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"Pilot Stories Wanted" wrote in message
om... I am a private pilot looking to create a book that I wish I had prior to starting flight school. I am only in the very first stage of this drawn out process. I hope to receive complete stories of pilots of all skill levels telling about their endeavors in learning to fly, their lessons learned, what they would/would not do again, etc. What do you think is posted on this newsgroup??? It's FULL of stories from people in all various stages of training. Just go to Google and you will have enough information and stories for several books. Troll? |
#2
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Troll?
Maybe just ignorant of what we're about here...? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
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Here's one option: Use the Google newsgroup archive to find such stories
already posted in this group, then contact the authors and ask them if it would be okay to use them. Feel free to use mine. -david Pilot Stories Wanted wrote: I am a private pilot looking to create a book that I wish I had prior to starting flight school. I am only in the very first stage of this drawn out process. I hope to receive complete stories of pilots of all skill levels telling about their endeavors in learning to fly, their lessons learned, what they would/would not do again, etc. I prefer not to have any anonymous entries in the final book. Once complete, which is not going to happen overnight, I will contact each and every donor and request final permission to print their entry in the book and, though not required, would like to put a first name and hometown as the submitting donor. If everything falls into place, I would hope to be able to provide each donor with a copy of the published book. All donors are requested to email their story and use an appropriate subject heading as found below. I do ask that no flight school names be used in the book. If you elect to use it, I will most likely need to get a notorized authorization from the president of the school prior to publishing. I will have to speak with an attorney on the legal ropes but am willing to accomodate any reasonable request. -PRIVATE PILOT -INSTRUMENT RATING -FLOAT PLANE RATING -MULTI-ENGINE RATING -COMMERCIAL PILOT -CFI -AIRLINE TRANSPORT PILOT -RECREATIONAL PILOT -SPORT PILOT -(ANYTHING I MAY HAVE MISSED, IE BALLOON, HELICOPTER, ETC.) -LESSONS LEARNED (MISHAPS WITH THEIR CAUSE,SOLUTION, FINAL OUTCOME) -MY FIRST CROSS COUNTRY THANK YOU IN ADVANCE FOR YOUR ASSISTANCE IN THIS TEAM EFFORT OF PROVIDING OTHERS WITH SOMETHING WE DID NOT HAVE -- Replace spam with david in the email address if you want to send email to me personally. |
#4
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SOME OF YOU HAVE (5) SUBMITTED STORIES AND I APPRECIATE IT. JUST TO
LET EVERYONE KNOW, I AM STILL LOOKINBG FOR STORIES SO THAT I MAY MAKE THIS THING HAPPEN. KEEP THEM COMING! THANKS MUCH. KEVIN WEBB...NO LONGER AT ELLSWORTH AIR FORCE BASE, SOUTH DAKOTA...NOW IN SYLVANIA, OHIO Pilot Stories Wanted wrote: I am a private pilot looking to create a book that I wish I had prior to starting flight school. I am only in the very first stage of this drawn out process. I hope to receive complete stories of pilots of all skill levels telling about their endeavors in learning to fly, their lessons learned, what they would/would not do again, etc. I prefer not to have any anonymous entries in the final book. Once complete, which is not going to happen overnight, I will contact each and every donor and request final permission to print their entry in the book and, though not required, would like to put a first name and hometown as the submitting donor. If everything falls into place, I would hope to be able to provide each donor with a copy of the published book. All donors are requested to email their story and use an appropriate subject heading as found below. I do ask that no flight school names be used in the book. If you elect to use it, I will most likely need to get a notorized authorization from the president of the school prior to publishing. I will have to speak with an attorney on the legal ropes but am willing to accomodate any reasonable request. -PRIVATE PILOT -INSTRUMENT RATING -FLOAT PLANE RATING -MULTI-ENGINE RATING -COMMERCIAL PILOT -CFI -AIRLINE TRANSPORT PILOT -RECREATIONAL PILOT -SPORT PILOT -(ANYTHING I MAY HAVE MISSED, IE BALLOON, HELICOPTER, ETC.) -LESSONS LEARNED (MISHAPS WITH THEIR CAUSE,SOLUTION, FINAL OUTCOME) -MY FIRST CROSS COUNTRY THANK YOU IN ADVANCE FOR YOUR ASSISTANCE IN THIS TEAM EFFORT OF PROVIDING OTHERS WITH SOMETHING WE DID NOT HAVE |
#5
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Hello. I am a commercial-multi engine pilot. I understand your
looking for pilots to submit stories. In case your interested, I was up in the air on 9/11 receiving flight training. I am very well educated in this field as I attended one of the best aviation schools in the country. I am currently looking to get a job with the FAA. I have a business minor and am offering assistance in your book for a percentage of the revenues. If you accept, my wife can also edit your book free of charge. I can talk about anything you would like me too, however, I would like to focus on the face change the aviation industry has received through a students perspective. If your interested, please contact my e-mail address. |
#6
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Here's a pilot story you can use in your book. I do retain copyright
