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Jose wrote:
An example of one of my errors was before I got my IFR ticket, I decided to launch on a forecast of broken 4000 foot ceilings and tops at 6000. Forecast was to improve by the time I got to my destination. I did flight following at 8000 so I could be VFR over the top and be in the clear smooth air. You can guess what happened. Forecast was a bust. Where was the error? If you had outs the whole way and didn't get yourself up a (figurative) box canyon, you were fine. You were not "Caught VFR on top", since VFR fields were in range. Needing to divert is not a sign of error. You were more vulnerable, as the fan could have quit leaving you to descend through cloud. But you have a similar vulnerability flying over water. Flying is risky; we accept the risk for the benefit. Does the above make me a bad pilot for... In my book, being a bad (or good) pilot requires a consistant pattern of bad (or good) decisions. A single instance does not have predicitive value. Do you mean predictive value? If that is the case, then you really can't predict much based on a pilots style or behavior. I've know lots of pilots who are very risk oriented and have never had an accident or incident and I know a few who are very conservative and safety conscious who have. I stand by my earlier assertion that it is results that count, not intent, style, good living, whatever. Matt |
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