Ken Ibold
Final Approach
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Ken Ibold
I try to think the best of people. But the more I read, the more this just sounds like intellectual masturbation.
Not necessarily. Unfortunately as an instructor that used to be more full-time in the light sport side of things I used to hear a lot of very passionate dreams like this from otherwise rational seeming individuals. Some of them were very successful businessmen who just thought they could make it work like some accountant’s balance sheet. I humored a few, too to my own regret. There was this guy that said he owned three taildraggers and finally wanted to get legal and he seemed like he could talk the talk... when it came to flying, it was quite scary, but I tried to let him prove himself wrong. That part wasn’t sooo very scary as it maybe could have been, but he couldn’t hold centerline to save his life. He took me to the edge several times and I would take it back but then an FAA guy later questioned me why I was letting a student get that far (I thought I was doing my job as a line of defense in this case). My belief at the time was that this particular student who did hold a pilot certificate wasn’t ever going to be “safe” to solo in tailwheel because of his hazardous attitudes and lack of ability to accurately self-evaluate and I had to let him figure that out within my comfort zone and I will say he *kept* taking it to the edge. I sent that guy home without an endorsement with a very good conscience. There were others that this thread reminds me of even more...
I try to think the best of people. But the more I read, the more this just sounds like intellectual masturbation.
In every circumstance, no. In many relevant circumstances, yes. Some people are demonstrably better than others.Just one question. Have you ever met ANYONE who could self-evaluate reasonably well?
Yes, but most of those people, like Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindberg, Bob Hoover, Eric Brown, Steve Hinton, etc... have all worked their way to success and also demonstrated reasonable humility and good decision making. You're not in that category yet by a long, long shot.I mean someone who did something significant in life. Anyone? Or is this impossible for human beings?
That sounds good, but somehow all that experience doesn't seem to have taught you important and relevant information related to your future Pipistrel. For someone with as much experience as you seem to claim, I'm also surprised that you don't approach this with a more healthy skepticism. I'm probably less skeptical than most here of the Pipistrel's capabilities, but I still see big glaring holes in your posts. I've also got my own concerns about your ability to properly research. I'll score you a notch for coming here to ask, but take that notch away for not listening well.I have had my pilot certificate for decades. Back when I flew a lot, I mostly did bush flying to spots that 99% of pilots would never go... period. However, to be fair, I worked up to those kinds of places slowly. Start with a bunch of easy places. Then several a little more difficult. And so forth, and so forth... until I reached the point where I decided "the risk of going further would be too high".
Nope, but I think you've definitely got a hazardous attitude towards a multitude of experienced individuals who think you're going to be a person being searched for by the Coast Guard if you make it that far.I guess what amazes me most is the attitude that just because some humans are incapable of making reasonable judgements, therefore every human is incapable. Just read this thread and you will find that people pretend to know the case about me without knowing me at all, without knowing my history, without knowing my attitudes or skills, without knowing anything specific. Which leads me to believe they believe that no human can self-evaluate. Is that what you believe? Just curious.
you mention the fuel, in liters of course to tick us all off. GALLONS!
Anyway, what is the oil consumption on that bad boy over a 17+ hour continuous flight? Do they have "oil bladders."?
Please reply in Quarts.
Here is what I don't understand. You're looking at buying a new factory built airplane that will cost well north of $100k. You intend to do something with this airplane it really was not designed to do. There are plenty of certified airplanes available that cost the same or less and are much better suited to what you intend and will be able to do the task with a much better margin of safety. Why this airplane when there are so many others that can do the job better for similar money?
You're asking questions but don't seem to like the answers you're getting. So I don't expect this to have any impact or sway you, but I'm going to say it anyway. Trying cross an ocean VFR is nothing short of idiotic. Instrument ratings exist as to plenty of airplanes that can legally operate IFR. It ain't rocket science or uncharted territory, get an instrument ticket and get an airplane that can legally fly instruments or don't do it.
Because here's the thing, its all well and good if you don't care whether you end up as a corpse in the ocean. But should that happen, people will be obligated to look for you and will therefore be forced to put themselves in harms way due to your poor choices. Any way you slice it, that ain't cool.
