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#51
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I think some people tend to log actual when they are not suppose to.
How often do you stay in the clouds? once you can see again, your not in actual and cant log it. "Cecil E. Chapman" wrote: For those of you who have your instrument ticket, how many hours of actual IMC did you have when you got your ticket. At approx 40 hours of instrument time I have a 'whopping' .9 hours of ACTUAL IMC... I sincerely hope I'm going to get to see a lot more before I get my instrument ticket - which I'm guessing should be around April or May at the latest. -- -- Good Flights! Cecil E. Chapman, Jr. PP-ASEL "We who fly do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet" - Cecil Day Lewis- Check out my personal flying adventures: www.bayareapilot.com |
#52
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the instrument ticket is priceless, 2 days ago I took my plane up for the first
time in a month (it had been in the shop getting new avionics installed) went only about 40 miles out to the MMM VOR, when I turned around to head back, the city was covered by low clouds and what looked like fog on the ground, I thought I could go under it, but as I got closer it did not look do'able. I was talking to nellis approach because I was entering class B, told them I didnt think I could make it in without a clearence, they gave it to me and away I went. technically, it was not VFR, I did not actually go through any clouds, but I skimmed them so I could not log it as actual. but once below the layer and I was able to see the airport, I canceled IFR and did the visual approach. You can see the las vegas valley in this picture and the fog, kinda sucked I couldnt login as actual even tho it was not VFR. http://216.158.136.206/newplane/clouds/image3.html Here is the cloud I almost got to fly through ![]() http://216.158.136.206/newplane/clouds/image2.html Jeff "Cecil E. Chapman" wrote: For those of you who have your instrument ticket, how many hours of actual IMC did you have when you got your ticket. At approx 40 hours of instrument time I have a 'whopping' .9 hours of ACTUAL IMC... I sincerely hope I'm going to get to see a lot more before I get my instrument ticket - which I'm guessing should be around April or May at the latest. -- -- Good Flights! Cecil E. Chapman, Jr. PP-ASEL "We who fly do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet" - Cecil Day Lewis- Check out my personal flying adventures: www.bayareapilot.com |
#53
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#54
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#55
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In article , "Cecil E.
Chapman" wrote: I'm not surprised at all. I remember reading an AOPA magazine article mentioning the very same thing. While a few replies to my original thread didn't seem to think it was an issue that one only had hood time - my limited experience with real IMC begs me to differ. As you said, with the hood or foggles on you are still aware of a peripheral 'outside', however when you are in real IMC the experience is quite different, especially seeing the quick movement of the cloud texture past your side windows in your peripheral view. another fun aspect of IMC is needing to transition from looking outside to looking inside to looking outside to looking inside as you fly in and out of the clouds. Hard to simulate. -- Bob Noel |
#56
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Gary L. Drescher wrote:
"Matthew S. Whiting" wrote in message ... I don't think having some arbitrary number of hours makes much difference. I think the more important issue is how you begin to use your new ticket. I've seen a number of authors of IFR books provide something like this: 1. Start by taking off from an airport with VMC conditions, climb through a fairly thin cloud layer to VMC conditions on top and then land at an airport with VMC. 2. Take off in VMC, fly enroute in a thin layer, land in VMC. 3. Take off in IMC, fly enroute in IMC, but land in VMC. 4. Take off in ICM, fly enroute in IMC, land in "easy" IMC. 5. Repeat 4 gradually working closer to an approach in minimums and adding in worse weather enroute. I don't quite understand the theory behind this advice. I do agree that IMC is harder than hood flying, because the latter provides peripheral cues as to changes in attitude. For that reason, I made sure to have adequate dual practice in IMC before trying it on my own. Because flying in the real world tends to get more involved that flying in a training environment. I flew a lot at night after a full day at work. This helped induce a fatique factor, but it still is nothing like shooting an approach at the end of a four hour flight, all in IMC with no autopilot. Very hard to realistically simulate that in training. On the other hand, once basic attitude flying in IMC becomes comfortable, it doesn't strike me that flying an approach to minimums in IMC is then any harder than doing it under the hood. And since doing it reliably under the hood is a required part of instrument training, I don't really see why pilots shouldn't fly single-pilot IMC to minimums soon after flying single-pilot IMC at all. I don't think it is any harder in actual, generally. The key point is "IMC becomes comfortable." I found my comfort level increased long after I got my ticket. I thought I was reasonably comfortable the day I passed my flight ride, but I wasn't. But I readily admit there could be good reasons that don't occur to me. If so, I'd like to hear them. Some pilots may be able to shoot to minimums the next day. I think I could have, but I wouldn't have unless I had to. It is nice to have the confidence of having shot a few real approaches to something above minimums a few times to really ensure you have the system down pat. Many surgeons train on cadavers and now even with computer simulation. They technically are qualified to then operate on a live person. However, sometimes things go wrong with live people that don't go wrong with cadavers. Similar things are true in instrument flying. Your training simply can't cover everything, unless you want to spend 500 hours in training. And did you get 100 on your written? I was close, I missed one question. The last I knew, only 70 was required to pass. What if a key thing you missed wasn't caught during your training or oral? This might be the piece you need to know on a dark and stormy night when things start to go wrong. As your experience builds, some of these gaps get filled in. That is why, up to a point, the safety record improves with experience level of the pilot ... until cockiness, over confidence and complacency sets in.... Matt |
#57
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Thanks for the reply!
