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#11
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wrote in message oups.com...
.... I still love flying in and out of puffy clouds, and if I can, I'll request an altitude that puts me in a layer like that. WW But when those "puffy clouds" show up on my radar, I try to deviate around them. :-( |
#12
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On 2006-02-02, Mark Hansen wrote:
On 02/02/06 14:48, Mark Hansen wrote: Oh jeeze - proofread... My very first time flying into IMC conditions was during a PP training flight, when my instructor agreed to let me see what it was light to ^^^^^ like shoot an ILS approach back into our home airport. We were over a status layer, and approaching a wall of cloud. It looked ^^^^^^ stratus like we were going to crash into it. The instructor told me that, to reduce the potential for disorientation, I should switch my gaze to the inside of the cockpit before we reach the clouds. I basically told him to get bent - this was the first time I'd ever seen this, and I was going to watch! ;-) I looked great, by the way. ^ So you really meant that it was *you* who looked great? :-) |
#13
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![]() "Mark Hansen" wrote in message ... On 02/02/06 14:48, Mark Hansen wrote: On 02/02/06 14:38, A Lieberman wrote: On Thu, 2 Feb 2006 13:51:20 -0500, Marco Leon wrote: The weird thing about the broken clouds was that I felt like I was going too fast and I kept glancing at my airspeed indicator more so than what I was taught. I find it much easier in solid IMC then partly cloudy conditions. Like you Marco, I feel the speed, and the variation of colors outside my windows adds to distraction, so I just do everything I can to keep my eyes inside the plane. Allen Oh jeeze - proofread... My very first time flying into IMC conditions was during a PP training flight, when my instructor agreed to let me see what it was light to ^^^^^ like shoot an ILS approach back into our home airport. We were over a status layer, and approaching a wall of cloud. It looked ^^^^^^ stratus like we were going to crash into it. The instructor told me that, to reduce the potential for disorientation, I should switch my gaze to the inside of the cockpit before we reach the clouds. I basically told him to get bent - this was the first time I'd ever seen this, and I was going to watch! ;-) I looked great, by the way. "It" looked great? Our did you "look mauvelos" (ala "Fernando") |
#14
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My favorite condition is scattered fair weather cumulus with thickness no
more than 2,000 feet. The beauty of the "mountains and valleys" of clouds is simply awesome. The temptation to deviate from your cleared route to zoom around is big. ![]() Another picture etched in my psyche forever was the first time I was fogged out of my home airport and diverted to a nearby Class C. We had a Southwest 737 5 miles ahead of us in full view in the unlimited vis above the fog layer. The late evening light set an eerie dream-like hue while looking down at what used to be a large aircraft disappear into a massive, milky, edgeless and surreal "landscape." I was still training for my IR and had two instructors (one mine the other was bored--had a cancelled student) so there was no chickening out to Connecticut. Made it in at minimums. Whoever said IFR flying wasn't a spectator sport?? Marco "Maule Driver" wrote in message ... Roy Smith wrote: That is a wierd sensation; like heading towards a brick wall at 150 mph, then all of a sudden you punch right through the wall with little or no effect on the airplane. It's really cool when you're just above to top of a nice flat stratus layer and you can keep dipping in and out of it by going up or down 50 feet. If the tops aren't right at the right altitude and there's not much traffic, you can ask ATC for an altitude block :-) ...or when you precisely hold an altitude and a stratus deck comes up, kisses the plane and then recedes. Really sweet. It's like accelerating to the speed of heat and then slowly braking. IMC pilots need better sunglasses! Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
#15
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Maule Driver wrote:
: ...or when you precisely hold an altitude and a stratus deck comes up, : kisses the plane and then recedes. Really sweet. It's like : accelerating to the speed of heat and then slowly braking. ... except this time of year when every time it does that some of the stratus deck sticks to your airplane. : IMC pilots need better sunglasses! Adaptive, maybe? ![]() -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#16
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On 02/03/06 00:35, Matt Barrow wrote:
"Mark Hansen" wrote in message I looked great, by the way. "It" looked great? Our did you "look mauvelos" (ala "Fernando") ^^^ See? It's not just me ;-) And yes, "I" did look great! ;-) -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#17
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A couple of visual images I can't forget:
- departing Asheville, NC at dawn, clouds filling the valleys, bright sunshine at a low angle. - departing Raleigh-Durham above a low stratus layer, uniform flat white blanket below with just a couple of antennas poking through. Dave Marco Leon wrote: My favorite condition is scattered fair weather cumulus with thickness no more than 2,000 feet. The beauty of the "mountains and valleys" of clouds is simply awesome. The temptation to deviate from your cleared route to zoom around is big. ![]() Another picture etched in my psyche forever was the first time I was fogged out of my home airport and diverted to a nearby Class C. We had a Southwest 737 5 miles ahead of us in full view in the unlimited vis above the fog layer. The late evening light set an eerie dream-like hue while looking down at what used to be a large aircraft disappear into a massive, milky, edgeless and surreal "landscape." I was still training for my IR and had two instructors (one mine the other was bored--had a cancelled student) so there was no chickening out to Connecticut. Made it in at minimums. Whoever said IFR flying wasn't a spectator sport?? Marco "Maule Driver" wrote in message ... Roy Smith wrote: That is a wierd sensation; like heading towards a brick wall at 150 mph, then all of a sudden you punch right through the wall with little or no effect on the airplane. It's really cool when you're just above to top of a nice flat stratus layer and you can keep dipping in and out of it by going up or down 50 feet. If the tops aren't right at the right altitude and there's not much traffic, you can ask ATC for an altitude block :-) ...or when you precisely hold an altitude and a stratus deck comes up, kisses the plane and then recedes. Really sweet. It's like accelerating to the speed of heat and then slowly braking. IMC pilots need better sunglasses! Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com -- Dave Butler, software engineer 919-392-4367 |
#18
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My most unforgettable flights. One, I obtained a block altitude and
went swooping between and into nice, small, closely spaced cumulus puffs of cotton. The other (my claim to fame), I was first in after ground fog on an ILS to a nearby airport. Conditions were right at minimums (200'). And....I had a class on the ground waiting for me....they all wanted to know what it was like. |
#19
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Dave Butler wrote:
A couple of visual images I can't forget: - departing Asheville, NC at dawn, clouds filling the valleys, bright sunshine at a low angle. as nice as it gets in the east - departing Raleigh-Durham above a low stratus layer, uniform flat white blanket below with just a couple of antennas poking through. ....and then flying over to to do the GPS RWY21 at Asheboro and seeing that 2649' tower poking up thru that same deck as you descend to 2600' at HABUG |
#20
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Yes, this little thrill game can push you to more exciting adventures.
In mine I like to fly through the small dark (not t'storm) clouds that look like they'll give me about 30 seconds of moderate turbulence. Sometimes, though, I just have to give in and request a slight course deviation "for weather." |
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