however. My first solo cross-country was also my second solo flight. It was a little more memorable than I planned. I had been taking flying lessons roughly weekly starting just before Christmas of 2002. After about 30 something hours of excellent dual instruction I finally soloed. It was both unremarkable and unforgettable at the same time. Every pilot knows what the first solo is like, right? I planned a long cross-country from Conway, SC down to Hilton Head, SC via the VORTAC at Charleston, SC. From Hilton Head I planned to fly to Florence, SC again via the Charleston VORTAC and then back direct to Conway. It was intended to satisfy the long solo cross-country requirement. The weather was fantastic. Visibility was pretty much unlimited, temps were in the mid 70s and winds were light. Since I was taking lessons on weekends and evenings I had more night time than most students. Even so, my instructor wisely insisted on some in-depth night training the night before my solo. That turned out to be a very wise decision. I started that morning nervous as a cat! It was a Saturday and the second round of The Masters golf tournament was underway. Everything went smoothly, though. Preflight was completely uneventful and takeoff and pattern exit were totally normal. I contacted the Myrtle Beach controller for flight following and headed down to Charleston while climbing to 8500. My navigation was spot on and I was right on time down to Charleston. Then things started to go less than perfect. As soon as I passed the CHS VORTAC I immediately dialed my nav receiver to the reciprocal of my intended course so that it would read correctly while indicating FROM. Some cumuli were building at my altitude so I notified Charleston Approach that I was descending to 6500. I must have gotten slightly off course during the descent over the VORTAC so I started chasing the nav receiver for a couple of miles before I heard the Charleston controller casually ask, "Skyhawk Niner-7-4-5-Niner did you say you were heading to Hilton Head?" "That's affirmative…4-5-Niner." I replied cheerily. "Suggest course 221 for Hilton Head." the controller said in a deadpan voice. I really looked at my compass for the first time in several minutes… 010! Oops! That's when I realized my mistake with the nav receiver. Doh! I felt like a real idiot! I must be the only pilot who ever made that mistake while a student! "Thanks for the heads up Charleston. I'm a student pilot on my first solo cross-country!" I broadcast somewhat sheepishly. "No ****!" I imagined the controller thinking sarcastically as he cleared traffic out of the way of the idiot student in the Skyhawk. Worse than that, with the beautiful weather there were 5 other student flights from Conway down to Hilton Head. Some of them had to be on the Charleston Approach frequency. I was going to catch it when I got back to the flight school. "Understood 4-5-Niner…" was the actual response. I hoped things didn't get any worse. I almost got luck there. I got handed off to Beaufort Approach and made an uneventful pattern entry and landing at Hilton Head. Unlike some smaller fields that I've since visited, every plane in the area was actually listening on the CTAF and making good position calls. If you've never visited Hilton Head, it's quite a nice airport in one of the nicest resort spots in the country. Highly recommended! I parked the Skyhawk on the ramp as directed by the line-boy, killed the avionics and pulled the mixture. It seems strange to refer to a 40-something, grizzled looking black man as a line-boy. I pulled off my David Clarke's, unbuckled and unlatched the door. I was dripping with sweat and shaking a little. I needed a Coca-Cola badly! Hank came over and asked if I needed fuel. I told him to fill it up and started to walk over to the FBO. I noticed then that I'd parked next to two other planes from my flight school and a couple of other students were standing nearby chewing the fat. I figured I'd better go take my ribbing while it was still fresh. Luckily Jen and Red were really nice about it. They were working on their instrument requirements and said that yes they'd heard me on the radio and no I hadn't sounded like a total fool. What really made me feel better was having both of them inform me that they too had once dialed the nav radio to the wrong course and ended up chasing a reverse sensing needle. Apparently I'm not the only one. I was more shook up than I thought I would be. I went into the FBO and drank a couple of cold Coke's and used the restroom. The flight planning room was jammed full. There were a bunch of people trying to file flight plans and make phone calls. I ended up forgetting to call my flight school and let them know I had made it safe and sound. Luckily another student with an instructor showed up soon and reminded me about that. I made the calls, closed my flight plan and filed another for the next leg. All in all I stayed in Hilton Head about two hours, much longer than I had planned. I headed back out to the Skyhawk for an abbreviated preflight. I confirmed that Hank had in fact filled the tanks with what looked and smelled like avgas, there were no contaminants and the control surfaces all looked and operated as designed. There were no obvious problems with the engine. The oil was at six and a half quarts, comfortably above the five quart minimum and only a smidge lower than when I had left Conway. Runup was normal and on this takeoff I really felt like I knew what I was doing. I called up flight service on an RCO to open my flight plan. I called twice and remembered to tell them what frequency on the second call up. I contacted Beaufort