Clip4
Touchdown! Greaser!
Except they can do something about it. A CFI applicant must demonstrate instructional knowledge and todays CFI applicants don’t have it.Not caring and not being able to do anything about it are two different things.
Except they can do something about it. A CFI applicant must demonstrate instructional knowledge and todays CFI applicants don’t have it.Not caring and not being able to do anything about it are two different things.
You obviously have no concept of how many people choose to operate well below the level they demonstrate on checkrides.Except they can do something about it. A CFI applicant must demonstrate instructional knowledge and todays CFI applicants don’t have it.
Don't worry, there is a longer one before you can take the private checkride.Still early in my training, but I'm surprised it's only 50nm.
When you ask a few questions and determine they have no base knowledge it is easy to determine they level they were required to demonstrate was too low. The questions are not all that tough.You obviously have no concept of how many people choose to operate well below the level they demonstrate on checkrides.
so there is absolutely no loss of knowledge after a test? Nobody studies up for the test and then load sheds afterwards?When you ask a few questions and determine they have no base knowledge it is easy to determine they level they were required to demonstrate was too low. The questions are not all that tough.
Like you forgot the difference between a forward and side slip?so there is absolutely no loss of knowledge after a test? Nobody studies up for the test and then load sheds afterwards?
I’ve seen a lot worse.Like you forgot the difference between a forward and side slip?
We all have. @Clip4 is just old. Whining about the younger generation is a sure sign. Don't worry, the prior generation said the same things about him too. And the new crop will say it about the next. It's been happening for thousands of years and repeated without exception.I’ve seen a lot worse.
We all have. @Clip4 is just old. Whining about the younger generation is a sure sign. Don't worry, the prior generation said the same things about him too. And the new crop will say it about the next. It's been happening for thousands of years and repeated without exception.
Hi everyone! I am planning my first solo cross country, and there is one airfield that is 49.5 miles away from my home airport as measured from the geographic centers of both airports.
Would KLZU → KTOC be accepted by a DPE as a cross-country?
I figure KAHN → KPDK at 48.9 NM is not acceptable, but what about something like KRYY→6A2 at 49.8NM?
I thought it was a hard "more than 50."50 is 50. Not “50ish” or “about 50”. It’s a hard “at least 50” so I would just comply and makes things much easier for yourself.
Seems to be a little harder than it should be.I thought it was a hard "more than 50."
This all seems harder than it should be.Seems to be a little harder than it should be.
The rule is easy. And reading is fundamental. Making the words up yourself or trying to fudge around it is the hard thing.This all seems harder than it should be.
Like you forgot the difference between a forward and side slip?
Improved technology and changes to the FAA training requirements are why accident rates have decreased. The minimalist I got to just do enough to get to the airlines CFI might change that safety trend. You might be seeing it today with increased runway incursions.Yep. Pilots today are far worse than decades ago, which is the only way to explain why the GA accident rate is doing down............
The rule is easy. And reading is fundamental. Making the words up yourself or trying to fudge around it is the hard thing.
It's not about skirting the rules. It's about reading them.I really don't think this was born out of any sort of effort to skirt the bare minimums, or on any sort of gross understanding..... I think it was probably more of a thought experiment. I get thoughts like this sometimes....wondering maybe "why 50, and not 49?", etc....
I don't get annoyed by them....I view it as not so much a direct question needing a specific answer (which might seem like an annoying stupid question to some)... but I think of it more like a sittin' around the campfire small talk trivia question....
and in the process I might come accross something like this, which may not have been on the front of my mind before....
Distance To The Horizon
Ever wonder how far is the horizon when flying? AGL / Horizon Mile Away 1,000 = 38.71 2,000 = 54.76 3,000 = 66.10 4,000 = 77.44 5,000 = 85.45925 6,000 = 93.4785 7,000 = 101.49775 8,000 = 109.517 9,000 = 117.53625www.pilotsofamerica.com
On the other hand, the fact that "at least" and "more than" both appear in that clause probably contributes to some people's misremembering what it says.Thought experiment: It's not completely consistent but I wonder whether the repeated use of "more than" language, sometimes combined with "at least"
"That includes a point of landing that was at least a straight-line distance of more than 50 nautical miles from the original point of departure;"was intended to avoid the rounding question.
There's no need to argue if we just choose airports well outside 50. I don't think @JackFliesGA told us which airport is home base (mentioned two different starting points). If it's LZU, here's a list of public airports with paved runways at least 3000' long between 50 and 75 nm away.I’ve argued this a few times. DPE checks with ForeFlight, it says 50. Put a old sectional on that table and a plotter and you get about 50.5 lol….
The FAA has no issue with XCs in a J3 cub to complete 5 hours of XC time and you are worried about the student adding some landings in a 172?There's no need to argue if we just choose airports well outside 50. I don't think @JackFliesGA told us which airport is home base (mentioned two different starting points). If it's LZU, here's a list of public airports with paved runways at least 3000' long between 50 and 75 nm away.
View attachment 120295
There's a flip side discussion too. We've seen it. 61.109 also requires 5 hours cross country time, so we not only try to morph 49.6 to 50.1, but we do 18 touch and goes there to build up the time instead of flying to an airport another 10 minutes away.
Unless you happen to live somewhere with no options, I never understood either "I don't really want to go anywhere" discussion.
Best way to get instructional knowledge of cross country navigation is to do touch and goes for an hour?The FAA has no issue with XCs in a J3 cub to complete 5 hours of XC time and you are worried about the student adding some landings in a 172?
