GMascelli
En-Route
Good read....you're getting close to that checkride!
Yep, a SoCal phenomenon. Well represented by SNL's "The Californians." Check out Bradley Cooper at 3:40 here. Hilarious!Side note, is it a California thing that you call roads 'the' . I live on the east coast, I've never heard anyone saying 'take the 95 north to ... ' we'd just say take 95, or take i-95.
Thanks for the update. I like the landing video. That youtube image stabilization does some weird things eh? Your structure was morphing a bit there. I know you didn't ask and I'm not really qualified to critique landings, but my 2 cents from a fellow student pilot is that you may want to hold it off a little more before touchdown and hold the yoke back longer after touching to let the nose down slower. It seems like you released your back pressure on most of those right as the wheels touch. Maybe get your cfi to watch your video and see what he thinks.
Thanks for the update. I like the landing video. That youtube image stabilization does some weird things eh? Your structure was morphing a bit there. I know you didn't ask and I'm not really qualified to critique landings, but my 2 cents from a fellow student pilot is that you may want to hold it off a little more before touchdown and hold the yoke back longer after touching to let the nose down slower. It seems like you released your back pressure on most of those right as the wheels touch. Maybe get your cfi to watch your video and see what he thinks.
That IS a nice video. Something that jumps out at me (aside from the interesting distortions along the edge) is that you're releasing some back pressure and dropping the nose a second or two before touchdown. That's why your landings are firm. Hold the backpressure all the way through touchdown, and pull the yoke gradually into your lap (if it isn't already there) through the rollout.
Just to be clear, those are not bad landings at all. Just providing a little feedback to make them even better. I don't know where your aimpoint was, but I do think that was to PTS (well ACS now) for a normal landing.
In SoCal, there are a LOT of IFR days along the coast.
Corrosion shouldn't be an issue unless you park within range of salt spray.True. Partly why I have my aircraft hangared pretty far inland; corrosion is less of an issue too.
We got socked in a lot at John Wayne where I did my training (May Gray/June Gloom marine layer), but on most soupy days the ceiling was still high enough to do pattern work.
Corrosion shouldn't be an issue unless you park within range of salt spray.
It's ~5 miles from KTOA to the beach, further for KLGB. You'll get lots of marine layer, but no salt corrosion.
If you want evidence, go driving around Torrance and count the rusted out cars. You won't find many, if any at all.
Yes, you can sometimes do pattern work under marine layer (as long as the ceiling is 500 feet above TPA -- SVFR is likely to be a problem at a busy airport). But going somewhere at 1000 feet over the city isn't a good idea.
In SoCal, there are a LOT of IFR days along the coast.
You'll get good use out of an instrument rating.
Why does the west coast not get corrosion like the east coast (Florida)? Corrosion seems to be a big issue over there, is it because they have storms that pick up the salt water?
Why does the west coast not get corrosion like the east coast (Florida)? Corrosion seems to be a big issue over there, is it because they have storms that pick up the salt water?
Corrosion shouldn't be an issue unless you park within range of salt spray.
It's ~5 miles from KTOA to the beach, further for KLGB. You'll get lots of marine layer, but no salt corrosion.
If you want evidence, go driving around Torrance and count the rusted out cars. You won't find many, if any at all.
Yes, you can sometimes do pattern work under marine layer (as long as the ceiling is 500 feet above TPA -- SVFR is likely to be a problem at a busy airport). But going somewhere at 1000 feet over the city isn't a good idea.
Go to Cleveland and you'll see something quite different.Corrosion will certainly be accelerated by salt spray, but humidity will cause it as well. Ever look at the engine compartment of a car that's been parked near the beach but away from the salt spray? Corrosion on all the aluminum bits like alternator housings, etc. Less humidity, less chance of corrosion. There's a reason that AMARC and SoCal Logistics, where all the mothballed planes are stored, are in the arid desert.
I think the "no rusted cars" argument is more because of galvanized metal in the unit bodies, better paint, better sealing of seams, etc. Not a lot of pre-1970s cars in Torrance these days.
No argument there...the salt really accelerates the process.
Richard, I think Corona would be a great place to keep a plane. Many years ago, the place was flooded out (for those unfamiliar with Corona, it sits quite near the Prado Reservoir), but since it will never, ever, ever rain again in SoCal, I think you'd be safe!
I agree on the rain. We would need about 3 months of it raining every day to fill the Prado Reservoir enough to flood in out again. I'm sure I could find time somewhere in that window to get the plane and anything else in the hanger to higher ground...
Ah, Zero Zero Uniform, I remember her well! I'd avoid that particular plane if possible just because the tail number was hard for me to say quickly!
Dang. Another day. And the mechanic tells me it flew yesterday and no one reported anything. The GPS was just as expired yesterday (changeover date was Aug 18) so it sounds to me like someone wasn't paying attention.