Ok so I spoke with my CFI last night about going to Oshkosh and he encouraged me to go saying that it is not as big a deal as some people make it out to be, he just recommended I take someone to help look out for traffic. I also asked him about the whole spot landing thing and he said most people just "drag it in", sort of aim for the threshold then fly low then plop down on the dot they tell you to land on.
Any other tips? I've been reading the NOTAM and it looks fairly straightforward.
Its so straightforward that dozens of people an hour screw up..
MEMORIZE it... read it every day..
Practice your landings.. at a place with a long runway and pick different intersections to land at, from 500 feet straight in (make sure the pattern isn't busy)...
Just because you are landing long doesn't mean you can drag it in, there will be a plane landing under you.
I printed the entire notam on 8 x 11 paper, then made a giant VFR sign on the back cover (like... 300 font bold) and GAP (Gen Aviation parking) for the front cover.. Hole punched and used split rings to bind it. Thats in addition to the printed copies I got from the FAA leading up to the event.
Briefed the approach again the morning before departure. Briefed it again one hour out, and briefed each portion sequentially as we passed checkpoints.. i.e. heading into Ripon... and the assigned landing..
STAY OFF THE RADIO. Listen only. There is no reason to talk.
Stay on speed, on altitude, and over the tracks until they break you out.
The very fact that you are asking for pointers means you will likely not be one of the problem pilots... but the truth is there are people who launch every year who havent read, or dont have, the NOTAM.
Everything works based on EVERYONE staying at their assigned altitudes and in their assigned sectors. I did a powerpoint years ago that showed in different colors how everything fit together to de-conflict the airspace.
Good luck..