fiveoboy01
Pattern Altitude
Boo!
Did my IFR checkride today. I was very nervous about the oral portion and not worried about the flight portion. Turns out things happened the opposite way...
Oral, breezed through it. One or two questions I needed a hint but the majority of it I had no problem with. I studied a LOT.
Flight portion - first instrument approach was an ILS. Went ok... half a dot off here and there. Missed approach procedure is a hold on a radial 9.2 DME(VOR on the field). Made the teardrop entry.. Mistake: forgot to spin the OBS to the inbound course. Stayed on the protected side anyways. Realized my mistake, spun the OBS 180 degrees, did one more lap. Timing by the 4th lap was pretty close. Not fail-worthy.
Forgot the pre-landing checklist on the first approach. Remembered it the other 2 approaches.
Followed up with a GPS approach including a course reversal. Easy, no problems, LPV approach, both needles dead on the entire approach to the miss.
Last approach - VOR with a circle to another runway. Due to runway closures this was a VOR approach to 18 with a circle to 21. ATC vectored me in sort of close, but I wasn't worried. Just before I got established on the final approach course, DPE covers my DG and AI. I was expecting it, so no big deal. But the cover kept falling off the AI. At one point he had to take the controls while I fished it out from between my feet. Distraction...
I misread the plate. Descended to 2600 when it should have been 1620(ish). I remember looking at the DME reading 2.5(the altitude limit is no lower than 1620 at 3.0 DME), and I was at about 2500 feet. Everything from there on out went to ****. I increased my descent rate, and I don't remember looking at the DME again. The GPS was counting UP from 4+ miles(presumably from a prior fix)... this most likely was the biggest distraction that screwed me up. I didn't know what I was looking at there. I don't remember if the TO/FROM flag flipped. I caught a glimpse of the airport in my vision and we were almost over the airport and that's when the DPE took the airplane away from me. At that point the ride was over.
I've read numerous times that if the approach gets away from you, full-scale on the needle, or an unstablized descent, whatever.. go missed. The DPE flat out said that if I would have gone around, he would have given me another shot at the approach. I knew I was high, and I knew my descent rate was excessive... and I was obviously not situationally aware of where I was in relation to the missed approach point. Why I didn't go around or why it didn't even occur to me, I have no idea.
Very frustrated and a little angry with myself. It's pretty hard for me to write all this but I hope that perhaps someone reading it will learn a lesson and not make the same mistake.
Positives - altitude and heading were dead on the entire time. Approach briefings were excellent. 25 or so knots of wind at 3000 and quite bumpy. That certainly didn't help. Fatigue had started to set in a little bit.
Anyways.. flying with my CFII this week a couple times. Retest Saturday morning. All I have to do is a VOR or LOC approach partial panel and circle to land. If I fail it again, I probably don't deserve an instrument ticket.
Did my IFR checkride today. I was very nervous about the oral portion and not worried about the flight portion. Turns out things happened the opposite way...
Oral, breezed through it. One or two questions I needed a hint but the majority of it I had no problem with. I studied a LOT.
Flight portion - first instrument approach was an ILS. Went ok... half a dot off here and there. Missed approach procedure is a hold on a radial 9.2 DME(VOR on the field). Made the teardrop entry.. Mistake: forgot to spin the OBS to the inbound course. Stayed on the protected side anyways. Realized my mistake, spun the OBS 180 degrees, did one more lap. Timing by the 4th lap was pretty close. Not fail-worthy.
Forgot the pre-landing checklist on the first approach. Remembered it the other 2 approaches.
Followed up with a GPS approach including a course reversal. Easy, no problems, LPV approach, both needles dead on the entire approach to the miss.
Last approach - VOR with a circle to another runway. Due to runway closures this was a VOR approach to 18 with a circle to 21. ATC vectored me in sort of close, but I wasn't worried. Just before I got established on the final approach course, DPE covers my DG and AI. I was expecting it, so no big deal. But the cover kept falling off the AI. At one point he had to take the controls while I fished it out from between my feet. Distraction...
I misread the plate. Descended to 2600 when it should have been 1620(ish). I remember looking at the DME reading 2.5(the altitude limit is no lower than 1620 at 3.0 DME), and I was at about 2500 feet. Everything from there on out went to ****. I increased my descent rate, and I don't remember looking at the DME again. The GPS was counting UP from 4+ miles(presumably from a prior fix)... this most likely was the biggest distraction that screwed me up. I didn't know what I was looking at there. I don't remember if the TO/FROM flag flipped. I caught a glimpse of the airport in my vision and we were almost over the airport and that's when the DPE took the airplane away from me. At that point the ride was over.
I've read numerous times that if the approach gets away from you, full-scale on the needle, or an unstablized descent, whatever.. go missed. The DPE flat out said that if I would have gone around, he would have given me another shot at the approach. I knew I was high, and I knew my descent rate was excessive... and I was obviously not situationally aware of where I was in relation to the missed approach point. Why I didn't go around or why it didn't even occur to me, I have no idea.
Very frustrated and a little angry with myself. It's pretty hard for me to write all this but I hope that perhaps someone reading it will learn a lesson and not make the same mistake.
Positives - altitude and heading were dead on the entire time. Approach briefings were excellent. 25 or so knots of wind at 3000 and quite bumpy. That certainly didn't help. Fatigue had started to set in a little bit.
Anyways.. flying with my CFII this week a couple times. Retest Saturday morning. All I have to do is a VOR or LOC approach partial panel and circle to land. If I fail it again, I probably don't deserve an instrument ticket.