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#11
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"Roy Smith" wrote in message
A lot of people on this group were acting like being asked to "say intentions" when their flight-planned route turned out to be unavailable was a major crisis. I agree with your point but not your example. Sometimes the most experienced IFR pilots have the mindset and judgment to question ATC rather than accept whatever is given and sometimes that is essential for safe IFR flight. If you sorted the responses to that situation, I think you would find fair representation by capable and experienced IFR pilots on both sides of the issue. |
#12
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Y'All,
I have prepared pilots to take Field's program. A California trained pilot has great difficulty getting truly hard IFR experience. An IFR rating in California does not prepare you for what you will meet in Great Lakes, Northwest, Southwest and the Midwest. You can get the basics in California but Field (He is named after his father's airport) will train you to be a survivor. His program is the best available for those who require the best possible experiences in an accellerated realistic program. Not everybody can take it and make it. Field has a syllabus for your local CFI to use before you fly to Wisconsin. He also has taken some of my pilots to the Bahamas and Alaska. Gene Whitt |
#13
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![]() "Gene Whitt" wrote in message ink.net... Y'All, I have prepared pilots to take Field's program. A California trained pilot has great difficulty getting truly hard IFR experience. An IFR rating in California does not prepare you for what you will meet in Great Lakes, Northwest, Southwest and the Midwest. You can get the basics in California but Field (He is named after his father's airport) will train you to be a survivor. His program is the best available for those who require the best possible experiences in an accellerated realistic program. Not everybody can take it and make it. Field has a syllabus for your local CFI to use before you fly to Wisconsin. He also has taken some of my pilots to the Bahamas and Alaska. Gene Whitt Unfortunately the program run by Field and his son Rich has now finished. |
#14
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I recently did one of those courses.
The best I can say about it is that I am now a genuine US government certified instrument pilot. I can also say that the procedure cost me less than others have spent to get the same rating. The course cut a lot of corners. They sort of, arguably, did meet the minimum legal standards for such training. To say the course prepares one to fly IFR would be more than a stretch. It would be absurd. Sanjay Kumar wrote: Folks ! I am planing to get my IFR ticket. preferably in one of accelerated programs. I have read about a few but I am still looking for one where they take you on a cross-country ride to say west-coast or Alaska (I am in east) and you don't shoot same approach twice. AT the end of the trip you take your checkride. Do you know of such a course ? How do they compare to ones that remain local ? thank you, -Sanjay Kumar |
#15
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Xxx,
well, since you're the first to really come down hard on these courses from personal experience, I'd be very interested in WHICH you took. Could you post this or at least e-mail me the information? Thanks! -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#16
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#17
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![]() "Andrew Gideon" wrote in message online.com... wrote: Sometimes the most experienced IFR pilots have the mindset and judgment to question ATC rather than accept whatever is given and sometimes that is essential for safe IFR flight. One of the reasons I chose the CFII I did, back when I did, was his comfort with ATC. It was the start of my education regarding the advantages of a "well seasoned" CFI. I've since become quite a bigot on that topic, in fact laugh. One of the "real world" concepts he taught, in addition to the small matter of IFR flying, was dealing with ATC. I've found far more seasoned pilots surprised at my negotiation style, and I owe it all to that instructor. Hello Andrew, I am interested in this. Are there any other aspects of this style that you would care to share? Or is it just basically as said above, "don't blindly accept what is given to you by ATC". Cheers, John Clonts Temple, Texas N7NZ |
#18
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John Clonts wrote:
I am interested in this. Are there any other aspects of this style that you would care to share? Or is it just basically as said above, "don't blindly accept what is given to you by ATC". Hmm. I am *not* this CFII (or any CFI {8^), so I'm not sure I can give "this style" adequate coverage. But from this one student's perspective... It involves first a recognition that the people behind the ATC microphone are just that: people. Once that's internalized, a lot of "mic fright" goes away. Listening in for a while also helps that. Even the heavy iron drivers make mistakes too, as do controllers. And that relates to part of our job. "Communication" and operating under ATC control (ie. IFR, in a class B, etc.) doesn't mean giving up PIC status. I just heard a story a couple of evenings ago about a pilot that had a mishap on a T&G. He actually ran off the runway into the grass, dented the plane on something (a taxi light?), and then returned to the air. When he was asked his intentions by the tower, his response was one which indicated complete abdication. Bad Move. ATC is not there to fly the plane. Another aspect is that ATC and pilot are working cooperatively towards a goal, with that working sometimes overly well defined by the rules. A contact approach is one example where the controller is precluded from doing something that might otherwise be helpful (though I've heard funny stories of 'hints' given {8^). But within those limits, it's certainly a team approach. We're on the same side. If you're unhappy with an instruction or a reply, and assuming conditions permit, you can work together to find an alternative. - Andrew |
#19
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Andrew Gideon wrote:
Another aspect is that ATC and pilot are working cooperatively towards a goal, with that working sometimes overly well defined by the rules. A contact approach is one example where the controller is precluded from doing something that might otherwise be helpful (though I've heard funny stories of 'hints' given {8^). - Andrew Lots of stories like that, but I'll relate one: Was stuck at Albany NY with light snow falling. Started up and got the ATIS which was reporting 2 1/2 miles... beacon was on... called Ground, and they reported it appeared clearer to the West (our direction of flight). Sat at the runup pad for many minutes, calling for the official visibility two or three times. Finally asked if I could get a "special VFR" out of their. Response from the tower was "We thought you'd NEVER ask!" Was on my way in minutes. Rich |
#20
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Rich wrote:
Lots of stories like that, but I'll relate one: Was stuck at Albany NY with light snow falling. Started up and got the ATIS which was reporting 2 1/2 miles... beacon was on... called Ground, and they reported it appeared clearer to the West (our direction of flight). Sat at the runup pad for many minutes, calling for the official visibility two or three times. Finally asked if I could get a "special VFR" out of their. Response from the tower was "We thought you'd NEVER ask!" Was on my way in minutes. In a similar situation, I've had the tower controller ask me: "...is there anything special you'd like to request?" Dave |
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