Sinistar
En-Route
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2016
- Messages
- 3,735
- Display Name
Display name:
Brad
One goal I set for myself after getting my PPL was to give rides to at least 10 passengers over the summer/fall. I managed to reach that number a bit sooner than I thought, due in part to some nice weather and a large group of family visitors. For anyone interested I'll give a quick summary of each and follow up with some lessons learned.
#1,#2: Wife & Daughter (Winter).
Reaching TPA on the climb out my daughter says: "My plane!". She can't reach the pedals but flew for about 30 minutes. Then indicated she was done. First time my wife's been in the
back seat of our plane...at least I hope! Greased that landing but greasing landings after that became illusive. One of my favorite flights of all time. A really big trust thing for me
#3: Brother In Law.
There was rain to the west slowing moving east but also dissipating. Nothing convective. So I told him to fly towards the rain. When we hit it, turn left and fly along as it dissipated. Very nice, relaxing flight. Was a nice simple test of ADBS wx preceeded by a much longer chat with the wx briefer before the flight regarding cloud levels, precip type, etc. He flew most of the flight and did good.
#4: Daughter's Friend
I flew my daughter and her friend up to my folks place for he 4th of July. She had never been in a
plane. The two of them sat in back and watched episodes of Gilligan's Island. It was a bit bumpy on the way up and very smooth on the way back 2 days later. We had a decent tailwind on the back and her only comment on landing was a very serious "Are we back already?" I was on FF on both directions (precious cargo onboard!). Both of them hated it So, per a previous thread I am working on how to handle that (FWIW - a new audio panel is not a option right now).
#5: My brother.
He loved it! We flew up over the Itasca area. He takes his 5th grade classes camping there each
year at the headwaters of the Mississippi. He was trying to spot the fire tower they all climb. He came to realize that what seems tall on the ground really isn't that tall at all He didn't want to fly and was taking pictures and video like crazy. He spends a lot of time portaging up into Canada to go fishing. I am wondering this will spur a float plane interest. But he is color blind - not sure what that means to a PPL?
#6: Wife's Cousin:
This is the sim guy I mentioned in another thread. He flew most of the flight and loved it. Didn't
look out the window much, but I he so wants to be a pilot. I found out after they left that he is
color blind - sucks! He was just having the best time flying. Maybe back in Norway he can find a way to fly more.
#7: Wife's Cousin's Husband
This guy is into machines and was just way into airplanes. The sim guy was in the back for this flight. He just loved being up front. He flew but I think he would have been just as happy to be in front looking. To him it was kinda like going for a ride in someone's cool restored car. Just being part of it was good enough for him! On his flight we got to get up close to a few tiny puffy clouds and he loved the sensation of going near them where you can feel the speed and 3D of it all.
#8: Wife's Cousin
Actually this one (14yo girl) could have flown but it was early and she was tired so she rode in back and the sim guy gotto fly again. This was my first trip dropping off passengers. This was my longest flight so far at about 215miles flown and was a great trip from SW of the Twin Cities to Superior (near Duluth). I was on a schedule to get there so I could get back before
the early afternoon clouds built and would drop. They did not understand the concept of being on time. They had no clue how many contingencies my wife and I had worked out in case the flight didn't work since they were meeting a larger group in Duluth.
#9: Coworker
Okay, very very smart guy (SW Engineeer). His first question was "is one pedal for the gas and one for the brake." So I knew he was very interested and also had no prior experience. Being not very tall, it was a bit hard for him to fly. He would get altitude right, then fix up course but then kinda get the leans. It was hard to get him to use the panel and horizon. I made this one a xc to a small Delta with a very large runway. I thought to myself: "Hey, I'm getting better at this ride thing, I've got 7500x150 of runway so I will let him keep his hands on the yoke and have him rotate us off." DID NOT GO WELL! When I said rotate he pulled back. And he pulled back more. And more. So I put enough pressure to stop the pull. But the deck angle got pretty steep. So I started overriding him and pushed harder and final gave out a confident (but not panicked) "My plane". And I just pushed us right back to level to get some airspeed back. I could just feel his instinct, he was nervous and thought pulling back would equal safety and security. Lessons learned on this flight!!!!
#10: Coworker
Now this guy is really interested in flying! So much so that his first questions months ago were about capabilities and ownership of a SR22T. During the winter I talked him into getting a discovery ride with my first CFI. He did it and enjoyed it. But he wants so bad for this to work for his wife and I just tell him be a pilot because you want to. I can tell (his words) that he wants it to be with others. So this flight he asked for something fun to see, didn't need to fly so much. So I asked for a scenic of MPLS. Didn't quite get what I wanted due to the main airport traffic direction. However, eventually (on FF of course) we were cleared to fly over downtown as long as I kept the IDS tower to my right. WOW!!! That was awesome. I am not a fan of flying that low (1250agl over congested city) so I was always looking for a place to land while he was taking in the sites. On the way back we went right under 3 Passengers jets on final. The closest was +700ft and well under 1 mile. I think I could hear an alarm going off when Approach was vectoring me. Great flight to round out the first 10.
