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#1
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I'm just curious how many of you have flown on top? Either way, why or why
not? I have. but didn't like doing it. It was to avoid flying too low among the blue ridge mountains when there were low layers hanging in the valleys. (I had a Garmin 396 with XMWx so from the sat/radar view I knew what to expect ahead). I'm not sure why it bugs me so much, I'm dual rated and in a plane I feel totally fine on top, but it bothered the snot out of me to do it in the helicopter. Bart |
#2
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B4RT
I've done it quite a bit over the years and most recently (helicopter) on the ferry last year with the B206L3 coming down from the canada border to Baton Rouge. Lots of cloud cover from Minnesota south on the trip. I was up at 7-8000 over the Ozarks and surrounding area I suspect to give me more time to consider options if I found myself in an emergency situation. Most of the time in FW was probably IFR filed even though VFR on top. Even then I constantly considered my emergency options as I moved along the course. Perhaps I've gotten more fatalistic as I age and rely on the quality of the equipment when I am flying over hostile terrain, or at night over mountainous areas, or way out over water with no flotation gear, etc. Even so, I do a lot of "what ifs" in my pre-flight planning before I elect to light the fire or scrub the flight till later. Funny that 10,000 hours ago it took less for me to scrub a flight than it does now. Yet, even then I considered myself to be a safe prudent pilot. I can't help but think my 3 month old son may have some bearing on it now?! Cheers Rocky B4RT wrote: I'm just curious how many of you have flown on top? Either way, why or why not? I have. but didn't like doing it. It was to avoid flying too low among the blue ridge mountains when there were low layers hanging in the valleys. (I had a Garmin 396 with XMWx so from the sat/radar view I knew what to expect ahead). I'm not sure why it bugs me so much, I'm dual rated and in a plane I feel totally fine on top, but it bothered the snot out of me to do it in the helicopter. Bart |
#3
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I'm just curious how many of you have flown on top? Either way, why or why
not? I did it once in a plane, but that scared me quite a bit, especially when you saw - on hilly terrain - some antenna-tops or windmill blades cutting through (they did spin, cool!). I don't like it at all. But it is a bit like flying at night. Good landings are quite impossible. Just hope - one can't avoid it if its a job. wisecracking mode You surely meant "over the top" (talking about VFR). "On top" is IFR. This was surprising for me when I did my IFR. Everybody talkes about "on top" but always means "over the top". The latter I had never heard before learning IFR. /wisecracking mode |
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