Hi everyone, OP here – I’m back. I let this thread go for a while but it looks like there’s still significant activity here and I’ve recovered a bit, so I’ll fill in some of the blanks.
- My panel is GTN 650, G5 HSI and GPSS going to an old Century single-axis autopilot. I also use Foreflight on an iPad with a “professional” (I think?) subscription – the second-level subscription that gives you geo-referenced charts.
- On the approach in question, I was post-IAF, pre-IF. So I guess that must be why I didn’t get the altitude callouts on Foreflight or on the GTN that I might have otherwise. No, I had not received a “radar services terminated” and highly doubt I was outside of radar or altitude coverage (per
@brcase's comment).
- I somewhat resent
@tawood's comments about quitting IFR flying, but I’m taking it as tough love and appreciate the honesty. It’s worth a thought, but for the moment I’m not willing to give it up. No offense taken,
@tawood.
- Regarding the two mis-reads. The time I mis-read the turn in the VOR was probably 850 hours and 20 years ago. The fact that I still remember it to this day speaks to the impact it had on me. This was back before the era of widespread GPS usage; my panel was dual VORs and an NDB so situational awareness was so much harder to maintain. I’m happy to share that approach: it was the VOR 26 at KTNP (Twentynine Palms) in California on my instrument cross-country. I tracked into the VOR on a 255 bearing, and outbound at 255 as well… He who did not bust an approach during their instrument training feel free to throw the first stone.
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@Rushie Thanks for your supportive comments. You asked about "benign" conditions. To me that means no icing potential in particular. A couple bonuses are that there was very little turbulence and no precip, storm, or convective activity. We're talking thick haze layers that reduce visibility only. This and SoCal marine layer are about the most ideal practice "benign" IMC environments I can think of.
- For now, I have decided not to let this horse buck me off without getting right back on. To that end, this weekend I filed and took another IFR flight in marginal VMC (down low) to IMC in haze (up higher) and executed another IFR flight and IFR approach, this time with a bunch of traffic conflicts in a non-radar, mountainous environment. Got to fly a couple laps around a hold in IMC, got re-routed, the whole deal. Nothing that knocked me off-kilter and I’ll promise you, I damn well made sure I understood every single leg along the way and implemented the strategies discussed below:
- Some takeaways from this thread: I can do a better job briefing approaches on the ground. Also, there are also some technologies I can take better advantage of: for instance, using Terrain Mode on the 650 which I did this weekend. I can also (and did) double-check the altitude callouts on the GTN (per
@eman1200's comment). I don’t love that they’re only in the Flight Plan view, by the way, but it’s worth the reference.
@Arnold's careful consideration of the MSA and double-check before descending below it is useful, and I added that as a check item on my descent this weekend.
Thanks to everyone for helping me learn from and process this experience. Open to further discussion or thoughts.