This evening I did a quick proficiency flight to an airport ~33nm from my starting point. Coming back, it was after sunset, and according to ForeFlight, I could log 0.2 night hours, but no night landings. Either way, this is my third flight with my iPad, and only the second with it actually mounted. I scan the skies, and scan ForeFlight. On ForeFlight, I see an aircraft at about my 2 o'clock, a few hundred feet above, it's already yellow on FF, and I start looking for it visually and flicked my landing light on. I still don't see it visually, but I make a turn to the right (per the right of way rules) and about halfway through my "evasion" turn, there it is right in front of me, same altitude. Measuring on ADSB replay, we didn't get closer than 1.5nm, but that's plenty close enough for me. Looking at the ADSB replay some more at our altitudes, he must have just been a hair above my roof line. Also looking at ADSB, if I didn't turn, y'all would be having a more intense discussion in a different part of this forum. When I landed and was taxiing back, I also looked at the concrete and verified all my own lights were working. In many ways, this is a non-event, I saw traffic, I avoided traffic according to the right of way regulations, and no one said anything. But I'm still slightly concerned with just how much traffic can hide. I fly both C172s and a PA-28R and I've read up on how one of the most dangerous situations is a low wing descending into a high wing or vice versa. Today it was in front of me, maybe next time the traffic will be hiding behind a wing and won't pop out as quickly.
Something I've read and heard all along through my training (my instructors used their iPads a fair bit) is that ForeFlight is just another resource, it doesn't take the place of proper CRM such as visually scanning for traffic. Something that stuck out to me on my pre-solo check with another instructor was him grumbling that tower told another plane about traffic, and they said they had it on their iPad with no indication they visually had it. This is the first flight I've done solo in a busier corridor where traffic has actually been a concern. In addition to the above scenario, I used FF to help find other traffic. In fact on climbout, tower gave me an altitude restriction due to crossing traffic, then identified that traffic. Thanks to FF, I was able to spot it visually faster, report that to tower and that I'd pass behind them, and they promptly canceled my altitude restriction. I'm glad I had it today and I won't be fumbling with my iPad mount in the cockpit and be like "forget this" on future flights, it was too valuable. But, I do promise not to rely exclusively on it anymore than I rely exclusively on my attitude indicator, or altimeter, or vertical speed indicator, they all have their uses, so does ForeFlight. I think today was a good flight, I didn't necessarily learn anything that changes how I'll be flying, but did reinforce what I hope are some good habits I'm slowly developing. But I'm open to any feedback. For background, I'm a fairly low-time pilot, today's flight put me at 95TT, 26 PIC, 6 in this plane. I did my checkride in early October so I'm very green and still very much learning. Transitioning to learning on my own with my certificate has been a little scary, but loads of fun and I've got a long way to go.
Something I've read and heard all along through my training (my instructors used their iPads a fair bit) is that ForeFlight is just another resource, it doesn't take the place of proper CRM such as visually scanning for traffic. Something that stuck out to me on my pre-solo check with another instructor was him grumbling that tower told another plane about traffic, and they said they had it on their iPad with no indication they visually had it. This is the first flight I've done solo in a busier corridor where traffic has actually been a concern. In addition to the above scenario, I used FF to help find other traffic. In fact on climbout, tower gave me an altitude restriction due to crossing traffic, then identified that traffic. Thanks to FF, I was able to spot it visually faster, report that to tower and that I'd pass behind them, and they promptly canceled my altitude restriction. I'm glad I had it today and I won't be fumbling with my iPad mount in the cockpit and be like "forget this" on future flights, it was too valuable. But, I do promise not to rely exclusively on it anymore than I rely exclusively on my attitude indicator, or altimeter, or vertical speed indicator, they all have their uses, so does ForeFlight. I think today was a good flight, I didn't necessarily learn anything that changes how I'll be flying, but did reinforce what I hope are some good habits I'm slowly developing. But I'm open to any feedback. For background, I'm a fairly low-time pilot, today's flight put me at 95TT, 26 PIC, 6 in this plane. I did my checkride in early October so I'm very green and still very much learning. Transitioning to learning on my own with my certificate has been a little scary, but loads of fun and I've got a long way to go.