Dmitri Scheidel
Pre-Flight
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2016
- Messages
- 53
- Location
- Northern California
- Display Name
Display name:
NorCali.Pilot
First off, I was a student pilot.
I was finishing up my flight training in summer of 2016 out of Concord Buchanan Airfield (KCCR). I needed 0.7 more hours of solo cross country to meet all hourly Minimums for the private pilot certificate. My route of flight was to depart out of CCR and head south over highway 680 over Walnut Creek before turning a little bit in-land to stay away from SFO’s class Bravo to Hollister Co airport. Ceiling was about 4-5,000ft broken but I planned for 3,500ft the whole way. May I mind you that this was in the summer, so the ceiling was not a cloud layer, it was a straight up smoke layer.
So I departed as normal and started making my way down, the could base definitely got larger the higher I climbed, confirming I couldn’t go heiger than around 4,500feet as expected. I was about 5nm to the north west (heading south east) of Livermore airport when I hit this wall of smoke. In a matter of minutes visibility dropped from more than 10 (but not unlimited) to about 6-7sm. As a student pilot this scared me. A lot. I expected reduced viz and the cloud layer, but this wall of smoke spooked me. I was using the VOR and ground waypoints to navigate to practice my pilotage, but I loaded up the GPS after I hit the wall to smooth my worries as I continued. Visibility and clouds were fine, it was just as a new pilot that the current situation was definitely giving me a bad feeling in the gut.
As I continued I neared and crossed over Livermore (LVK) airport when NorCal approach gave me 3 traffic advisories:
- Southwest 738 descending at my 10o’clock.
- A Cirrus at my 12o’clock closing in
- And a news chopper under me.
In the smoke and on edge, this freaked me out as I did not see any of these targets, and I apparently was an intersection for all of them. So spooked student-pilot me exectured a level 180o turn right back to concord to get out of there, I was not comfortable with continuing the flight as the haze/smoke was now pushing my personal Minimums. A few seconds after my turn ATC came on and asked me what I was doing, I said I was returning back to Concord for weather and explained that the smoke got too bad for me. He wasn’t too happy and slapped my wrist over the frequency explaining that I couldn’t do something like that without advising him, but he didn’t give me “the number”.
I continued back to KCCR with my confidence both crush and hyped up. I knew I made a good choice as PIC of the aircraft to not continue, but I was embarrassed about the emergency 180. I landed at CCR and pushed the plane back into its spot when a hydraulic line snapped and the nose strut collapsed on the nose gear... guess it was a good thing I turned back.
I was finishing up my flight training in summer of 2016 out of Concord Buchanan Airfield (KCCR). I needed 0.7 more hours of solo cross country to meet all hourly Minimums for the private pilot certificate. My route of flight was to depart out of CCR and head south over highway 680 over Walnut Creek before turning a little bit in-land to stay away from SFO’s class Bravo to Hollister Co airport. Ceiling was about 4-5,000ft broken but I planned for 3,500ft the whole way. May I mind you that this was in the summer, so the ceiling was not a cloud layer, it was a straight up smoke layer.
So I departed as normal and started making my way down, the could base definitely got larger the higher I climbed, confirming I couldn’t go heiger than around 4,500feet as expected. I was about 5nm to the north west (heading south east) of Livermore airport when I hit this wall of smoke. In a matter of minutes visibility dropped from more than 10 (but not unlimited) to about 6-7sm. As a student pilot this scared me. A lot. I expected reduced viz and the cloud layer, but this wall of smoke spooked me. I was using the VOR and ground waypoints to navigate to practice my pilotage, but I loaded up the GPS after I hit the wall to smooth my worries as I continued. Visibility and clouds were fine, it was just as a new pilot that the current situation was definitely giving me a bad feeling in the gut.
As I continued I neared and crossed over Livermore (LVK) airport when NorCal approach gave me 3 traffic advisories:
- Southwest 738 descending at my 10o’clock.
- A Cirrus at my 12o’clock closing in
- And a news chopper under me.
In the smoke and on edge, this freaked me out as I did not see any of these targets, and I apparently was an intersection for all of them. So spooked student-pilot me exectured a level 180o turn right back to concord to get out of there, I was not comfortable with continuing the flight as the haze/smoke was now pushing my personal Minimums. A few seconds after my turn ATC came on and asked me what I was doing, I said I was returning back to Concord for weather and explained that the smoke got too bad for me. He wasn’t too happy and slapped my wrist over the frequency explaining that I couldn’t do something like that without advising him, but he didn’t give me “the number”.
I continued back to KCCR with my confidence both crush and hyped up. I knew I made a good choice as PIC of the aircraft to not continue, but I was embarrassed about the emergency 180. I landed at CCR and pushed the plane back into its spot when a hydraulic line snapped and the nose strut collapsed on the nose gear... guess it was a good thing I turned back.
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