eetrojan
Pattern Altitude
Here’s a video of my first night flight with my instructor Mark, from John Wayne Airport, to Chino Airport, and back:
Shorter 8-minute version – http://youtu.be/aU0ZzVfD_8w
Longer 30-minute version – http://youtu.be/R6Xsih-a61A
My student takeaways on flying at night are:
Shorter 8-minute version – http://youtu.be/aU0ZzVfD_8w
Longer 30-minute version – http://youtu.be/R6Xsih-a61A
My student takeaways on flying at night are:
- It’s stunningly beautiful.
- It’s VERY hard to find an airport in the bright lights of an urban sprawl.
- The freeways are NOT nearly as prominent as you might expect them to be.
- The airport beacons are NOT easy to spot (at least around here).
- It’s hard to see the runways.
- You CANNOT see the runway edge lights when approaching from the side, only when you are generally aligned for landing. It’s important to keep track of which runway you might be seeing and which runway you want to land on.
- When Approach gives you a vector, it’s not necessarily to the runway. Independent pilotage is still important.
- It’s hard to see the runway if you forget to turn your landing light on. We planned on making a future landing without the landing light to simulate a power out situation, but I didn't plan this one. The landing light is your friend. The checklist is your friend (I turned on the fuel pump switch, but skipped over the landing light switch right next to it). A separate light for the checklist might be helpful.
- For some unknown reason, my landings are way smoother when it’s dark out. Perhaps it’s just blind luck. Pun intended.
- Three hours of training is probably not enough to be competent.