Mistake Not...
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- Jun 18, 2013
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Mistake Not...
Admitting right up front that I still suck at this, and it's probably due to that.
I'm starting to fly approaches well enough to pass, consistently enough to pass. (That is, they're correct and I can do it more often than not). But I still get, I guess, distracted easily. It's seriously ****ing me off. I can keep the needle centered (well within PTS), but I'll forget and go through an altitude. That seems to be the single biggest failure mode.
We went out this weekend, and I was nailing a GPS approach in wind and turbulence. Bouncing around a good bit, but centered up and on altitude to a non-towered airport. Then I start getting these random prods from my instructor "Let 'em know where we are, I see activity on the runway" (It was mowing).
When announcing on CTAF, I try to make a position report like "Mooney 9999A, 5 NE, RNAV 23 approach, low pass only." The distance, I try to get close, because as has been mentioned on here, VFR-only pilots may not understand where you are if you give approach fixes.
Well, I guess I'm missing something obvious, because the 430W gives you distance to next fix, but not total distance from airport. And it seriously breaks my concentration to try to add up the total distance to the runway from where I am so I can make a report. Even as a type that, it sounds like whining, but dammit... how are you supposed to do it?
Also, there's no predictable pattern to it. Instructor drills "5 Ts" and then violates it with random reports at unpredictable times with information I do not have available. Be much less intrusive if I made a report passing a fix.
Now, you might say "well, distractions are a part of instrument flying, he's just training you". I disagree. I'm based at a Class C, and have been vectored around incoming commercial stuff while doing ILS approaches. No big deal. But random call outs with calculated information at non towered airports is different. ATC never asks me my distance from the airport on an ILS.
When should CTAF reports be made on an IAP at a non towered airport?
I'm starting to fly approaches well enough to pass, consistently enough to pass. (That is, they're correct and I can do it more often than not). But I still get, I guess, distracted easily. It's seriously ****ing me off. I can keep the needle centered (well within PTS), but I'll forget and go through an altitude. That seems to be the single biggest failure mode.
We went out this weekend, and I was nailing a GPS approach in wind and turbulence. Bouncing around a good bit, but centered up and on altitude to a non-towered airport. Then I start getting these random prods from my instructor "Let 'em know where we are, I see activity on the runway" (It was mowing).
When announcing on CTAF, I try to make a position report like "Mooney 9999A, 5 NE, RNAV 23 approach, low pass only." The distance, I try to get close, because as has been mentioned on here, VFR-only pilots may not understand where you are if you give approach fixes.
Well, I guess I'm missing something obvious, because the 430W gives you distance to next fix, but not total distance from airport. And it seriously breaks my concentration to try to add up the total distance to the runway from where I am so I can make a report. Even as a type that, it sounds like whining, but dammit... how are you supposed to do it?
Also, there's no predictable pattern to it. Instructor drills "5 Ts" and then violates it with random reports at unpredictable times with information I do not have available. Be much less intrusive if I made a report passing a fix.
Now, you might say "well, distractions are a part of instrument flying, he's just training you". I disagree. I'm based at a Class C, and have been vectored around incoming commercial stuff while doing ILS approaches. No big deal. But random call outs with calculated information at non towered airports is different. ATC never asks me my distance from the airport on an ILS.
When should CTAF reports be made on an IAP at a non towered airport?