drummer4468
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Jul 5, 2020
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drummer4468
Welp, looks like I’m officially “cleared for the approach!”
Passed my IR checkride a few days ago and am both excited and relieved to finally have the rating under my belt. Definitely recommend any new pilot to go ahead and get the training. It was exhaustively challenging but has absolutely made me a better pilot. Attention to detail, aircraft control, working with ATC, confidence in the equipment, everything has become more precise and natural.
Even if you don’t plan on flying IMC on purpose, it provides a huge additional margin of safety. Hell, even if you don’t want(or can’t afford) the rating, get with a CFII and practice attitude flying and shooting approaches. It may just save your skin someday when weather doesn’t play nice. The more I learned, the more baffled I was that this training isn’t required for night flying in the US.
I there’s anything I’d do differently, I’d focus more on practicing oddball emergency situations on top of the routine procedural stuff. Unexpected situations increase pilot workload real quick. Realized on my checkride how complacent I got when my DPE failed my alternator and I got behind the plane a bit cobbling together a nasty ILS while configuring the plane. (Pulled flaps on short final and threw myself way off glideslope. Don’t try to save a botched approach by chasing pinned needles, just go missed) EDIT: to clarify, I should not have gone missed in this situation. Given the nature of the “emergency,” I should have not pulled flaps and thrown myself off, and even the DPE said I should have done what I had to to get back on glideslope instead of risking losing battery power while going missed.
Thanks to all of the posters here that allowed me to learn from their experience and mistakes. Diving into CPL now, and always looking forward to using my “license to learn” for all it’s worth.
Cheers, happy flying all.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Passed my IR checkride a few days ago and am both excited and relieved to finally have the rating under my belt. Definitely recommend any new pilot to go ahead and get the training. It was exhaustively challenging but has absolutely made me a better pilot. Attention to detail, aircraft control, working with ATC, confidence in the equipment, everything has become more precise and natural.
Even if you don’t plan on flying IMC on purpose, it provides a huge additional margin of safety. Hell, even if you don’t want(or can’t afford) the rating, get with a CFII and practice attitude flying and shooting approaches. It may just save your skin someday when weather doesn’t play nice. The more I learned, the more baffled I was that this training isn’t required for night flying in the US.
I there’s anything I’d do differently, I’d focus more on practicing oddball emergency situations on top of the routine procedural stuff. Unexpected situations increase pilot workload real quick. Realized on my checkride how complacent I got when my DPE failed my alternator and I got behind the plane a bit cobbling together a nasty ILS while configuring the plane. (Pulled flaps on short final and threw myself way off glideslope. Don’t try to save a botched approach by chasing pinned needles, just go missed) EDIT: to clarify, I should not have gone missed in this situation. Given the nature of the “emergency,” I should have not pulled flaps and thrown myself off, and even the DPE said I should have done what I had to to get back on glideslope instead of risking losing battery power while going missed.
Thanks to all of the posters here that allowed me to learn from their experience and mistakes. Diving into CPL now, and always looking forward to using my “license to learn” for all it’s worth.
Cheers, happy flying all.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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