Ken Ibold
Final Approach
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2005
- Messages
- 5,889
- Location
- Jacksonville, Florida
- Display Name
Display name:
Ken Ibold
File this one under never again. No, I was not the pilot involved, although I heard the story from him first hand. I have altered a few of the details but not the substantive ones.
An instrument pilot, minted about 8 months ago and with a couple hundred hours total time, was flying a glass-cockpit turbo 182 into a Class C airport. His current personal minimums in that airplane include 400 feet on an ILS. The weather was forecast to be 1000 feet, and his departure airport was about 1.5 hours away. Departure was good VFR. He was flying with his wife and <2-year-old son.
As they approached the airport he found the weather was much worse than forecast, and ATIS was reporting a 500 foot ceiling. I don't recall the reported visibility. He flew the ILS, but did not have the field at 400 feet, and so he went missed. For whatever reason, his son started screaming at that point, either because the go-around attitude scared him or he wanted to land, or he could detect the pilot's anxiety. Dunno. The pilot asked for vectors for another try, and this time broke out at about 600 feet and proceeded to land. Problem was, he mistook a newly paved taxiway that ran parallel to the runway for the runway itself, and landed on the taxiway. Fortunately there were no airplanes in the way, although there was an airliner holding short that was on the perpendicular connector and was not in danger.
He blames the distraction caused by his son's angst as a primary cause, along with the fresh pavement that made the taxiway prominent in his vision.
Just a word of warning. Manage distractions. Identify AND verify before you take action. This could have been very, very bad.
An instrument pilot, minted about 8 months ago and with a couple hundred hours total time, was flying a glass-cockpit turbo 182 into a Class C airport. His current personal minimums in that airplane include 400 feet on an ILS. The weather was forecast to be 1000 feet, and his departure airport was about 1.5 hours away. Departure was good VFR. He was flying with his wife and <2-year-old son.
As they approached the airport he found the weather was much worse than forecast, and ATIS was reporting a 500 foot ceiling. I don't recall the reported visibility. He flew the ILS, but did not have the field at 400 feet, and so he went missed. For whatever reason, his son started screaming at that point, either because the go-around attitude scared him or he wanted to land, or he could detect the pilot's anxiety. Dunno. The pilot asked for vectors for another try, and this time broke out at about 600 feet and proceeded to land. Problem was, he mistook a newly paved taxiway that ran parallel to the runway for the runway itself, and landed on the taxiway. Fortunately there were no airplanes in the way, although there was an airliner holding short that was on the perpendicular connector and was not in danger.
He blames the distraction caused by his son's angst as a primary cause, along with the fresh pavement that made the taxiway prominent in his vision.
Just a word of warning. Manage distractions. Identify AND verify before you take action. This could have been very, very bad.