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Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from
Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums |
#2
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In article , Greg Farris
wrote: Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night no. 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance depends on the reason for the MEA. 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. no 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is no 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums depends I guess I have a different definition of safe. -- Bob Noel no one likes an educated mule |
#3
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![]() "Greg Farris" wrote in message ... Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : I assume IFR means flying in IMC, so... 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night I agree. I'd also add no IFR over the Rockies, since I live here. 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance Not twin rated, but this seems reasonable. 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. I have a standby vacuum system, but the bigger issue is recognizing the failure and using the backup. It is not automatic. Redundant electrical would be great, I don't have it, and I fly a lot of SE, SP IFR. Something to consider... 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is Usually, but not a trip canceler. 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums Absolutely. In fact, if it is near minimums I will usually go out of my way to find an ILS. Michael |
#4
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"Greg Farris" wrote in message
... Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night I have yet to do that (in my 18 hours of IMC so far), but I'd be willing to if my destination airport (and plenty of potential alternates along the way) has a precision approach and the visibility below the ceiling is good. 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance No ME for me. 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. The planes I fly in IMC usually have standby vacuum (but just one alternator). I practice no-gyro approaches on my PC sim to stay proficient. 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is Usually, but not always (I'm ok with widespread, calm, not-too-low IMC and my handheld VOR/LOC for backup). 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums Absolutely, at least at my present level of experience. --Gary |
#5
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![]() "Bob Noel" wrote in message ... In article , Greg Farris wrote: Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night no. 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance depends on the reason for the MEA. 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. no 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is no 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums depends I guess I have a different definition of safe. Your's is more like AOPA Safety Foundation's. http://www.aopa.org/asf/publications/sa05.pdf (Single Pilot IFR) |
#6
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How many agree with these : (snipped)
Yes, I agree, the remaining IFR flights are likely to be safer. But you are trading safety for utility when you fly IMC in the first place. Jose -- You may not get what you pay for, but you sure as hell pay for what you get. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#7
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Greg Farris wrote in
: Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night I'm not sure I understand this. Assuming you have a decent portable light system in your flightbag - I carry a ring of red and green LED lights in my bag, along with a larger green flashlight, a white flashlight, and several green glow sticks, and keep at least one either roped around my neck or my wrist when flying at night - IMC or not. Enroute IFR/IMC at night seems fine. S-P approach to minimums at night is a different story... But I don't even think there's all that much difference between flying through soup at 3000' when the top of the white stuff outside your window is light by the sun or the moon. Either way, most of it will be lit by your strobes and landing light... ![]() 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance Makes sense, but no ME. 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. Agreed. 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is Kinda agreed. Always know your out. Not sure "real" VFR is necessary though. An airport with 800-1000' ceilings and 5+ mi visibility is probably enough for us guys in the flat NorthEast. Even if it means flying an extra hour or more out of the way (assuming you will have the fuel for it). Of course, I also carry a handheld radio with CDI and spare batteries, so if I have some sort of catastrophic electronics failure, I can still navigate IFR to find my way... 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums I don't really get the risk here. If you break out on a non-precision approach and can circle to land, you are probably within 200' of VFR pattern altitude anyway, and it's just doesn't seem like that big of a risk. Actually, a precision Circle to land, which I think will create more like a 500' - 600' pattern, seems more risky. But at 800', if you lose sight of the runway while circling, even if you dip a bit on your way up on the missed, you've got a lot of room to dip before hitting the ground... Admittedly, I also fly planes that have excellent avionics - IFR approved moving map GPSes and autopilots, so perhaps I am slightly more aggressive because of that. Admittedly, without the excellent avionics and autopilot, I might be much more conservative about flying S-P IFR. |
#8
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Greg Farris wrote:
Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night I agree that single-pilot IFR is hard, and doing it at night is harder, but I don't see the single-engine connection. If the fear is not being able to find an emergency landing spot, then the rule should be "No single-engine at night". If the fear is pilot task overload, then the rule should be "no single-pilot IMC at night". 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance Again, I don't see the connection here. Presumably this means it's OK to fly single-pilot, single-engine IFR at those same altitudes? 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. This is a good rule. I'll admit I break it. 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is. An excellent rule. 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums No argument there. |
#9
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Judah wrote:
But I don't even think there's all that much difference between flying through soup at 3000' when the top of the white stuff outside your window is light by the sun or the moon. The difference (in my mind, and with my 40-something eyes) is that it's harder to see stuff in the cockpit at night. Every task from instrument scan, to reading a chart, to tuning a radio, to copying an in-flight reroute becomes more difficult. Task overload is insidious. It's taking you a little longer than usual to find the right approach plate and get the radios set up, but you're still keeping up so it's not a big deal. Then the controller tells you they just switched runways, fly direct to some waypoint you've never heard of, expect some different approach, contact the next controller on 123.45, etc, etc, and suddenly you realize you're way behind. Maybe during the day you would have been able to keep up, but at night the added workload of having to do everything by flashlight sent you down the tubes. There's also a lot more in the way of visual illusions at night. I've broken out plenty of times and spotted what I thought was the approach lights, only to realize it was a nearby highway. |
#10
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Greg,
if you are just starting flying I agree. If you have experience I would consider and have done most of these. I have yet to fly a Multi-engine aircraft over terrain that is higher that the SE service ceiling. Although I do fly single pilot ME at night in IMC. Experience is the key to succeeding at all of these. Michelle ATP SE, COM ME. Greg Farris wrote: Here are some "general" tips for safe, single-pilot IFR, gleaned from Larry Bartlett's refresher course. These tips do not represent the "meat and potatoes" of the video course, but are thrown in at a couple of points as generalities. How many agree with these : 1) No Single-Pilot, single engine IFR in IMC at night 2) No S-P Multi-engine IFR with MEA's higher than the aircraft's SE performance 3) No S-P IFR in IMC without dual vacuum sources, and strong preference for dual alrternators. 4) Keep VFR weather within range of the aircraft at all times, and know where it is 5) Avoid S-P circling approaches in IMC, and definitely not at night or close to minimums |
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