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#61
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#62
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![]() "Joe Johnson" wrote in message news:2Xkwc.5825 I'm a newly minted PP-ASEL and I'm as scared (though not as eloquent) as Marco. Are you saying the whole thesis in The Killing Zone is based on such an elementary methodological error? Don't be afraid, just be aware and prepared. I read a statistic back in the early '90s that said that newly-minuted private pilots were less at risk than pilots in the 150-hour range, because their training and discipline was more current and they have flown more regularly than somebody like me, who logged a couple of hours a year until just recently. I'm at 150 hrs now, and thankful that I'm in a training program again because I can see how some of my skills have rusted that, without IFR training, I would have forgotten about all together. Other than that I'd probably me more of a danger to myself than I was at 50 hrs. -c |
#63
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![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message If your CFI didn't know that it was closed for noise, she/he might not have known had it been closed for safety-related reasons. This is exactly the issue I've found myself having with "instructor in command" (nice label, BTW!). Personal example: I failed my PPL checkride because of the Xctry section, where I picked a private field as a waypoint. My instructor, who moved from another state, referred to the field all the time. I should have known better; I had already suspected he was wrong, but who argues with their instructor? When the examiner asked "Where's your waypoint?" and I pointed to an old, abandoned airstrip, he pointed to a field near it and said "Nope. THAT'S the airstrip. The owner is a farmer, and when he wants to fly, he checks his windsock and mows the field accordingly. You should have been taught not to use private airstrips as waypoints." I should have stuck with my hunch and picked a different waypoint when I practiced the SAME cross country with the instructor onboard the day before. -c |
#64
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![]() "Teacherjh" wrote in message With or without an instructor, why would a grass strip be a problem? Ask the FBO. IT is pretty much universal that if you rent and airplane, you must land on a paved strip 2000 feet long or longer. It probably has something to do with insurance. I won't even attempt to fathom their reasoning. That's what I was told. An instructor of mine was fired for having me land on a grass strip. The sad thing was, not only was he one of the best instructors I've ever had, I had landed (as a passenger) at the same grass strip in the same FBO's aircraft when the OWNER of the FBO gave me a discovery flight. -c |
#65
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![]() "Cub Driver" wrote in message I go out of my way to land on grass. I hate that SQUEAK! when I land on asphalt. At the glider towing facility at McMinnville, Oregon, the lady who flies the cropduster/tow plane lands on the grass next to the asphalt because, she says, it's easier on the tires. -c |
#66
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"gatt" wrote in message
... Personal example: I failed my PPL checkride because of the Xctry section, where I picked a private field as a waypoint. My instructor, who moved from another state, referred to the field all the time. I should have known better; I had already suspected he was wrong, but who argues with their instructor? I do. But then I suppose most people here wouldn't find that surprising. It turns out that I'm right almost all the time, but not 100%. ![]() When the examiner asked "Where's your waypoint?" and I pointed to an old, abandoned airstrip, he pointed to a field near it and said "Nope. THAT'S the airstrip. The owner is a farmer, and when he wants to fly, he checks his windsock and mows the field accordingly. You should have been taught not to use private airstrips as waypoints." I should have stuck with my hunch and picked a different waypoint when I practiced the SAME cross country with the instructor onboard the day before. There may be reason not to pick a particular private airstrip as a waypoint. However: * I fail to see how the airstrip in question here was a sufficiently poor waypoint to justify failing you on your checkride. Did the error create a hazard, or a significant error in your groundspeed calculation? I doubt it did. I doubt it had ANY effect whatsoever on anything important. * Lots of private airstrips are fixed firmly to the ground, and are every bit as reasonable as a waypoint as a paved public airport. To claim that "you should have been taught not to use private airstrips as waypoints" is every bit as erroneous as if someone claimed "you can always use private airstrips as waypoints". Frankly, sounds to me as though you and your instructor got a bum rap by an overly critical examiner. Which is not to say you shouldn't argue with your instructor. You should always question what they say, if you don't understand what they said or why they said it. Sometimes you'll find out the instructor was wrong, and sometimes you'll learn with greater depth about how and why they were right. But either way, there's a benefit. Pete |
#67
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On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 15:27:38 -0700, "gatt"
wrote: You should have been taught not to use private airstrips as waypoints." That seems rather odd to me. Among my waypoints are my house, the Newmarket gym, the town of Durham, Littlemark Island, a couple of exits on I-93, and the southeast corner of an unnamed lake in Maine, not to mention two private airstrips. A waypoint is any easily recognized point that you might want to use for navigation, plus those where you might want to land sometime. all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com The Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com Viva Bush! www.vivabush.org |
#68
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On Thu, 10 Jun 2004 15:18:01 GMT, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: The net result is that, even though I have vastly more experience on the bike (almost a Dudley-esque level), I feel safer when I am flying because I know that I have a greater degree of control over my destiny. Bingo. When I ride, I am in a constant state of alertness -- partially for my own performance, but mostly for those around me. When I fly, I am in a constant state of alertness -- partially for those around me, but mostly for my own performance. (And the performance of my aircraft.) I am much more comfortable dealing with my own abilities and limitations; thus, although it may be an illusion, I feel much safer flying. Jay, I don't think it is an illusion. Your awareness of the issue and your alertness to your performance "make" it safer. I believe that you have the ability to tip the scales in this situation. No smoke and mirrors required. Rich Russell |
#69
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