Approach and flew back uneventfully to the Charleston VORTAC at 5500. From Charleston to Florence, there's a railroad that runs straight as an arrow with a huge hydro-dam lake off to the left, so it's pretty hard to get lost even if you're not flying a VOR radial. I flew along in slightly worse conditions that my trip down. Cloud cover had dissipated, but the wind had increased somewhat. Would you believe that it waited until it was a headwind to increase? I knew you would! I encountered some weird turbulence at 5500 so I informed flight following that I was descending. I don't mind turbulence, just slow down and deal with it, but this was odd stuff for me at the time. Several minutes of smooth cruise would be followed by a couple of relatively severe jolts that instantly went back to smooth. I kept my indicated cruise down to around 90 knots and according to my E6B I was only making about 65 knots groundspeed at 2000 feet. Yuck! It was good practice with the E6B though. Charleston switched me off to Myrtle Beach again when I wasn't far south of Florence. We had no trouble communicating but the Myrtle Beach controller couldn't pick me up on radar. I suggested contacting Florence and the controller immediately agreed. Florence had me immediately and vectored me in for spacing behind a King Air that was going to overtake me. The King Air pilot asked for and received an update on The Master's tournament that they had left earlier that day. Pretty neat day so far! I landed in Florence, taxied to the FBO ramp behind the King Air and went inside to call the flight school and close my flight plan and file the last leg. I used the bathroom and went back to the Skyhawk for the last leg. Dusk had passed and night was approaching. I was very glad I'd had the extra night training the previous evening. Preflight and runup were normal except for one thing. The low voltage light stayed on for about 30 seconds before going off. I checked the ammeter and it showed nothing unusual. I wrote it off to 1984 electronics and taxied to the runway. Takeoff was smooth and soon I was headed home into the rapidly deepening darkness. Interestingly, it was lighter immediately as soon as I took off, but it was again rapidly growing dark even in the air. I asked for permission from the Florence controller to leave the frequency and open my flight plan with Flight Service. Everything was going smoothly and the late evening air was absolutely smooth. I love flying that time in the evening. About 10 minutes into the flight the low voltage light flickered back on! I immediately checked the ammeter… FULL DISCHARGE! I didn't panic, but I was nervous. I immediately turned off all the electrical equipment that I didn't deem necessary. Each switch caused the ammeter's discharge needle to move a little bit more back towards straight up and down, but it was still discharging. I contacted Florence, "Florence Departure, Skyhawk Niner-7-4-5-Niner has an apparently failed alternator. I'm going to try to trouble shoot it and may be off the air and without transponder for a few moments." "Roger Skyhawk 4-5-Niner. We have you on primary radar. Report back this frequency when able." "I should have plenty of battery, Florence, this just happened. I'll report back momentarily." I shut off all electronics and lights. I pulled the alternator breaker and reset it. Nothing happened. I cut the master switch off momentarily and the low voltage light still glared angrily at me. I cut my primary com back on and called up Florence, "Florence Departure, Skyhawk Niner-7-4-5-Niner is back. I'm going to turn around and come back to land. I've been unable to fix the alternator problem. I don't know what my battery life will be, over." "Skyhawk 4-5-Niner, no problem, son! We'll get you down!" I must have sounded a little panicky for him to talk that way to me, but I didn't think I had. "Florence, I'd like to keep my transponder and and lights off to conserve power" "That's fine 4-5-Niner. We have you on primary radar and there's only one other plane in the air." I didn't respond to conserve power. I considered cutting my radio off to make sure I had battery power for the landing lights, but I wasn't really worried. I'd spent the previous evening making lights-off landings for my night qualifications. All in all I was fairly calm. I knew I could have continued on to Conway, since I was almost halfway there, but I was much more secure with Florence since they had radar. It seemed like an hour but it was really only about 10 or 15 minutes before I was back on the ground at Florence safe and sound. I pulled out my cellphone and called my flight school and told them what happened. They told me that I had done the right thing. Then I called my wife to let her know what had happened and ask her to come pick me up. I still haven't heard the end of that, by the way! Next day I called the flight school to see what happened. They weren't able to find anything wrong with the plane! They ferried it back to Conway without any problems. I got some teasing for that. Eventually it happened to one of the instructors and they replaced something in the electrical. I never did find out what. That same day I called up Sporty's website and orded a hand-held nav/com radio and a Garmin 196. I haven't heard the end of that either. Robbie Walker, PP-ASEL, works for Atlantic Printing in Tabor City, NC. He has always wanted to learn to fly and finally at age 32 did his primary training at North American Institute of Aviation in Conway, SC (HYW). He passed his checkride in late June of 2003. |
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