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Just got back from a good proficiency practice flight. This was the first
time I'd flown single pilot IFR at night with conditions that could potentially deteriorate to actual instrument. (cloudy, rain developing as the flight progressed, visibility dropping somewhat) The basic rundown... got the plane, preflighted in the dark, and realized that it was the first time I had actually done a full preflight at night. All the other night flights I did the preflight at dusk or earlier. Definitely took me a few extra minutes to get oriented to the darkness and using my flashlight. I got through that ok, ready to do, and poof! My flashlight _light_ (not the batteries) goes out! Just like the bright, microsend flash of illumination you see from a normal light bulb then total darkness. Crap! Fortunately, I had a spare light, smaller, but did the job. I was a bit disappointed in the bulb that burnt out though... it was a Maglight, and barely over a year old with hardly any use. I'm tempted to send it back to them for a replacement. Takeoff out of CDW was uneventful, although the controller was a bit pushy when I wanted to clarify the squawk before departing... she said "You need to get rolling" after confirming the code was correct... somebody on downwind was undoubtedly going to plow into me I guess if I didn't hurry along. Needless to say, I didn't hurry. (I was still holding short, so if need be could've just continued to hold short, but she (the controller) was obviously in need of some excitement on a dreary night with barely any traffic to manage). So up up and away we go, didn't even have time to make the initial turn to 180 before departure vectored me to SAX. Then enroute to SWF for a practice ILS. I noticed before departing that one of the two radio / nav units in the plane was not functioning... it's one of those that has a primary and secondary freq, but the display was completely dead, so I decided to just leave it off. So even before starting the flight, I knew I had only one working com and one working nav / vor unit operational. No problem, if things got too heavy, I could just cancel IFR and continue VFR... clouds were definitely high enough on the way up (around 6000 OVC). As I got closer to SWF, I tried tuning in the NDB so I could identify an intersection along the LOC. No dice. I didn't hear the magic morse in the background, and the needle spun and spun til I got dizzy. Strike two on operational components in the plane! Still, I managed to get to SWF safely, and taxied off to the side to get myself setup for the trip back to CDW. Departure out of SWF was a bit more interesting, as I had to read the SWF.4 departure procedure. Easy to do, and so off I went. Unfortunately, the routing back home wasn't optimal... was supposed to go out to HUG then turn south to head to CDW, so I asked for a shortcut to SAX instead. After getting handed off to NY Approach on 127.6, I had a helluva time hearing a transmission from the controller. I asked to hear it again, and again, even with the volume all the way up, it was barely audible. I got the instruction ok tho... left turn to 170. And fortunately the gremlin in the radio cleared itself up on the next transmission. But this turns out to have been strike 3 for equipment in the plane... I encountered this problem a couple other times, fortunately when other pilots were transmitting, and not ATC. Getting back in to CDW was a bit dicey, as the rain had started to come down, and the mist was making it difficult to pick out CDW (which is difficult enough these days anyway with 4/22 being closed for repairs). I told the controller at one point that I had the beacon in sight, but that wasn't good enough for him. 2 miles later, I could make out 9/27, so I was handed off for a visual approach, which wasn't my best approach, but was a squeaker of a landing. So to sum up: I had 1 VOR, 1 COM, and no backups in the plane for this trip. And the COM was flaky toward the end. Methinks this plane is about to be decommissioned from the flight line, because the owner refuses to put any more money into it. It also just came out of 100 hour, so should (in theory) be at its best operating capacity. I know I won't be trying any more trips at night or IFR in it anytime soon, but I'm glad I had the chance to push the boundaries a bit with the bare minimums for night IFR flight. -- Guy Elden Jr. |
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