...I say 5000km even though the furthest I need to fly is 3800km, because 5000km includes a reasonable safety margin.
My concerns would be in this order:One more question... a poll of sorts, for anyone to answer.
What is most likely to lead to my death in the island flying I have described:
#1: Run out of fuel, leading to a crash into the ocean.
#2: The engine fails, leading to a crash into the ocean.
#3: Pilot falls asleep, leading to a crash into the ocean.
#4: Pilot drinks then flies, leading to a crash into the ocean.
#5: Turbulence rips off tail or control surface, leading to crash into the ocean.
#6: GPS/avionics/navigation fails, leading to fuel exhaustion and crash in the ocean.
#7: Inability to stay out of IMC, leading to pilot loss of control and crash into the ocean.
#8: This moron of a pilot deserves to die, so god crashes his airplane into the ocean.
#9: Some other reason... please state.
I am actually being serious here. Though some people post sensible messages warning about specific worries they have, others just say "you are insane" or equivalent but do not say why they think my plans are absurd. I'm curious what everyone thinks, because this gives me specific items to think about and hopefully find reasonable mitigation or solutions for.
I am in fact talking used airplanes. As for the rest of your post, can't comment, no idea what a km is.Please list the best examples of those airplanes that you know of. Unless you're talking used airplanes, I don't know of any others capable of 5000km non-stop flights. Note that I say 5000km even though the furthest I need to fly is 3800km, because 5000km includes a reasonable safety margin. Well, some people think that margin is reasonable, others don't. My maximum budget is $200K including everything (options, shipping, etc).
I'm still confused. Did you come here for advice or just to spew your theories? I'd imagine offering advice to someone who has everything figured out, is as good as talking to the wall next to my desk. I'm concerned about the attitude that you approach this idea with.
Did he do it VFR in a light sport?Thanks for the attempt to make people think this is a fake thread. Is that also what you told the guy who flew this same airplane around the world twice?
Motorglider, but there are light sport registrations of basically the same plane. Like I said, I'm generally a Pipistrel fan, I just wish I could get one in Standard Category.Did he do it VFR in a light sport?
Interesting but doesn't change my opinion that trying to cross an ocean VFR is a bad idea. Also might be worth pointing out out that glancing at the links it seems none of those people attempted to go from California to Hawaii. Could it be even they thought it was a bad idea?Motorglider, but there are light sport registrations of basically the same plane. Like I said, I'm generally a Pipistrel fan, I just wish I could get one in Standard Category.
https://www.pipistrel.si/news/flight-around-the-world-weexpedition
https://www.pipistrel.si/extras/ext...-flew-around-the-world-and-set-a-world-record
https://www.flyingmag.com/pipistrel-virus-proves-efficiency-around-world
https://www.total-slovenia-news.com...top-in-1st-all-female-flight-around-the-world
In every circumstance, no. In many relevant circumstances, yes. Some people are demonstrably better than others.
Yes, but most of those people, like Jimmy Doolittle, Charles Lindberg, Bob Hoover, Eric Brown, Steve Hinton, etc... have all worked their way to success and also demonstrated reasonable humility and good decision making. You're not in that category yet by a long, long shot.
That sounds good, but somehow all that experience doesn't seem to have taught you important and relevant information related to your future Pipistrel. For someone with as much experience as you seem to claim, I'm also surprised that you don't approach this with a more healthy skepticism. I'm probably less skeptical than most here of the Pipistrel's capabilities, but I still see big glaring holes in your posts. I've also got my own concerns about your ability to properly research. I'll score you a notch for coming here to ask, but take that notch away for not listening well.
Nope, but I think you've definitely got a hazardous attitude towards a multitude of experienced individuals who think you're going to be a person being searched for by the Coast Guard if you make it that far.
I am in fact talking used airplanes. As for the rest of your post, can't comment, no idea what a km is.
You'd have a good point if Neil was 12-1/2 years old when he strapped himself in that rocket. But that's not the case, is it?That's why I'm starting this conversation about 6 months before I get my airplane, and about one year before I provisionally fly across open ocean. You and everyone has to realize, when Neil Armstrong at age 11 said he was going to fly to the moon someday, people were appropriately [more-than] skeptical.
