ColeThePilot
Filing Flight Plan
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2014
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ColeThePilot
Hey guys, I'm posting in the pilot training thread despite being a licensed pilot because...not to steal a line from Jason Schappert but I believe a good pilot is always learning.
So I've hit a bit of an embarrassing paradox as a private pilot. I've started shying away from gusty, turbulent conditions. I'm unsure if I'm exercising good airmanship, or if I'm proving to myself I lack confidence when I call off a flight due to AIRMET Tangos and 17+ knot winds.
I flew in them early on and I don't think I'm lacking experience. While I was still a student pilot, my instructor would purposely send us out to an airport with unfavorable runways on gusty days, and he even let me make my first solo with a hefty crosswind.
Last October though I tried to take my mom flying in 15-17 knot winds, with pretty high winds aloft in the 40s-50s. She genuinely asked me if we were crashing before we even reached 1000', and ultimately I needed to bring us back. Her panic attack rattled me a bit. What if my passenger was right? What if I didn't have everything under control?
Ever since then I've pictured hitting a micro-burst, or totally losing control in a violent, invisible wave of chaos in the sky any time I see conditions ripe for chops. I need help being able to draw that line in the sand, and be able to look at conditions and know right away what's bad, and what's manageable. It's not as obvious as looking at temp/dew point spreads, and ceiling predictions on a TAF.
I end up sitting there after canceling the flight, looking at the sky. Should I have pushed myself to build that confidence? To see things weren't as bad as I had perceived them to be? Or would that be poor airmanship? The safety blanket of having an instructor doesn't seem to help either.
Any advice?
So I've hit a bit of an embarrassing paradox as a private pilot. I've started shying away from gusty, turbulent conditions. I'm unsure if I'm exercising good airmanship, or if I'm proving to myself I lack confidence when I call off a flight due to AIRMET Tangos and 17+ knot winds.
I flew in them early on and I don't think I'm lacking experience. While I was still a student pilot, my instructor would purposely send us out to an airport with unfavorable runways on gusty days, and he even let me make my first solo with a hefty crosswind.
Last October though I tried to take my mom flying in 15-17 knot winds, with pretty high winds aloft in the 40s-50s. She genuinely asked me if we were crashing before we even reached 1000', and ultimately I needed to bring us back. Her panic attack rattled me a bit. What if my passenger was right? What if I didn't have everything under control?
Ever since then I've pictured hitting a micro-burst, or totally losing control in a violent, invisible wave of chaos in the sky any time I see conditions ripe for chops. I need help being able to draw that line in the sand, and be able to look at conditions and know right away what's bad, and what's manageable. It's not as obvious as looking at temp/dew point spreads, and ceiling predictions on a TAF.
I end up sitting there after canceling the flight, looking at the sky. Should I have pushed myself to build that confidence? To see things weren't as bad as I had perceived them to be? Or would that be poor airmanship? The safety blanket of having an instructor doesn't seem to help either.
Any advice?
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