BTW, great photos,, do you have anymore on-line? -- -- Good Flights! Cecil E. Chapman, Jr. PP-ASEL "We who fly do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet" - Cecil Day Lewis- Check out my personal flying adventures: www.bayareapilot.com "Jeff" wrote in message ... the instrument ticket is priceless, 2 days ago I took my plane up for the first time in a month (it had been in the shop getting new avionics installed) went only about 40 miles out to the MMM VOR, when I turned around to head back, the city was covered by low clouds and what looked like fog on the ground, I thought I could go under it, but as I got closer it did not look do'able. I was talking to nellis approach because I was entering class B, told them I didnt think I could make it in without a clearence, they gave it to me and away I went. technically, it was not VFR, I did not actually go through any clouds, but I skimmed them so I could not log it as actual. but once below the layer and I was able to see the airport, I canceled IFR and did the visual approach. You can see the las vegas valley in this picture and the fog, kinda sucked I couldnt login as actual even tho it was not VFR. http://216.158.136.206/newplane/clouds/image3.html Here is the cloud I almost got to fly through ![]() http://216.158.136.206/newplane/clouds/image2.html Jeff "Cecil E. Chapman" wrote: For those of you who have your instrument ticket, how many hours of actual IMC did you have when you got your ticket. At approx 40 hours of instrument time I have a 'whopping' .9 hours of ACTUAL IMC... I sincerely hope I'm going to get to see a lot more before I get my instrument ticket - which I'm guessing should be around April or May at the latest. -- -- Good Flights! Cecil E. Chapman, Jr. PP-ASEL "We who fly do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet" - Cecil Day Lewis- Check out my personal flying adventures: www.bayareapilot.com |
#58
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Tim wrote:
Then the training was lacking. Baloney. Training and capability and confidence learned through experience are two different things entirely. I don't care if we are talking about flying, driving, or a profession, the training/education are just the beginning. Practice and experience beyond that is what makes you a good driver, pilot, doctor, engineer or whatever. If you really don't know the difference here, then I feel really sorry for you. No need to feel sorry for me. I already conceded that experience will make you better. What you have still not convinced me of is that after I get my rating I should be "prudent" and not actually fly to the standards I was training at and took the practical? You are confusing two different issues. What I would like someone to explain is why a person who just passed the practical should not be able to file a plan, fly in actual and complete an approach to minimums. I argue that if they can't then: If you feel that you can fly to the edge of the envelope (fully utilize everything legally available to you in IMC conditions) at day one, what is left to gain from experience? I'm not being facetrious here, I'm really curious as to what value you feel that experience will bring? Generally, it brings additional capabilities beyond what you had at the start. But since you can't legally fly in worse weather after 500 hours than you can after 0 hours (I'm talking post rating here), what is left to gain from your experience? On your own without an instructor is no way to "learn" how to do an approach to minimums. (I can not figure out how else you get to that point on your own, since it seems that you are arguing that a person's training did not prepare them to make a flight in IMC and land after doing an approach to minimums) I don't think anyone is claiming that you need to learn to do the approach. It is a question of precision, confidence, and the ability to handle the unforeseen that comes with experience. I believe any new insrument pilot should have the knowledge to fly an approach to minimums. They shouldn't need to learn anything from a "mechanical" perspective. That isn't what experience usually brings. It is the ability to recognize and deal with the non-mechanical aspects (fatique, etc.) that occur in real flying much more so than during training. That's unfortunate. My instrument test was nearly 3 hours long, about 1.5 on the ground and 1.5 in the air. I passed, but wouldn't launch into low IFR to an airport reporting minimums at that point in my instrument flying career. Damn right it is unfortunate. Why wouldn't you have? Because doing things in a simulated environment isn't the same as doing things for real. I've learned this in many aspects of my personal and professional life. If I'd had the occasion to fly several approaches to minimums in actual during my training, then I'd have felt differently. I simply chose to explore the areas incrementally where I'd not had the chance to explore them "for real" during training. I had already agreed to that. The point is that after the test you should be expected to fly in IMC on your own and make an approach at minimums - after all that is what you trained and tested for. I will make it clear again - I am not arguing that a person who just passed his practical is going to be a wunderkind and be able to fly better or has better habits or is more capable than one who has been flying for years. What capbilities will you be able to use after experience than you could the day you got your rating? You can't arbitrarily fly to an MDA or DH lower than what is published, just because you are now a better pilot. As to your question: would you want a doctor who had just graduated from medical school perform his/her first quadruple bypass on you without a more experienced surgeon in the operating room? Totally different and your example is not even close in so many ways. Such as? Matt |
#59
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Bob Noel wrote:
another fun aspect of IMC is needing to transition from looking outside to looking inside to looking outside to looking inside as you fly in and out of the clouds. Hard to simulate. Sometime flying IFR in VMC can be more difficult. In VMC, you now have to look outside about 90% of the time, while in the clouds you could devote 100% of your time inside. When I flew with a friend of mine soon after getting his IR, I had to ensure that he looked outside when outside a cloud - definitely higher workload. Unfortunately, this is something the hood cannot simulate, and in fact, encourages the bad habit. Hilton |
#60
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vincent p. norris wrote
Bob, did you get a "White Card" when you got your wings? I don't remember Vince, but I do remember flying "solo" cross countries IFR in the S-2F while at Kingsville. John Cuddy, another NAVCAD, and I set-out from Kingsville to Pensacola and immediately looked for a cloud to fly in since neither of us had ever been in a cloud before. Maybe is was a special dispensation from the "white card" requirement. Bob Moore |
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