That advice is exactly as detailed as it could possibly be.But as you should see if you read these messages, those areas where I am extremely weak in my knowledge, and therefore rationally humble, I don't hear much advice. The best I got was "get an IFR rating". Well, that may be good advice, but isn't very detailed.
My concerns would be in this order:
1. Getting the plane legal
2. Getting good training
3. Accurate practice
Then:
1. Pilot stamina / endurance / conditioning
2. Running out of fuel in headwinds
3. Unexpected weather
4. Mechanical issues
If you could get a Pipistrel legal to do stuff, especially if it could actually get certified to do stuff, that would be awesome and a lot of us would tip our hat to you in a big way. A Standard Category Pipistrel would be awesome.
Not necessarily just IFR training. A 500 hour pilot just doesn't have the weather experience to know what he might be up against. I'd say a lot of study on Pacific weather patterns, navigation, dead reckoning, long-range stuff, too. Out in the Pacific, I have no idea what kind of equipment they are are using, if any, but you might find some places you might need to know how to use the ADF, which means one more piece of equipment you need on the plane and more weight, too. You also need to know what to do if GPS quits on you.That's interesting! My biggest fear is... mechanical issues! Just goes to show (assuming you're correct), I have my head on upside down!
Actually, I worry a great deal about your first #1. Though I really, really, really don't want to build mine from a kit, from what I've heard so far that may be the only way to be legal and remain legal for a substantial period of time. I suppose one way around that, assuming I never land at a serious airport anywhere, is to just "not worry about it". But I really prefer not to go that way.
I'm not sure what you mean by "training". Do you mean "IFR training"? I have to agree that IFR training certainly would not hurt. I am still trying to figure out how much IFR training will actually help in practice compared to "training" or [simulated] "practice" of getting out of bad IMC with capable avionics that includes everything except ILS instrumentation. After all, probably 98% of airports/airstrips/landing-spots in south-pacific islands have no ILS equipment. So if the nearest ILS equipped airport is well beyond my reach (remaining fuel), all the ILS equipment in the world won't save my bacon. But lots of practice navigating out of IMC with the GPS, moving-maps, synthetic vision and autopilot that the airplane will have, could be worth a great deal more. Remember, I mean in my specific mission out in the middle of the pacific ocean where few landing spots have ILS/IFR equipment. To be sure, the value of ILS/IFR within the mainland USA for example would be VASTLY greater. Or so it seems to me at this point. OTOH, maybe there are a lot more benefits and capabilities to IFR systems than I imagine. That could be true.
Boy do I wish the pipistrel virus sw was a standard certified airplane like a Cessna 172 or whatever. I guess that must cost a lot in time, effort and money, or they'd do that.
As an aside, I do believe pipistrel may try to make their new panthera 4-seat airplane a standard certified airplane. So maybe if they go (or went) through that process on the panthera, they will consider that for their 2-seat airplanes. I note that even though the pipistrel virus sw qualifies as an LSA (or SLSA maybe it is), almost everyone who buys the airplane in the USA is a private pilot and the airplane is categorized as some version of "experimental".
Have you thought about the Pipistrel sponsored STC for a Rotax Hydrogen engine? @ihenning can fill you in on the nonexistent details.
Extended range tanks add very little weight or additional fuel burn on flights in which they're not needed and therefore empty. Most aircraft with big engines and higher associated fuel burns also go relatively fast. Pull the power back to LSA speeds and fuel burn drops accordingly.km == kilometer == 0.62 miles (approximately).
If you want to mention a few candidates, please feel free. But I should mention that an airplane with high fuel consumption and enormous fuel tanks would be too expensive for me to be able to feed with fuel on an ongoing basis.
Your brain likes to measure distance in kilometers and measures fuel burn in miles per gallon. Flight planning must be a nightmare for you.Also note (from my first message at the top of this thread) that I also want to resume bush/backcountry/STOL flying like I used to do back when I was flying a lot. That's the reason for the Baringer 26" Tundra wheels/brakes/tires accessory. One reason that I became attracted to this airplane is that it satisfies all four of these desires:
#1: Capable of very short landings and take-offs required for bush/backcountry/STOL flying.
