red4golf
Line Up and Wait
Ok, I'm looking for some sort of evaluation....
I have 270+ hours and was comm check ride ready before the plane broke and life happened. Fast forward 5 years and I'm back in the air as of April. Since then I've had a flight review (WA), a checkout in a different state (FL), flew my family around Florida for a couple of hours before returning to WA to finish my CPL. Found a great group and have flown a dozen or so hours with them for fun and training. My CFI says I simply need to improve my power off 180 landing and continue to add polish to the other maneuvers. He wants me to be finished in the next 30 days or so.
I flew my long cross almost 6 years ago and only recently realized that it won't count. I understand why but I don't like it even if it was a new rule at the time and legal opinions have clarified the situation.. enough of that for now.
Today I was out with the goal of completing that x-country requirement so I can finally complete this milestone. My intent was to fly from S50 (Auburn, WA) to RBG (Roseburg, OR) and then stop at SLE (Salem, OR) for lunch with one of my employees. I planned to leave between 0800 and 0830 with an arrival at RBG 2.5 hours later, take on fuel and a little over an hour later I'd be landing in Salem for lunch. I updated my briefing when I woke up at 0600 and decided to delay my departure until between 0930 and 1000 because things weren't burning off as fast as forecast.
Prior to departure I received an update and decided to stop at Salem first, eat lunch and then go on to Roseburg before returning home. Even though I was starting late there was no time crunch because I didn't want any pressure.
I had factored in time for a diversion and identified 3 airports along the coast that were supposed to be VFR during the entire period of my flight. I have landed at 2 of these 3 before and had no issues with setting down, doing some work, and waiting. When I departed, the middle one had gone IFR. I didn't notice this until I was airborne and only knew because I was hooked up to a stratux that had been left in the plane. Now that I have flown with traffic and weather, I don't think I can ever go back!!!
I knew that I would need to use the edges of the Bravo to climb before I hit the cloud layer and that went almost exactly as planned. Instead of turning south, I angled southeast and made a nearly continuous climb before turning back to the south west. The second turn put me over the clouds but under the Bravo.
I continued the climb as the Bravo went higher until I was at 6,500 and happy as a clam.
Turning south is when things started feeling uncomfortable. The little puffy clouds that allowed for a glimpse of the ground and an escape route started closing in on each other. It wasn't long before my ability to see the ground and identify my landmarks turned into a blanket of white. Looking at the ADSB weather I saw that my destination hadn't improved, and I wasn't able to land short for lunch anymore. Things that were supposed to improve hadn't and things that had, got worse again. I turned to the coast for a diversion to Astoria. It was now IFR and so was Tillamook. Newport was still VFR but that was a long way away.
It was day VFR and the weather on top was beautiful. If I had continued, Tillamook improved by the time I would have landed but my ultimate destination didn't until roughly 5 hours after my original departure time and 3 after my actual time.
Once I saw my options fade away, I turned around. I didn't want to push my luck but I did look back later and thought maybe I could have done something different. After I made my decision to turn back I stopped worrying about my original plan and focused only on practicing maneuvers or simply getting home. There was no option to try again.
I guess what I'm beating myself up about is that I'm an Army dude that is used to completing missions regardless. I have always been a combat guy and was taught to kill 10 Russian tanks or live 2 weeks and I would be a success. Later years saw me escorting VIPs of all sorts in combat zones and their survival and mission success was vital. Looking at a day like today I can see multiple answers and I'm not sure what is the correct line of thinking.
Option 1 - do as I did and turn back because simply checking a block isn't important enough to risk being stuck or worse.
Option 2 - should have continued to expand your envelope and comfort level. (yes, not as comfortable as when I was flying regularly)
Option 3 - should have figured out how to make it work even if that meant holding or diverting and waiting. You are working on being a commercial pilot after all.
What say you?
I have 270+ hours and was comm check ride ready before the plane broke and life happened. Fast forward 5 years and I'm back in the air as of April. Since then I've had a flight review (WA), a checkout in a different state (FL), flew my family around Florida for a couple of hours before returning to WA to finish my CPL. Found a great group and have flown a dozen or so hours with them for fun and training. My CFI says I simply need to improve my power off 180 landing and continue to add polish to the other maneuvers. He wants me to be finished in the next 30 days or so.
I flew my long cross almost 6 years ago and only recently realized that it won't count. I understand why but I don't like it even if it was a new rule at the time and legal opinions have clarified the situation.. enough of that for now.
Today I was out with the goal of completing that x-country requirement so I can finally complete this milestone. My intent was to fly from S50 (Auburn, WA) to RBG (Roseburg, OR) and then stop at SLE (Salem, OR) for lunch with one of my employees. I planned to leave between 0800 and 0830 with an arrival at RBG 2.5 hours later, take on fuel and a little over an hour later I'd be landing in Salem for lunch. I updated my briefing when I woke up at 0600 and decided to delay my departure until between 0930 and 1000 because things weren't burning off as fast as forecast.
Prior to departure I received an update and decided to stop at Salem first, eat lunch and then go on to Roseburg before returning home. Even though I was starting late there was no time crunch because I didn't want any pressure.
I had factored in time for a diversion and identified 3 airports along the coast that were supposed to be VFR during the entire period of my flight. I have landed at 2 of these 3 before and had no issues with setting down, doing some work, and waiting. When I departed, the middle one had gone IFR. I didn't notice this until I was airborne and only knew because I was hooked up to a stratux that had been left in the plane. Now that I have flown with traffic and weather, I don't think I can ever go back!!!
I knew that I would need to use the edges of the Bravo to climb before I hit the cloud layer and that went almost exactly as planned. Instead of turning south, I angled southeast and made a nearly continuous climb before turning back to the south west. The second turn put me over the clouds but under the Bravo.
I continued the climb as the Bravo went higher until I was at 6,500 and happy as a clam.
Turning south is when things started feeling uncomfortable. The little puffy clouds that allowed for a glimpse of the ground and an escape route started closing in on each other. It wasn't long before my ability to see the ground and identify my landmarks turned into a blanket of white. Looking at the ADSB weather I saw that my destination hadn't improved, and I wasn't able to land short for lunch anymore. Things that were supposed to improve hadn't and things that had, got worse again. I turned to the coast for a diversion to Astoria. It was now IFR and so was Tillamook. Newport was still VFR but that was a long way away.
It was day VFR and the weather on top was beautiful. If I had continued, Tillamook improved by the time I would have landed but my ultimate destination didn't until roughly 5 hours after my original departure time and 3 after my actual time.
Once I saw my options fade away, I turned around. I didn't want to push my luck but I did look back later and thought maybe I could have done something different. After I made my decision to turn back I stopped worrying about my original plan and focused only on practicing maneuvers or simply getting home. There was no option to try again.
I guess what I'm beating myself up about is that I'm an Army dude that is used to completing missions regardless. I have always been a combat guy and was taught to kill 10 Russian tanks or live 2 weeks and I would be a success. Later years saw me escorting VIPs of all sorts in combat zones and their survival and mission success was vital. Looking at a day like today I can see multiple answers and I'm not sure what is the correct line of thinking.
Option 1 - do as I did and turn back because simply checking a block isn't important enough to risk being stuck or worse.
Option 2 - should have continued to expand your envelope and comfort level. (yes, not as comfortable as when I was flying regularly)
Option 3 - should have figured out how to make it work even if that meant holding or diverting and waiting. You are working on being a commercial pilot after all.
What say you?