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    Flight Training on Long Island

    I think that the idea of a flight instructor offering unlimited flight time should raise some red flags.
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    The Improbable Turn

    Interesting recent example of a Cessna Skyhawk crashing into someone’s front yard despite what appear to be alternate landing sites without a 180 degree return to the airport (no fatality, currently under investigation):
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    What's the $ burn rate while learning?

    Perhaps someone else has mentioned it, but if not I’d like to suggest that you think very carefully before agreeing to make an upfront payment to get a “discounted” hourly rate.
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    Airplane lands on California Freeway

    And here’s footage of a Cessna landing on Long Island’s Sunrise Highway last July, plus comments from the pilot:
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    Airplane lands on California Freeway

    Interview with the pilot:
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    Preflight & Misrigged Controls

    There’s a current thread on pre-flight checks in which a contributor mentions mixed-up controls. The NTSB/FAA Safety Team has made a great video on this about a real case. I’m creating this separate thread on the video because of how powerful it is, and because it has only 1500 views on...
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    Flight Reviews: What knowledge areas are pilots most weak?

    Yes. Given a choice between plain English and jargon, I will choose plain English every time unless there is a really good reason not to. Except for radar, which is at this point a well-understood word, I use the full form of all of those. There is some debate about what METAR stands for. I use...
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    Flight Reviews: What knowledge areas are pilots most weak?

    In ForeFlight, it’s possible both to create a checklist from scratch and to customize an existing checklist. One of the first things that I did in ForeFlight was dump I.M.S.A.F.E. and create a checklist, based on the underlying principles, that makes sense to me and my situation. I’m a lot...
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    Flight Reviews: What knowledge areas are pilots most weak?

    You aren’t alone. The acronyms and mnemonics are rampant. I concluded that they were getting in the way of my understanding, and made a conscious decision to ban both from my aviation vocabulary. Obviously not the right choice for everyone, but it works for me.
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    Flight Training on Long Island

    I agree. From Manhattan the New Jersey airports make more sense, and KISP is a bit of a haul even from Queens and Brooklyn. If you like the Hudson Valley, I also think that Orange County is worth considering. When you factor in traffic, it’s a viable alternative when it comes to travel time...
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    Compensating for Density Altitude

    Let me get this straight. When I calculate density altitude using the common private pilot formula, there's a significant discrepancy between the number I get and the number that ForeFlight gives, and that discrepancy proves not to be linear between airports, and asking about it here is in your...
  12. R

    Compensating for Density Altitude

    Then don't do more.
  13. R

    Compensating for Density Altitude

    Not only did I not say anything about safety, I said specifically in the very post you quoted that the method works on a practical level and that if the discrepancy isn't of interest, cool. Some people are interested in physics, and better understanding formula, and some aren't.
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    Compensating for Density Altitude

    If you are right, cool. Since you seem interested, perhaps do some density altitude calculations for a number of airports using the rough and ready pilot method, then do them from ForeFlight or NOAA and tell us what accounts for the discrepancies, especially the significant discrepancies...
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    Compensating for Density Altitude

    I'm not criticizing you or questioning whether your method works on a practical level. I raised a question about something that I observed with respect to negative density altitudes and that, when I investigated it further, showed a significant discrepancy between the results of the formula we...
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    Compensating for Density Altitude

    Sophisticated formulas do take humidity into account. There can be a significant discrepancy between the numbers that come from the NOAA calculator/ForeFlight and the rough and ready calculations that we are taught. Somebody asked what I mean by "rough and ready". Look at the Wikipedia article...
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    How often do I need to fly ?

    I have never in my life heard someone suggest that the cost of sailing is irrelevant. Sorry, but several of the posts in this thread are patently ridiculous, unless they are written by people with limitless disposable income.
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    Compensating for Density Altitude

    Density altitude is an objective number and has nothing to do with your airplane handbook. There are several formulas of varying accuracy. The formula used by NOAA, and probably by ForeFlight, is more complex than the “rough and ready” formulas. I suspect that the biggest difference has to do...
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    Compensating for Density Altitude

    Good question. What I’m finding is that the rough and ready calculation formulas for the New York area right now are way off compared to what I get from ForeFlight or the NOAA site. I guess my question is whether they are generally way off. When I use ForeFlight for airports across the US at...
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    How often do I need to fly ?

    There’s always the chance that I don’t care about brownie points ..... dude. I gather that I’m supposed to congratulate you on how you posted this message, so congratulations on your SM-G935V, whatever that is ..... dude.
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