No. I don't think that's what I said. I thought I saidThe FAA has no issue with XCs in a J3 cub to complete 5 hours of XC time and you are worried about the student adding some landings in a 172?
so we not only try to morph 49.6 to 50.1, but we do 18 touch and goes there
They can also go under.If higher than 12.5 MSL, even a student pilot can go across ATL airspace.
Is it the student?No. I don't think that's what I said. I thought I said
IOW, I'm worried about the attitude that leads a student to add a bunch of landings in a 172 at an airport maybe >50NM away instead of flying an airport another 10 minutes away. Besides, there are far better things to do on a cross country that hang out for a half hour in a traffic pattern.
It's not about the rule. Heck, according to the rule you don't need to go more than 26 NM away, but I wouldn't sign off on it.
Doh! Cheers and happy aviating. F70 is a cool airport near us but it's just under the 50 nautical miles but by a wide enough margin that it's not something like 0.2nm.. too bad because it means people have to go to HMT which in my opinion is a less interesting placeTL;DR is have a professional attitude and go above and beyond. Splitting hairs about 0.2NM is not what a DPE wants to do. They want to see you well beyond compliant of regulations.
oh hehe, I just saw the email with your original reply. lol.
That's what I thought this forum could be: sitting around the World Wide Campfire telling stories and wondering about things. The range of tones in the responses pretty well matches the split between wonderers and rule-followers.but I think of it more like a sittin' around the campfire small talk trivia question.... and in the process I might come accross something like this, which may not have been on the front of my mind before....
Yup, my home base is LZU. That AirNav tool is pretty handy. I used a range ring on Google Earth and then used SkyVector, Foreflight, Garmin Pilot, to check the distances for those fields really close to the circle I drew.I don't think @JackFliesGA told us which airport is home base (mentioned two different starting points). If it's LZU, here's a list of public airports with paved runways at least 3000' long between 50 and 75 nm away.
There's a flip side discussion too. We've seen it. 61.109 also requires 5 hours cross country time, so we not only try to morph 49.6 to 50.1, but we do 18 touch and goes there to build up the time instead of flying to an airport another 10 minutes away.
This question actually came up with a friend I was riding with on a planned cross-country KLZU KTOC KDZJ (52.5NM from KLZU) before heading back. We decided not to go to Blairsville, which is in a valley in the Appalachia due to ground hugging clouds we could see from the air, and a scattered layer just 1500ft above the highest peaks. despite the TAF showing 6SM SCT 050. My friend was sad that TOC was just shy of 50NM of LZU, and I thought, well if we count the distance between the numbers of RWY7 at LZU and the numbers at RWY 21 at TOC, its ~50.4NM per Google Earth. So that made me wonder, how is that distance even measured, and if a DPE would accept that the logbook. My friend ultimately didn't count it ultimately, it made for an interesting question.
Just had a applicant headed for an instrument check ride that was 25 hours short on his cross country time because much of what he logged as cross country didn't include a landing 50nm from the original airport. Fortunately this error was caught prior to going the check ride, but is a significant setback in getting his instrument rating.
So yes understanding the requirements is important.
Brian
If you’re going to attempt to take this approach, you better log the lat/longs in your logbook of point of departure and point of landing. If your logbook only documents the airport codes, the assumption is you’re using the airport reference point (ARP) for calculation.I wonder if, when faced with being turned down due to a 49.9 NM XC, any student has ever mentioned that the regulations don't say the distance is measured between the airport reference points.
Rather, the flight has to be 50 NM between the point of departure and the point of landing (and other similar statements in the various sections).
So, the hopelessly argumentative applicant would claim that he measured the distance between his point of rotation and point of touchdown, and look, it's 50.1 NM! At most big airports there could easily be a difference of over a mile between takeoff/landing point and ARP.
I imagine this IS actually a pretty typical issue for helicopter pilots, where they may take off from some random field and land in some other random field, and just have to measure the distance between the actual departure and landing points.
One can still wonder and even wish for something different while understanding and following the existing rules. they are not mutually exclusive.The range of tones in the responses pretty well matches the split between wonderers and rule-followers.
The DPE for my instrument rating saw a few he thought were suspect and measured them. 49-point-something: no good. Fortunately I was well over the minimum required for XC time, but the answer to your question could be no, depending on the DPE. With mine it would have been negatory.Hi everyone! I am planning my first solo cross country, and there is one airfield that is 49.5 miles away from my home airport as measured from the geographic centers of both airports.
Would KLZU → KTOC be accepted by a DPE as a cross-country?
I figure KAHN → KPDK at 48.9 NM is not acceptable, but what about something like KRYY→6A2 at 49.8NM?
That is a story we can all learn from, and the community can appreciate that honesty. Good thing you had something else that qualifies! Thanks for sharing exactly what I wanted to know I thought this would have been a really short threadThe DPE for my instrument rating […] measured them.
I thought so too ...I thought this would have been a really short thread
I'm in a similar position, there is a airport 49.7ish nm from my home airport, but the reasoning is that the airports that are 50nm+ are in very mountainous terrain. I can fly to a nearby air port, then stop and take off from there and it would be 50nm away from that airport. But that's not my originating airport technically, and I do not want to take that risk. So we will see what I can do. I'd rather be safe than sorry, and chance the mountains
That is really good to know. I was not getting answers anywhere else and I was frustrated because I'd have to wait (while more time isn't bad it does=more money) so that id be prepared to do the mountainous airports. I appreciate knowing that it is legitThat's perfectly legit. You make a repositioning flight to the more distant airport, then it becomes the originating airport for the cross country. No problem with the regs, and much safer than a student pilot doing mountain flying.