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I got my IR last August and finally got to log my 1st post-checkride actual
approach. All while the airport I was landing at was reporting 10 miles and clear below 12,000. More like 1,200. All day long this place was reporting clear skies. All day long it varied between 1,200 and 1,700. ATC read me the AWOS before I heard it and we were planning a decent to MSA then a visual landing. The bases were only about 700-800 below me, but I just couldn't keep visual. I ended up flying a full procedure turn LOC approach. Bah. Just enough to keep my in the clouds until descending past the FAF. (and yes, i will be logging that approach g) Lesson learned? Be prepared. I had already loaded the approach into the GPS just in case, & had everything ready for it. Also, I'll believe reported weather when I'm actually in it. Third lesson? Be very familiar with the equipment in your plane. I was flying a Diamond Star I was recently checked out it. We had gone through auto pilot usage, and I used it for most of the flight, but when it was time to make the procedure turn, the plane wasn't turning. I didn't have something set. I think I forgot to switch the 530 from GPS mode to VLOC once I activated the approach. Shoot I can't remember if I even hit APR on the autopilot now that I think of it. I ended up hand flying the approach. Cool experience. Very rare to get such benign IMC to learn in. -- PP-ASEL, instrument |
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