flyingpreacher
Pre-takeoff checklist
So I thought I'd give you some thoughts from my flight this weekend that follow up to my thoughts from Friday.
First, I had some of the very things happen that we talked about. Binghamton approach advised me that their ILS was OOS. Both KBGM and KAVP have a RWY 10/28. It was closed at KAVP, so I mistakenly requested the other runway at KBGM. That was a mistake in my preflight planning because at KBGM, 10/28 was the only open runway. So in flight, I was given a different approach than what I had planned. I had to pull up the new plate, load it into the GPS, and rebrief the approach. However, I did use that "dead space" to get back ahead of the airplane and it went fairly smoothly. The rest went as planned.
As mentioned before, it is INCREDIBLY helpful to have the plate overlaid on the map in ForeFlight. That also helps when you're doing your readback because you can see that you are [expecting, cleared for] the [RNAV, ILS, VOR] Approach on RWY [XX]. It's right there on the plate in front of you, plus you have your missed instructions, and respective holds all visualized right in front of you.
Second, I worked really hard this week on flying the numbers. For me, a stabilized descent at 500FPM and 90KIAS is about 1800RPM in a C172 180hp. If you're flying a standard trainer single (C172, PA28, etc.) try those numbers as (according to my CFII) many of these aircraft have at least similar numbers. It should at least give you a starting point and you can adjust accordingly.
I'm glad you were able to get your plane home. Take some time and just relax. ENJOY flying. You didn't start this journey (even the journey of your instrument rating) because you liked stress. You did it because flying is AWESOME! Don't let this next step in your skill development take that enjoyment away from you. Yes, work hard at it to make sure that you and yours are safer up there, but don't let aviation become a drudge. You're a pilot, and that's something not a lot of people can say! Keep being awesome and have fun doing what you love!
First, I had some of the very things happen that we talked about. Binghamton approach advised me that their ILS was OOS. Both KBGM and KAVP have a RWY 10/28. It was closed at KAVP, so I mistakenly requested the other runway at KBGM. That was a mistake in my preflight planning because at KBGM, 10/28 was the only open runway. So in flight, I was given a different approach than what I had planned. I had to pull up the new plate, load it into the GPS, and rebrief the approach. However, I did use that "dead space" to get back ahead of the airplane and it went fairly smoothly. The rest went as planned.
As mentioned before, it is INCREDIBLY helpful to have the plate overlaid on the map in ForeFlight. That also helps when you're doing your readback because you can see that you are [expecting, cleared for] the [RNAV, ILS, VOR] Approach on RWY [XX]. It's right there on the plate in front of you, plus you have your missed instructions, and respective holds all visualized right in front of you.
Second, I worked really hard this week on flying the numbers. For me, a stabilized descent at 500FPM and 90KIAS is about 1800RPM in a C172 180hp. If you're flying a standard trainer single (C172, PA28, etc.) try those numbers as (according to my CFII) many of these aircraft have at least similar numbers. It should at least give you a starting point and you can adjust accordingly.
I'm glad you were able to get your plane home. Take some time and just relax. ENJOY flying. You didn't start this journey (even the journey of your instrument rating) because you liked stress. You did it because flying is AWESOME! Don't let this next step in your skill development take that enjoyment away from you. Yes, work hard at it to make sure that you and yours are safer up there, but don't let aviation become a drudge. You're a pilot, and that's something not a lot of people can say! Keep being awesome and have fun doing what you love!