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Hi all. Just trying to wrap my mind around a situation I encountered last week that just keeps bothering me. I'm still a student waiting for my checkride. Last week I decided to take a short 30 min cross country flight to meet my soon to be examiner, basically just to do something different. I announced at 8 miles that I was inbound and listened for any traffic in the area and to determine if any specific runway was being used (uncontrolled by the way). Based on radio calls, one plane was in the pattern. I am very good at visualization and can create a quick mental map of where everybody should be based on radio calls. At about 5 miles, I announced that I would cross mid field at TPA +500 and circle back to 45 degree left pattern entry on the runway being used by the other traffic. I announced my intentions again at 2 miles. The other traffic was taxiing back to the runway and about 500 feet from the hold short line. As I approached mid field, I confirmed the wind sock and runway, announced my intentions again and saw the plane approaching the hold short line. As I passed mid field, I heard the other traffic announce takeoff intentions, but do not remember if he announced staying in pattern. As I turned back towards the airport and began the 45 degree entry, I announced my intentions again.
This is where the mistake was that I know I made. My "great" visualization skills made me complacent assuming he was still climbing out and I focused my traffic scan for planes that I might run into in the pattern. I know, there could have been other no radio planes in traffic, I admit that it was a huge mistake on my part not to take a better look further upwind. I was just about to announce my turn to base, I heard a snarky announcement come over the radio from the other plane that he was abeam the numbers and he was annoyed to turn a 360. I felt the sinking feeling in my stomach about someone being so close. I shrugged it off and focused on finishing the flight and didn't think much else about it until I was preparing the plane to return to my home airport. The other pilot came over and confronted me, not angrily, but he made a point of letting me know that I cut him off in the pattern and he made the comment abeam the numbers to basically tell me that I messed up. To make it worse, he had been on his commercial checkride with the examiner I was there to meet. He also made a point that the examiner commented that I would have failed a checkride because of cutting him off. This of course ruined the rest of my "fun" flying day.
From what happened, I assume I was beginning the 45 degree entry as he was on crosswind. As I turned to downwind, he must have been on downwind already about .5 miles behind me. I realize my mistake that I should have looked more upwind. However, the more I think about his comments, the more it bothers me. Did I cut him off, or was he trying to cut me off?
Maybe this story will give other students something to think about.
This is where the mistake was that I know I made. My "great" visualization skills made me complacent assuming he was still climbing out and I focused my traffic scan for planes that I might run into in the pattern. I know, there could have been other no radio planes in traffic, I admit that it was a huge mistake on my part not to take a better look further upwind. I was just about to announce my turn to base, I heard a snarky announcement come over the radio from the other plane that he was abeam the numbers and he was annoyed to turn a 360. I felt the sinking feeling in my stomach about someone being so close. I shrugged it off and focused on finishing the flight and didn't think much else about it until I was preparing the plane to return to my home airport. The other pilot came over and confronted me, not angrily, but he made a point of letting me know that I cut him off in the pattern and he made the comment abeam the numbers to basically tell me that I messed up. To make it worse, he had been on his commercial checkride with the examiner I was there to meet. He also made a point that the examiner commented that I would have failed a checkride because of cutting him off. This of course ruined the rest of my "fun" flying day.
From what happened, I assume I was beginning the 45 degree entry as he was on crosswind. As I turned to downwind, he must have been on downwind already about .5 miles behind me. I realize my mistake that I should have looked more upwind. However, the more I think about his comments, the more it bothers me. Did I cut him off, or was he trying to cut me off?
Maybe this story will give other students something to think about.