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#1
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Hi,
I'm planning to make a trip from RHV to MYF in a C182 this weekend and back. I could do some really mild IFR, but I'd really rather be VFR. Although I got my IR last year, I don't have a lot of hours (250 total and only 15hrs in the previous year) and feel nervous when I have to travel through different WX system. What I'm facing? Will I be making any mistake by choosing the inland route vs the coast one (or vise versa)? I'd imaging coastal flight would be pretty. In the SF Bay Area you could almost get away with VFR locally even there is a winter storm nearby. What about the SCal? Thanks a lot for any tips and help, Jizhong |
#3
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Yes, I'm a little worried about the wx on this weekend. Looks like
SoCal is going to be sunny, but the bay area will be wet. Thanks for the information. Jizhong On 13 Nov 2003 07:38:18 -0800, (lance smith) wrote: Hi Jizhong, Inland socal has a higher probability of clear weather than the coast- we often get clouds within 5-10 miles of the coast. We just had a storm come through and another one is due next week, not sure of the effect of them on the weather this weekend. The coastal run is nice, but you can always decide a few hours before wheels up. -lance smith wrote in message . .. Hi, I'm planning to make a trip from RHV to MYF in a C182 this weekend and back. I could do some really mild IFR, but I'd really rather be VFR. Although I got my IR last year, I don't have a lot of hours (250 total and only 15hrs in the previous year) and feel nervous when I have to travel through different WX system. What I'm facing? Will I be making any mistake by choosing the inland route vs the coast one (or vise versa)? I'd imaging coastal flight would be pretty. In the SF Bay Area you could almost get away with VFR locally even there is a winter storm nearby. What about the SCal? Thanks a lot for any tips and help, Jizhong |
#4
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So, I did not go last weekend because of the marginal weather. I'm
going to try again this weekend. It looks like the weather is going to be clear Friday night. I'm thinking of a night flight. Will this be a foolish choice to cross the Gorman pass in the dark? Jizhong |
#5
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You should be fine. Just get some altitude, it can get windy in those
mountains. Weather looks good for this weekend too. -lance smith wrote in message . .. So, I did not go last weekend because of the marginal weather. I'm going to try again this weekend. It looks like the weather is going to be clear Friday night. I'm thinking of a night flight. Will this be a foolish choice to cross the Gorman pass in the dark? Jizhong |
#6
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I've been doing a LVK or OAk to RAL flight on occasion lately and I've
been flying more easterly than directly over Gorman. It keeps me closer to flat lands of the high desert in case the big wheel out front has a problem. Although at night there's not much out that way to allow for a differential between flat and rocky. I'm not sure I would do the flight at night single engine, depends on how much I trust the plane. Other than that I would do the usual things, flight following if not IFR and stay as high as possible. I have some new business in SD so I'll be making a similar trek back and forth to SDM starting the first of the year, enjoy the flight. |
#7
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Strange question to ask. You ought to know your capabilities and that of the
aircraft best. wrote in message ... So, I did not go last weekend because of the marginal weather. I'm going to try again this weekend. It looks like the weather is going to be clear Friday night. I'm thinking of a night flight. Will this be a foolish choice to cross the Gorman pass in the dark? Jizhong |
#8
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Single Engine
Night Mountains Pick any two. Jim (CFI from the mountains) shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: I'm thinking of a night flight. Will this be a -foolish choice to cross the Gorman pass in the dark? - -Jizhong Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
#9
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Obviously you've never been over the Grapevine before.
Jim shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: Now, by the way, my proposed route is only a 10min flight -over a pass. Flat land both sides. Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
#10
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Jim, I've been over the Grapevine at night multiple times. In VMC, the area
is such that it is rare to not be within gliding distance of some lit chunk of pavement that is more hospitable than the usual invisible night granite. It is certainly more than a 10 minute passage, though; I'm not sure where he got that number. Many twins have such poor single engine performance that the extra engine does little besides give a false sense of security; it will indeed allow you to fly to the accident site. Having a well maintained single with a low Vs and better glide ratio can be as safe. Safe is a very relative term here. The "pick any two" from "Single Engine, Night, Mountains" guide is a good starting point to evaluate a plan and to give folks pause, but as a real go/nogo rule I think it is too simplistic. To the unitiated, Tejon Pass (also known as Gorman or the Grapevine) is between the California Central valley and the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles. There is an 8040' peak just 8 miles to the west of the airway and a few others that are nearly as tall; to the east, the hills are nearly to 6000'. And a four lane (each way) freeway known as Interstate 5 cuts through it, the main artery between northern and southern California. The actual pass is marked as being at 4239'. The MEA on the V 23 airway is 9500', a good bet for a night VMC flight and it has radar coverage by Bakersfield Approach and LA Center. In my Cherokee, at night in VMC, IFR or VFR Flight Following, I'd not hesitate to fly the Grapevine (and *some* other mountainous routes) with a flight plan filed and both eyes open. *Might* be doing it again on Wednesday eve, although I-5 will be bumper to bumper and not a good emergency landing choice (it really never is, anyway). If VFR I make the occasional call to FSS (if a long flight) to update position just like my primary instructor had me do in 1974 when flying the Grapevine on my long solo XC on my way to Bakersfield, Santa Barbara and back to Brackett/Pomona. -Greg "Jim Weir" wrote in message ... Obviously you've never been over the Grapevine before. Jim shared these priceless pearls of wisdom: Now, by the way, my proposed route is only a 10min flight -over a pass. Flat land both sides. Jim Weir (A&P/IA, CFI, & other good alphabet soup) VP Eng RST Pres. Cyberchapter EAA Tech. Counselor http://www.rst-engr.com |
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