Welcome to POA! Where every pilot is a super pilot.With all due respect, my CFI has nothing to do with this. I was the one who was confused about the requirements. My CFII is extremely knowledgeable and has been teaching for decades.
Welcome to POA! Where every pilot is a super pilot.With all due respect, my CFI has nothing to do with this. I was the one who was confused about the requirements. My CFII is extremely knowledgeable and has been teaching for decades.
With all due respect, my CFI has nothing to do with this. I was the one who was confused about the requirements. My CFII is extremely knowledgeable and has been teaching for decades.
Welcome to POA! Lol
I went through the same thing when I joined here and was very defensive of my CFI. That's good, it means you have one you like! Just remember they are human too and doesn't matter how long they've been teaching, they aren't always right.
Good luck on your xc!
Hmm, I never knew that about MOD. I do enough practice approaches there (and at SCK) that one of these times, I'll have to stop and check it out. Too bad it's hotter than the 9th circle of Hell. But August will end eventually.Definitely. Expanding the block this time isn't possible because 3 people are behind me. But I have many other stops for the rest of the XC hours required at very interesting airports. (But I am stopping at Modesto this trip, there are apparently a TON of super nice aero clubs at the west part of the apron.)
Hmm, I never knew that about MOD. I do enough practice approaches there (and at SCK) that one of these times, I'll have to stop and check it out. Too bad it's hotter than the 9th circle of Hell. But August will end eventually.
To be honest, I've only run into one unpleasant controller, and it was a NorCal controller in the Livermore sector. He got ticked at me for crossing the LVK extended centerline while VFR, apparently with inbound IFR traffic for the ILS I somehow should have guessed. Frankly, "Turn left heading 360 for traffic" is far better than "Do you know where you are?"That's what the word is at least. Many of the guys from my flight school say the controllers are super cool and love it (probably because they're non contract).
Are you kidding? I hated my CFI. Still do. Enough to text him back and forth at least 4 times a week. Stupid Matt. 0/10. Would not recommend.
but looking it up doesn't generate as much comedy/drama/etc. discussion and perspectives are why people come here right?That seems to happen quite a bit on here. People taking more time to ask us on POA for an answer when it is quite often quicker to just look it up. Looking it up is also very educational and helps to develop one's research skill set.
Strict? There is no rule about having to stay out of the way of distant traffic you don't know about in Class E. And every other NorCal controller seems to have it together.NorCal app have always been a bit more strict. Can't get too mad because they got SJC/OAK/SFO super close together. I head that OAK tower was the worst.
I give my students the option. The long one is pretty exhausting so it wouldn't hurt for them to get out, stretch their legs, and regroup.I'm sending my first student off for solo cross-countries soon.
I feel like I'd rather he not get out and hang out at an airport, but rather, stay in go-mode. If he needs a breather, fine. But I feel like it helps to limit the other stuff going on. Any thoughts either way?
@Cajun_Flyer, your long XC was epic, maybe it should be the model instead?
I have the plane for a small block and need to get it home for the next person who booked it. I will definitely do full stop taxi backs during the other solo XC trips.
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I'd suggest leaving it up to him. Maybe a reminder that weather tends to worsen in the afternoon might push the decision in the direction you want...I'm sending my first student off for solo cross-countries soon.
I feel like I'd rather he not get out and hang out at an airport, but rather, stay in go-mode. If he needs a breather, fine. But I feel like it helps to limit the other stuff going on. Any thoughts either way?
@Cajun_Flyer, your long XC was epic, maybe it should be the model instead?
I've never had a problem with OAK Tower, but I haven't been in their airspace much lately, so maybe things have changed there.NorCal app have always been a bit more strict. Can't get too mad because they got SJC/OAK/SFO super close together. I head that OAK tower was the worst.
With all due respect, my CFI has nothing to do with this. I was the one who was confused about the requirements. My CFII is extremely knowledgeable and has been teaching for decades.
My ground school instructor told me a story about when he was doing a bay tour and OAK tower told him "turn to the 30's"... he didnt know what that meant and asked, but was promptly told to change freqs. On the other freq. he asked again and the controller apparently sighed and gave him a heading reluctantly then explained "turn to the 30's" meant turn towards the 30 end of the runway.I've never had a problem with OAK Tower, but I haven't been in their airspace much lately, so maybe things have changed there.
I've heard "30 numbers" many times when transiting the South Field (including cross-bay departures or arrivals on 28R), but never "30's." The worst I've heard from OAK controllers is a weird taxi clearance from the CAP hangar to the "old T's." No big deal; something must have been afoot near the 15 threshold.My ground school instructor told me a story about when he was doing a bay tour and OAK tower told him "turn to the 30's"... he didnt know what that meant and asked, but was promptly told to change freqs. On the other freq. he asked again and the controller apparently sighed and gave him a heading reluctantly then explained "turn to the 30's" meant turn towards the 30 end of the runway.
I've heard "30 numbers" many times when transiting the South Field (including cross-bay departures or arrivals on 28R), but never "30's." The worst I've heard from OAK controllers is a weird taxi clearance from the CAP hangar to the "old T's." No big deal; something must have been afoot near the 15 threshold.
Frequency changes are de reguir at OAK. I suspect coincidence. Until recently, they had two towers and a transition usually meant talking to both. It's still two frequencies, though both positions are in the new tower. That means four frequencies to get across the Class C.
With all due respect, my CFI has nothing to do with this. I was the one who was confused about the requirements. My CFII is extremely knowledgeable and has been teaching for decades.
Do NOT let yourself get pressured to hurry because of this. A whole bunch of things can happen to slow you down, including wind or weather, mechanical issues, burning more fuel than planned, etc. The people waiting for you to return the plane would much rather have you be a little late than break the airplane and hurt yourself.
My thoughts exactly.
I'd shoot for a day when you can have the plane the entire day.
"This isn't Russia...is this Russia?"
That's one where it helps to have the terminal area chart (TAC), since it depicts the location and the sectional doesn't.
- Know where the Oakland Colosseum is and be able to identify it from the air.
Another one where the TAC is helpful, since it shows the GPS waypoint VPMID.
- Know where the midspan of the San Mateo bridge really is (you're probably flying too far east).
(removed this part to keep it calm in here) I have the plane for a small block and need to get it home for the next person who booked it. I will definitely do full stop taxi backs during the other solo XC trips.
Edit: THe second stop during this flight is KMOD, a proclaimed super nice airport for new people so my CFI recommended I stop and say hi to all the clubs.
I blocked my rental slot out for two hours longer than what I thought I'd need. Took a lot of pressure off. Good thing I did that, as I had some unpredictable things happen and actually ended up using most of the extended time slot.
One thing that I did for the purpose of just getting more practice was I had an additional landing planned for my long x/c. It really paid off because the weather was great and forecasted to be great when I departed my home field. You know where this is going. Well, one of the airports I intended to visit had 20 knot almost direct crosswinds when I got to it. As a student, no thanks (actually, no thanks with me PPL). So, no harm as I still got my required landings and counted as long X/C. Also, don't forget the hours requirement for solo x/c's in your planning, there is still an hour requirement?
Not sure how they do it now but back when I did my cross countries I stopped and had someone sign my log book. Arrived so and so airport, Billjoe JimBob.
ETA: Maybe my instructor didn't trust me.
That's one where it helps to have the terminal area chart (TAC), since it depicts the location and the sectional doesn't.
Another one where the TAC is helpful, since it shows the GPS waypoint VPMID.
If you are on any sort of schedule, DO NOT start a conversation with any other pilots.