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I am getting ready to start of Instrument training. I plan on training
during the day on the weekends and 1 or 2 nights during the week. What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? Personally I don't fly at night and have only for what was required for my PPSEL. However my goal is to go on to my Commerical and CFI after the Instrument. I know I will have to get proficient at night flying to teach the PPSEL, but not while IFR. So, I guess my question comes down to added risk. How much additional risk am I taking by doing some of my Instrument at night? |
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![]() What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? There is a small increased risk in any night flying. The main thing is an engine failure and the inability to find a safe landing spot as easily as during the day. IFR training in VFR conditions carries no additional risk IMO other than the increased risk of any night flying. If the area you fly in has a reasonable amount of ground light, night flying is rewarding and pleasurable. The night landing robs you of a bit of depth perception and you might have a few hard landings until you get the hang of it. If you are in mountainous or sloping terrain or in an area were there is little ground light be aware of the usual optical illusions (black hole, false horizon, spatial disorientation, etc). Personally, I don't like landing at an unfamiliar airport at night unless there is glide slope indication of some sort (ILS, VASI, PAPI). Learn to fly at night and become proficient. Passengers love to fly with you at night for the smooth air and great view. Once you're comfortable you will fly much less during the day. Kobra |
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wrote in message
oups.com... What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? Personally I don't fly at night and have only for what was required for my PPSEL. However my goal is to go on to my Commerical and CFI after the Instrument. So, I guess my question comes down to added risk. How much additional risk am I taking by doing some of my Instrument at night? The main thing with flying at night in a single-engine aircraft is that life is less encouraging when it comes to engine failures. This said, though, I can't see that it's really more risky flying on a nice, clear night than, say, flying single-engine in daytime IMC with a low cloud base. The main thing to be sure of is that your instructor is experienced and extremely competent with night flying. Again, no surprises here - if you're doing an IMC course in real IMC you'd want your instructor to have loads of experience. The trick is to be confident that (a) they're sharp enough to stop you getting into trouble; and (b) if, by some misfortune, they were looking at the map while you got yourself into an inverted, screaming descent, they'll be able to get you out of it. I was fortunate in that my IMC instructors were both several-thousand-hours ex-commercial pilots who had thousands of hours of hands-on IMC between them (i.e. none of this namby-pamby auto-land stuff for the ex- Hunter and Fokker 50 pilot, and lots of nice North Sea weather for the helicopter captain :-) Sadly I can only fly at night with an instructor because the CAA thinks I'm too colour-blind, but it's immense fun and the views are awesome. D. |
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wrote in message
oups.com... I am getting ready to start of Instrument training. I plan on training during the day on the weekends and 1 or 2 nights during the week. What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? Personally I don't fly at night and have only for what was required for my PPSEL. However my goal is to go on to my Commerical and CFI after the Instrument. I know I will have to get proficient at night flying to teach the PPSEL, but not while IFR. So, I guess my question comes down to added risk. How much additional risk am I taking by doing some of my Instrument at night? As an instrument instructor, I prefer teaching instruments at night. Here's why: 1) It's more realistic to simulate instrument conditions in VMC at night. 2) Most airports seem to be less busy so busting into the pattern from a practice approach is less problematic. 3) In my area, ATC tends to be less busy so controllers tend to be more patient with my students 4) The air is smoother (although sometimes its *too* smooth) 5) the night environment forces good cockpit management habits. Fishing around for a chart is harder at night when they all look alike in the dark. There are challenges and risks though... 1) I tend not to do aggressive unusual attitudes or stalls at night. At night a stall is an instrument manuever for both the student and the instructor, especially on a dark night with no moon. 2) Some fields do not allow practice approachs later in the evening. My local class C doesn't allow them after 10pm, presumably for noise abatement. 3) Airports services are less likely to be available...locked FBOs, no fuel truck, empty vending machines, etc. 4) Greater potential for ground fog...must watch the temperature dewpoint spread. 5) less options available for forced or precautionary landings. Highways and parking lots become viable options. 6) night generally occurs at the end of the day, so stress and rest are factors for both the student and the instructor. An IMSAFE audit is real important. I will fly in IMC at night in a single provided: 1) I am familiar with the aircraft. While engine failure can occur anytime to any engine, the probability is much less on a well maintained aircraft. 2) We are over flat terrain. I will fly over mountains (east coast mountains, that is) at night in VMC provided we have enough visibility, altitude and options below us (i.e. valleys, highways, etc.) 3) We have a GPS with an independent electrical source. This is my rule for day IMC as well. |
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Kobra wrote:
What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? There is a small increased risk in any night flying. The main thing is an engine failure and the inability to find a safe landing spot as easily as during the day. IFR training in VFR conditions carries no additional risk IMO other than the increased risk of any night flying. Definitely correct on all accounts including the stuff I deleted. I did much of my IFR training at night and about 25% of my 200 hours is at night. I am actually fairly comfortable at night and almost wonder why people are so scared of it (noting the additional risks listed above). With foggles, it is a great substitute for IMC. It is also more challenging which is good as you have the CFII to fall back on. Same thing for getting night experience with the experience of the CFII on board. I highly recommend it. Gerald |
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Jimmy B. wrote:
I would recommend getting some actual IMC during your training. There is a huge difference between you wearing foggles and being in actual IMC. I would have to concur *strongly*. You don't want your first experience in actual to with your family in the plane. In my training, I never experienced any vertigo or disorientation with the foggles on, but I still experience it to this day in actual. I learned very quickly to ignore it and trust my instruments. Fortunately, my first experience in actual was while I was still training. To make it extra special, it was at night and we departed with ceilings about 700' AGL. We entered IMC in a climbing left turn that quickly turned into a descending left turn. Had I not been with an experienced instructor, I may not have been able to recover as I wouldn't have realized the problem until I broke out again at 700' in a 1,000 - 1,500 fpm spiral dive. As it was, my instructor made a comment like "are you going to correct that?" and immediately I realized the situation and corrected it. Which is the other thing. You need to have an instructor that is confident enough and experienced enough to let you get into trouble and let you get out of it again. If your instructor takes control every time you get into trouble, you won't learn much. Recognizing that you are in an unusual attitude and then recovering is, in my mind, the most important skill in instrument flying. Being able to keep the needles exactly centered or flying a perfectly wind corrected hold is nice for showing off, but you have room for error in those operations. You don't have to fly them with autopilot precision. On the other hand, recognizing that you're entering a descending left turn instead of the climbing right turn that you intended or that from straight and level you have somehow managed to get into an increasingly steep climbing turn is far more useful. You don't get to learn this properly under the hood. It takes the real thing to truly learn it. If your instructor won't do it or your instructor takes control too quickly, you are missing out on training that could save your life one day. -m -- ## Mark T. Dame ## VP, Product Development ## MFM Software, Inc. (http://www.mfm.com/) "I'm a doctor, not a bricklayer." -- Star Trek: Dr. McCoy, "The Devil In The Dark" |
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I did half of my IFR training at night. If it is VFR go for it. I do not
recommend training in actual at night. Flying IMC at night is some of the hardest flying you will do especially if there is turbulence. Michelle wrote: I am getting ready to start of Instrument training. I plan on training during the day on the weekends and 1 or 2 nights during the week. What are your thoughts on instrument training at night? Personally I don't fly at night and have only for what was required for my PPSEL. However my goal is to go on to my Commerical and CFI after the Instrument. I know I will have to get proficient at night flying to teach the PPSEL, but not while IFR. So, I guess my question comes down to added risk. How much additional risk am I taking by doing some of my Instrument at night? |
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