drgwentzel
Pre-takeoff checklist
Flyers,
I thought I would confess a situation that happened to me recently and maybe some of you can learn from it.
Bless me J. Randolph Babbitt for I have sinned; it has been 6 ILS's and 2 NASA reports since my last confession.
I was receiving flight instruction for my CFII rating. I was the pilot flying from the right seat and I was under the hood.
My instructor and I departed our home airport to practice a non-precision approach. I was receiving vectors from my instructor as he was guiding me Northwest to the VOR. He then noticed possible bad weather North of the fix and decided to vector me onto the approach course early. When he “cleared” me for the approach I intercepted the final approach course and he instructed me to fly the published approach to minimums from that position which I dutifully did.
When we landed and were debriefing an airport employee advised me that a supervisor from a local tower called the FBO and asked if the pilot flying the VOR-A approach could call them. I denied at first that we violated any airspace and felt so since I was flying with a highly experienced instructor (35,000 hours, a commercial heavy iron pilot and a retired FAA examiner) and even more so because I had a GPS on the yoke.
I began to have doubts of my innocence when I discerned the sheepish look on my instructor's face . After we concluded our lesson I reviewed my GPS track and indeed we clipped the outside of the near-by class D airspace.
With my tail between my legs , I immediately called the provided number, but a shift change gave me a supervisor who had no idea what I was talking about. He assured me I was "not in trouble” and to be more careful in the future.
Lessons learned are not to depend on an instructor, regardless of experience, to keep you out of controlled airspace in which you are not permitted to be operating. That goes for a lot of things, like looking for traffic and the like. Further, I had a portable GPS in front of me and felt invincible to such blunders. But I soon realized that it was set to an IFR map mode which does not depict Class B, C or D airspace. The lesson learned here is, if you’re VFR keep on a VFR map. Lastly, I found myself intimidated by my instructor’s experience and although I thought to call approach, I held my tongue in what I thought was respect for his seniority and superiority.
As we discuss this more in this thread I will expand on this last statement more. At the moment it’s time for bed. :wink2:
Gene
I thought I would confess a situation that happened to me recently and maybe some of you can learn from it.
Bless me J. Randolph Babbitt for I have sinned; it has been 6 ILS's and 2 NASA reports since my last confession.
I was receiving flight instruction for my CFII rating. I was the pilot flying from the right seat and I was under the hood.
My instructor and I departed our home airport to practice a non-precision approach. I was receiving vectors from my instructor as he was guiding me Northwest to the VOR. He then noticed possible bad weather North of the fix and decided to vector me onto the approach course early. When he “cleared” me for the approach I intercepted the final approach course and he instructed me to fly the published approach to minimums from that position which I dutifully did.
When we landed and were debriefing an airport employee advised me that a supervisor from a local tower called the FBO and asked if the pilot flying the VOR-A approach could call them. I denied at first that we violated any airspace and felt so since I was flying with a highly experienced instructor (35,000 hours, a commercial heavy iron pilot and a retired FAA examiner) and even more so because I had a GPS on the yoke.
I began to have doubts of my innocence when I discerned the sheepish look on my instructor's face . After we concluded our lesson I reviewed my GPS track and indeed we clipped the outside of the near-by class D airspace.
With my tail between my legs , I immediately called the provided number, but a shift change gave me a supervisor who had no idea what I was talking about. He assured me I was "not in trouble” and to be more careful in the future.
Lessons learned are not to depend on an instructor, regardless of experience, to keep you out of controlled airspace in which you are not permitted to be operating. That goes for a lot of things, like looking for traffic and the like. Further, I had a portable GPS in front of me and felt invincible to such blunders. But I soon realized that it was set to an IFR map mode which does not depict Class B, C or D airspace. The lesson learned here is, if you’re VFR keep on a VFR map. Lastly, I found myself intimidated by my instructor’s experience and although I thought to call approach, I held my tongue in what I thought was respect for his seniority and superiority.
As we discuss this more in this thread I will expand on this last statement more. At the moment it’s time for bed. :wink2:
Gene