#1,#2: Wife & Daughter (Winter).
Reaching TPA on the climb out my daughter says: "My plane!". She can't reach the pedals but flew for about 30 minutes. Then indicated she was done. First time my wife's been in the
back seat of our plane...at least I hope! Greased that landing but greasing landings after that became illusive. One of my favorite flights of all time. A really big trust thing for me
#3: Brother In Law.
There was rain to the west slowing moving east but also dissipating. Nothing convective. So I told him to fly towards the rain. When we hit it, turn left and fly along as it dissipated. Very nice, relaxing flight. Was a nice simple test of ADBS wx preceeded by a much longer chat with the wx briefer before the flight regarding cloud levels, precip type, etc. He flew most of the flight and did good.
#4: Daughter's Friend
I flew my daughter and her friend up to my folks place for he 4th of July. She had never been in a
plane. The two of them sat in back and watched episodes of Gilligan's Island. It was a bit bumpy on the way up and very smooth on the way back 2 days later. We had a decent tailwind on the back and her only comment on landing was a very serious "Are we back already?" I was on FF on both directions (precious cargo onboard!). Both of them hated it So, per a previous thread I am working on how to handle that (FWIW - a new audio panel is not a option right now).
#5: My brother.
He loved it! We flew up over the Itasca area. He takes his 5th grade classes camping there each
year at the headwaters of the Mississippi. He was trying to spot the fire tower they all climb. He came to realize that what seems tall on the ground really isn't that tall at all He didn't want to fly and was taking pictures and video like crazy. He spends a lot of time portaging up into Canada to go fishing. I am wondering this will spur a float plane interest. But he is color blind - not sure what that means to a PPL?
#6: Wife's Cousin:
This is the sim guy I mentioned in another thread. He flew most of the flight and loved it. Didn't
look out the window much, but I he so wants to be a pilot. I found out after they left that he is
color blind - sucks! He was just having the best time flying. Maybe back in Norway he can find a way to fly more.
#7: Wife's Cousin's Husband
This guy is into machines and was just way into airplanes. The sim guy was in the back for this flight. He just loved being up front. He flew but I think he would have been just as happy to be in front looking. To him it was kinda like going for a ride in someone's cool restored car. Just being part of it was good enough for him! On his flight we got to get up close to a few tiny puffy clouds and he loved the sensation of going near them where you can feel the speed and 3D of it all.
#8: Wife's Cousin
Actually this one (14yo girl) could have flown but it was early and she was tired so she rode in back and the sim guy gotto fly again. This was my first trip dropping off passengers. This was my longest flight so far at about 215miles flown and was a great trip from SW of the Twin Cities to Superior (near Duluth). I was on a schedule to get there so I could get back before
the early afternoon clouds built and would drop. They did not understand the concept of being on time. They had no clue how many contingencies my wife and I had worked out in case the flight didn't work since they were meeting a larger group in Duluth.
#9: Coworker
Okay, very very smart guy (SW Engineeer). His first question was "is one pedal for the gas and one for the brake." So I knew he was very interested and also had no prior experience. Being not very tall, it was a bit hard for him to fly. He would get altitude right, then fix up course but then kinda get the leans. It was hard to get him to use the panel and horizon. I made this one a xc to a small Delta with a very large runway. I thought to myself: "Hey, I'm getting better at this ride thing, I've got 7500x150 of runway so I will let him keep his hands on the yoke and have him rotate us off." DID NOT GO WELL! When I said rotate he pulled back. And he pulled back more. And more. So I put enough pressure to stop the pull. But the deck angle got pretty steep. So I started overriding him and pushed harder and final gave out a confident (but not panicked) "My plane". And I just pushed us right back to level to get some airspeed back. I could just feel his instinct, he was nervous and thought pulling back would equal safety and security. Lessons learned on this flight!!!!
#10: Coworker
Now this guy is really interested in flying! So much so that his first questions months ago were about capabilities and ownership of a SR22T. During the winter I talked him into getting a discovery ride with my first CFI. He did it and enjoyed it. But he wants so bad for this to work for his wife and I just tell him be a pilot because you want to. I can tell (his words) that he wants it to be with others. So this flight he asked for something fun to see, didn't need to fly so much. So I asked for a scenic of MPLS. Didn't quite get what I wanted due to the main airport traffic direction. However, eventually (on FF of course) we were cleared to fly over downtown as long as I kept the IDS tower to my right. WOW!!! That was awesome. I am not a fan of flying that low (1250agl over congested city) so I was always looking for a place to land while he was taking in the sites. On the way back we went right under 3 Passengers jets on final. The closest was +700ft and well under 1 mile. I think I could hear an alarm going off when Approach was vectoring me. Great flight to round out the first 10.