CerroTorre
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2020
- Messages
- 136
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CerroTorre
Had one of those days of flying that felt very much like two steps backwards. And of course it happened while taking my BFR.
Has anyone else gotten completely thrown off their game by (after a long time just flying on your own) suddenly having an instructor next to you, telling you what they want to see? Through absolutely no fault of the CFI, I found myself repeatedly flying to their demands, instead of flying the airplane. Terrible speed control, behind the airplane, imprecise glide slope control, etc. On the same tasks that feel every day and casual otherwise.
My takeaways were that I am way out of practice in being instructed and that these basic skills are (obviously) not yet cooked into my DNA. I did not split my attention well, did not focus on flying (stick and rudder) and instead focused on pleasing. I focused on the numbers they wanted, which left me outside of the usual references I use to fly, and suddenly I flew neither their standard or my standard very well. Was I safe? Yes. Was it pretty? Absolutely not. Did I learn anything. Yep - lots.
So a "successful" BFR. Sure. But it gives me pause as I head toward future checkrides. Being assessed and flying with another pilot is a skill as much as any other skill. And I was bad at it.
I set high standards for myself. I think we all should and most do. I've flown with some of the best stick and rudder pilots in existence (truly) ... so I've seen what possibilities exist at that level. And unfortunately I am the type of perfectionist that has a difficult time separating my assessment of my skill level (sub-500 hours) from my assessment of their flying (20k+ hours).
Still progression is the entire point, imho. How do folks get their focus back after getting bucked off the horse a little? What gets you back into the game when you feel out of the game? Specific tasks in the airplane? How to shake the mental funk of feeling like a schmuck? =) Cheers and happy flying, even on the "bad" days. =)
Has anyone else gotten completely thrown off their game by (after a long time just flying on your own) suddenly having an instructor next to you, telling you what they want to see? Through absolutely no fault of the CFI, I found myself repeatedly flying to their demands, instead of flying the airplane. Terrible speed control, behind the airplane, imprecise glide slope control, etc. On the same tasks that feel every day and casual otherwise.
My takeaways were that I am way out of practice in being instructed and that these basic skills are (obviously) not yet cooked into my DNA. I did not split my attention well, did not focus on flying (stick and rudder) and instead focused on pleasing. I focused on the numbers they wanted, which left me outside of the usual references I use to fly, and suddenly I flew neither their standard or my standard very well. Was I safe? Yes. Was it pretty? Absolutely not. Did I learn anything. Yep - lots.
So a "successful" BFR. Sure. But it gives me pause as I head toward future checkrides. Being assessed and flying with another pilot is a skill as much as any other skill. And I was bad at it.
I set high standards for myself. I think we all should and most do. I've flown with some of the best stick and rudder pilots in existence (truly) ... so I've seen what possibilities exist at that level. And unfortunately I am the type of perfectionist that has a difficult time separating my assessment of my skill level (sub-500 hours) from my assessment of their flying (20k+ hours).
Still progression is the entire point, imho. How do folks get their focus back after getting bucked off the horse a little? What gets you back into the game when you feel out of the game? Specific tasks in the airplane? How to shake the mental funk of feeling like a schmuck? =) Cheers and happy flying, even on the "bad" days. =)