Hi all,
My first post here. This site is a great resource that I just discovered over the weekend.
I'm a student pilot. I started training in August 2013. I train at Republic (KFRG) in New York, one of the busiest airports in this area, mostly GA but also many jets and even an occasional big charter (Saw an Air Canada 737 I think when some CA hockey team came to play the NY Islanders). So it's a good experience.
I fly only on Saturdays, so I get in about 2 hours/week. I'm at 34 hours now. I have not solo'd yet, for 2 reason. The main reason is that my landings are so-so. I still need my CFI's help most of the time, not much but a touch. Any advice on landings? My thing is that when I get over the threshold and kill the power the plane starts down and I get scared of smacking nose first so I start flaring when too high. But I'll be good to go with a couple more lessons. The rest of the stuff I'm pretty good at, takeoffs, manuevers are good, radio is good, getting better at keeping altitude/heading, steep turns are ok, ground ref manuevers are ok but haven't done much, etc.
The other reason is that I recently got a letter from the FAA stating that I have to do a medical flight test (SODA) since the vision in one of my eyes is below standards (I have corneal damage so can't correct it) in order to get my 3rd class medical. I was passed by the AME, but then the FAA contacted me and had me send them medical records, do tests, and finally now the SODA. I can see out of the eye, but not clear, kind of cloudy.
I read some very informative posts here about SODA's for vision issues and one poster posted a checklist that included selecting emergency landing fields at a distance/altitude/depth and spotting traffic. Honestly, I'm a little worried about those two because I just recently (2 sessions ago) started emergency procedures training and I don't have a lot of practice knowing what to look for and what's "suitable" for a landing spot. Also, about spotting traffic... at times I'll get an advisory on the radio about "traffic at your 10 o'clock at x miles", and I don't always see it right away. I honestly don't think that makes me unsafe, but it doesn't matter what I think, depends what the FAA examiner thinks. Any advice/comments on these?
Thanks for any advice.