TexasAviation
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2014
- Messages
- 214
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TexasAviation
Well, I finally took my first flying lesson.
I wish I could say it was inspiring — a breathtaking, bird-like sense of freedom that I'd been dreaming of — but I'd be lying.
I'd been planning to train in a Cessna 150, but always in the back of my mind I wondered whether my instructor and I would be too heavy to fly it. At about 450 pounds total, the weight and balance didn't work out. No surprise there.
So we took the club's Archer up instead. Not that big a deal. It'll cost me more to train in, but it's more comfortable and more like the kind of plane I'll want to fly after training anyway.
The downside was that after studying the airspeed numbers, systems, gauges etc. in the Cessna, I found myself in a completely unfamiliar Piper. That threw me for a loop.
A bigger problem, though, was airsickness. On a gusty day, I felt queasy the whole flight and ended up losing my breakfast near the end of the 1.4-hour flight. I felt like only about 60% of my brain was focused on learning the aircraft and 40% on my stomach the whole time.
Basically, I felt foggy-brained and not "in the moment" at all. I was overwhelmed by all the sensations of moving in three dimensions, controlling the plane, knowing where even basic things like the tach are located, etc.
Despite all this, I'm not discouraged at all. I know it's just going to take some time ... and will be a lot better once my body adjusts to the sensation of flying and I actually familiarize myself with the aircraft I'll be in.
Going forward, we're going to try to fly in the evenings when the air is less choppy.
Can't wait for the next lesson!
I wish I could say it was inspiring — a breathtaking, bird-like sense of freedom that I'd been dreaming of — but I'd be lying.
I'd been planning to train in a Cessna 150, but always in the back of my mind I wondered whether my instructor and I would be too heavy to fly it. At about 450 pounds total, the weight and balance didn't work out. No surprise there.
So we took the club's Archer up instead. Not that big a deal. It'll cost me more to train in, but it's more comfortable and more like the kind of plane I'll want to fly after training anyway.
The downside was that after studying the airspeed numbers, systems, gauges etc. in the Cessna, I found myself in a completely unfamiliar Piper. That threw me for a loop.
A bigger problem, though, was airsickness. On a gusty day, I felt queasy the whole flight and ended up losing my breakfast near the end of the 1.4-hour flight. I felt like only about 60% of my brain was focused on learning the aircraft and 40% on my stomach the whole time.
Basically, I felt foggy-brained and not "in the moment" at all. I was overwhelmed by all the sensations of moving in three dimensions, controlling the plane, knowing where even basic things like the tach are located, etc.
Despite all this, I'm not discouraged at all. I know it's just going to take some time ... and will be a lot better once my body adjusts to the sensation of flying and I actually familiarize myself with the aircraft I'll be in.
Going forward, we're going to try to fly in the evenings when the air is less choppy.
Can't wait for the next lesson!