drummer4468
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Jul 5, 2020
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drummer4468
We all have "off days" during training that sneak up and discourage us. Yesterday was one of those days for me. I had a stage check for CPL after getting all of my solo XC hours in, and let's just say I am entirely unhappy/embarrassed with my performance.
Flew with the chief instructor for a quick round-robin and "surprise" diversion, basic stuff to assess my XC skills. Just paper map and compass, no nav aids(except VOR for a couple stretches), no big deal. Pulled out the sectional and plotter, got a new heading, calculated time, distance, fuel burn, etc, and I thought I was doing pretty well, until he brought up that I wasn't paying as much attention to the map as he thought I should, that he wanted to see more "pilotage skills" and tighter scrutiny on the sectional landmarks. Mind you, I'm rather familiar with the area and saw the island that the airport was on, but was a little off course and briefly mistook another clearing for the field about 10ish miles out, so maybe I seemed a little more lax or unaware than I intended. But point taken, the DPE is gonna wanna see demonstrated precision and I need to get better at verbalizing for exam purposes.
What really upset me was that my landings were absolutely ATROCIOUS today. I hadn't flown in a few weeks but I didn't think I was THAT rusty. Practicing shorts and softs, for whatever reason I simply COULD NOT get "in the zone". The approaches all looked/felt great, but the last 100ft to the ground fell apart every time. Getting blown off centerline, slamming down the soft field landings, etc. I felt like a pre-solo newbie all over again.
So, a bit discouraged and beating myself up, I got a little sloppy with the navigation back to the original destination. Got a little behind the plane, off heading, and slightly disoriented briefly, but nothing too terrible or even close to being lost. The crux of that situation was when I went to deviate left around a rain cell while the destination was clearly to the right of it ~20 miles in the distance; it was hazy and I hadn't yet processed it as "in sight"
One thing that really ticked me off, though, was getting denied a go-around. Roundout got really messy and even though I realistically could have saved it with 9k+ feet remaining, I decided to abort, reset, and try again. As soon as I added full power he chopped it and insisted I land it. Of all the things an instructor can do that I'm not fond of, that tops the list and instantly puts me on edge. Training or not, I hate when the controls are abruptly taken from me unexpectedly. His reasoning was that there was a rain cell coming into the approach end, and we may not have time for another lap before it was over the rwy(we "needed" this landing to qualify as an XC, >50nm yadayada). Again, I wasn't as concerned with it being unsafe on such a long rwy, as I was flat-out indignant. I personally would rather have taken another diversion if wx was an issue, we had plenty of fuel and numerous other fields to land at. It really screws with my head and perception of the authority dynamic, knowing that I'm ultimately PIC but also trying to be a receptive student at the same time. But that's a whole 'nother kettle of fish that I'll dive deeper into in another thread.
Anyway, so I end up getting it down, stopped, and set up for a soft-field takeoff. Add TO power, hold the nose up, lift off, build speed in ground effect, lowering the nose smoothly as speed built, and once I hit Vy, I released some fwd pressure and let it climb away. I felt good about it. But the instructor didn't like it, saying I wasn't holding it in ground effect long enough. So I tried again, making more of a pronounced effort to lower the nose and keep it in ground effect longer. Same response from the instructor though. I contested him, saying that I know full well not to pull it out of ground effect prematurely, but if the plane is past Vy and wants to climb, I see no reason to hold it down and rip down the runway at Vy+10 or 15. Am I wrong for this?
One last thing he hemmed me up for is the way I taxi with my heels off the floor. Now...I completely understand the endless battle against students who ride the crap out of the brakes with the power at 1300rpm. Sometimes I do catch myself in minor transgressions like braking before reducing power to slow down. But I make it a conscious point to continue checking myself on the ground so I'm not roasting rotors all the way to the runway. My rationale is that while taxiing, I feel much more comfortable with my feet at the ready to apply braking if needed, especially in the ramp area. Whether it's for a sudden stop or a gentle tap on one side to help motivate the very lazy nosewheel on some of these planes. He staunchly disagrees and wants my feet away from the brakes. I'd lose a lot less sleep over marginally more pad wear, than potential propstrike or wing damage when an unexpected obstacle appears. Any thoughts on/problems with my views?
ANYWAY, long rant over with. Before anyone thinks I'm just whining/blaming the instructor for my poor performance, I'm not. Despite a list of things I need to work on, he ultimately passed me for the stage check. If you've read this far, thanks for your time. For fellow student pilots at every level, take your criticism as constructively as you do your praise. Even criticism you disagree with. Get other opinions to supplement your own experience. Learn from everything positive and negative, and improve every chance you can. Most importantly don't let a bad day and some discouragement stomp on your progress. I'm gonna head over there and bang out a bunch of pattern work this week to get these landings back up to snuff.
