on the fairly conservative side although the XM weather makes some decisions easier then they were before. Of course sometimes it paints up all sorts of stuff we would never have imagined was out there before :-). We spent an entire day at our home airport this summer waiting to go to OSH because it was 700 broken and 1.5 miles. EVERY other airport within 20 miles was reporting CAVU. That really was not a good day! Margy |
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Please pass along my congratulations. That's a difficult rating but well
worth the effort. Along with the honor is also the responsiblity of maintaining currency and expanding experience and competency but the reward is more flying opportunities than before. |
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