Any advice for my first solo cross country? Its coming up on Wednesday. I feel super comfortable about it, but I'm just curious if anyone has any unique advice/tips/quirks for cross country flying. Thanks guys!
Fly it without anything even remotely resembling a magenta line.
A magenta highlighter on a sectional is OK.
If atc makes you do something you're not comfortable with say "student pilot, unable."
I had one controller ask me to do a short approach because a citation was coming in. It didn't hurt to extend downwind
....
Most important, relax, be safe and have freaking fun!!
Two words:
Have fun!
Plot your route on Google Earth, and "fly" it at your proposed altitude back and forth, as many times as you can, without any identifying labels. Learn to recognize all your selected landmarks from different angles. Once you feel confident, remove the route line and "fly" the route using those landmarks *only* (no additional help). Once you get good at it, you should need no sectionals or GPS or anything else but your eyes to get from A to B, just like walking to the bathroom at home or driving to the corner store. You should recognize an off-course drift/heading and correct for it immediately.
For bonus points, drop yourself randomly anywhere in the region and try to find the way home (with no labels or plotted route line, of course). You can cheat by increasing the altitude as your "help line", but you lose points for every extra 1000 foot increment above your proposed level, and get extra bonus for being lower than planned when "lost".
I did all my heli cross country training flights this way (no VOR/GPS installed), and never opened a sectional (I had the frequencies and runways written on a piece of paper on my knee). Not only does this method make the flight easy, but much more enjoyable too.
Two words:
Have fun!
Green highlighter is better, works under red light as well.
I don't think it's realistic to memorize every route. It can get you in trouble in complex airspace.
You won't have Google Earth in the plane, but you will eventually need to divert. It makes more sense to learn to correlate sectional with landmarks. And that's a big part of the point of a solo cross country.
Do what you did in your dual cross country, just solo.
Never leave an airport without making a bathroom stop (unless you're carrying one).
Rule learned the hard way on my first x-country.
Plot your route on Google Earth, and "fly" it at your proposed altitude back and forth, as many times as you can, without any identifying labels. Learn to recognize all your selected landmarks from different angles. Once you feel confident, remove the route line and "fly" the route using those landmarks *only* (no additional help). Once you get good at it, you should need no sectionals or GPS or anything else but your eyes to get from A to B, just like walking to the bathroom at home or driving to the corner store. You should recognize an off-course drift/heading and correct for it immediately.
For bonus points, drop yourself randomly anywhere in the region and try to find the way home (with no labels or plotted route line, of course). You can cheat by increasing the altitude as your "help line", but you lose points for every extra 1000 foot increment above your proposed level, and get extra bonus for being lower than planned when "lost".
I did all my heli cross country training flights this way (no VOR/GPS installed), and never opened a sectional (I had the frequencies and runways written on a piece of paper on my knee). Not only does this method make the flight easy, but much more enjoyable too.
Which airports? There has to be somebody here with a story about them!
That should be simple enough - VOR to VOR, with KEBA right in the middle.KAHN to KGRD
Would it be a bad idea to go somewhere I've never been before? I'm feeling pretty comfortable with KGRD because I've been there before. So I'm thinking about "challenging" myself and going somewhere new for my first solo cc.