Fly safe y'all.
Flew with the chief instructor for a quick round-robin and "surprise" diversion, basic stuff to assess my XC skills. Just paper map and compass, no nav aids(except VOR for a couple stretches), no big deal. Pulled out the sectional and plotter, got a new heading, calculated time, distance, fuel burn, etc, and I thought I was doing pretty well, until he brought up that I wasn't paying as much attention to the map as he thought I should, that he wanted to see more "pilotage skills" and tighter scrutiny on the sectional landmarks. Mind you, I'm rather familiar with the area and saw the island that the airport was on, but was a little off course and briefly mistook another clearing for the field about 10ish miles out, so maybe I seemed a little more lax or unaware than I intended. But point taken, the DPE is gonna wanna see demonstrated precision and I need to get better at verbalizing for exam purposes.
What really upset me was that my landings were absolutely ATROCIOUS today. I hadn't flown in a few weeks but I didn't think I was THAT rusty. Practicing shorts and softs, for whatever reason I simply COULD NOT get "in the zone". The approaches all looked/felt great, but the last 100ft to the ground fell apart every time. Getting blown off centerline, slamming down the soft field landings, etc. I felt like a pre-solo newbie all over again.
So, a bit discouraged and beating myself up, I got a little sloppy with the navigation back to the original destination. Got a little behind the plane, off heading, and slightly disoriented briefly, but nothing too terrible or even close to being lost. The crux of that situation was when I went to deviate left around a rain cell while the destination was clearly to the right of it ~20 miles in the distance; it was hazy and I hadn't yet processed it as "in sight"
One thing that really ticked me off, though, was getting denied a go-around. Roundout got really messy and even though I realistically could have saved it with 9k+ feet remaining, I decided to abort, reset, and try again. As soon as I added full power he chopped it and insisted I land it. Of all the things an instructor can do that I'm not fond of, that tops the list and instantly puts me on edge. Training or not, I hate when the controls are abruptly taken from me unexpectedly. His reasoning was that there was a rain cell coming into the approach end, and we may not have time for another lap before it was over the rwy(we "needed" this landing to qualify as an XC, >50nm yadayada). Again, I wasn't as concerned with it being unsafe on such a long rwy, as I was flat-out indignant. I personally would rather have taken another diversion if wx was an issue, we had plenty of fuel and numerous other fields to land at. It really screws with my head and perception of the authority dynamic, knowing that I'm ultimately PIC but also trying to be a receptive student at the same time. But that's a whole 'nother kettle of fish that I'll dive deeper into in another thread.
Anyway, so I end up getting it down, stopped, and set up for a soft-field takeoff. Add TO power, hold the nose up, lift off, build speed in ground effect, lowering the nose smoothly as speed built, and once I hit Vy, I released some fwd pressure and let it climb away. I felt good about it. But the instructor didn't like it, saying I wasn't holding it in ground effect long enough. So I tried again, making more of a pronounced effort to lower the nose and keep it in ground effect longer. Same response from the instructor though. I contested him, saying that I know full well not to pull it out of ground effect prematurely, but if the plane is past Vy and wants to climb, I see no reason to hold it down and rip down the runway at Vy+10 or 15. Am I wrong for this?
One last thing he hemmed me up for is the way I taxi with my heels off the floor. Now...I completely understand the endless battle against students who ride the crap out of the brakes with the power at 1300rpm. Sometimes I do catch myself in minor transgressions like braking before reducing power to slow down. But I make it a conscious point to continue checking myself on the ground so I'm not roasting rotors all the way to the runway. My rationale is that while taxiing, I feel much more comfortable with my feet at the ready to apply braking if needed, especially in the ramp area. Whether it's for a sudden stop or a gentle tap on one side to help motivate the very lazy nosewheel on some of these planes. He staunchly disagrees and wants my feet away from the brakes. I'd lose a lot less sleep over marginally more pad wear, than potential propstrike or wing damage when an unexpected obstacle appears. Any thoughts on/problems with my views?
ANYWAY, long rant over with. Before anyone thinks I'm just whining/blaming the instructor for my poor performance, I'm not. Despite a list of things I need to work on, he ultimately passed me for the stage check. If you've read this far, thanks for your time. For fellow student pilots at every level, take your criticism as constructively as you do your praise. Even criticism you disagree with. Get other opinions to supplement your own experience. Learn from everything positive and negative, and improve every chance you can. Most importantly don't let a bad day and some discouragement stomp on your progress. I'm gonna head over there and bang out a bunch of pattern work this week to get these landings back up to snuff.
Fly safe y'all.
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