#2: Capable of very long range flying (for a tiny single engine airplane) so I could fly the 3800km "longest-legs" to fly across the south-pacific ocean.
#3: Great fuel economy so I can afford to feed it fuel (50mpg to 70mpg).
#4: Doesn't cost more than my life savings (budget $200K or less).
I used to manage the maintenance for a small fleet of airplanes. These days I manage a larger fleet of commercial trucks. One thing that both jobs have taught me well is that brand new equipment breaks too. Sometimes, not often, but sometimes, brand new equipment can be more problematic than older equipment.I do have a possibly irrational degree of fear of used equipment, which is why I strongly prefer new (and thus know the entire history). However, I am curious to know what you would suggest as alternatives.
The fact that you speak of yourself in such glowing an grandiose terms means you really ARE "all that and a bag of chips" or your a poseur. The fact that $200K constitutes your life savings tells me which one.If you read my posts, you'd know I've been a scientist, engineer, INVENTOR and product developer my whole life.
Do you know what INVENTION is? It is fairly accurate to say invention is mental masturbation. After all, what you are considering DOES NOT EXIST... until you make it exist. Then it is real. Then it is not mental masturbation. Then it becomes an everyday reality.
So you know what? I agree. But I've gone through this a great number of times in my life. Sometimes I decide "no go" and drop it. Other times I carry it all the way through and make it real, make it happen... and enjoy the results.
Most people are not inventors, and do not think like inventors. That's okay, somebody needs to just turn the crank or poke the buttons on what inventors create.
But know this. So-called mental masturbation can and has led to some good things. Go ahead and discount it all you wish. I'm sure that's exactly what people did to the guy who already flew this same kind of airplane around the world twice, once in each direction. And he had to fly these same long range hops over the south pacific that I'm planning. And he accomplished some other feats too, ones that I won't try. So know this. He had to go through his mental masturbation too... before he did it for real.
Good thing for him that he planned before he jumped... I mean flew.
That advice is exactly as detailed as it could possibly be.
The fact that you speak of yourself in such glowing an grandiose terms means you really ARE "all that and a bag of chips" or your a poseur. The fact that $200K constitutes your life savings tells me which one.
I have nothing more to contribute.
Hmmm, interesting read to say the least, not sure it has been mentioned, but what 58 year old can ride in a spam, (OK this one is plastic) can for 16 to 20 hours, much less stay alert and awake. The craft to the left had 72 Gallon tanks which gave me nearly 7 hours endurance. There is no way this body could have taken 7 hours in the air, just wasn't going to happen.
Wasn't there a movie based on a true story about two guys trying to deliver a couple Cessna Crop dusters to Australia with HI as a stop over. Oh yes, "Flight From Hell", a little dated but a good watch none the less.
In all seriousness, if you are determined to purchase the aircraft do so. Start small and work up to 1000 nm trips non stop, then 1500, then 2000 all over land. If that hasn't dissuaded you from your goal keep moving things up till you have the confidence and experience to do what it is you want to do.
POA is like a supermarket, and not everything you see on the shelf is good for you. If you get nothing more than this from 4 pages of posts, understand that no one wants to read about you in the headlines for something going horribly wrong.
This guy needs a boat, not an airplane.
You write too much so I'm skipping a lot. This bit I quoted here describes myself almost exactly. I like to build stuff. I like to make stuff. I often like to do it in ways that I think it should be done instead of how everyone else does it. But trying to fly 1000+ miles VFR kills people dead and I don't mess with that. If you're fine it then go. But remember what I said earlier, being willing to die for your own pleasure is all well and good. But people will be obligated to find you and depending on the circumstances, one or more of them could lose their own lives in the process. Putting yourself in harms way is one thing. Putting others in harms way because of it is irresponsible. Those people have families. They shouldn't have to die looking because some bull headed asswipe that didn't want to listen.I want to answer that without being offensive. I understand that a "normal way" exists to accomplish just about everything that has been done before. And I also understand that almost everyone just follows the "normal way" to do XYZ once they decide to do XYZ. Furthermore, I also understand that's how almost everyone thinks.
I'm sorry I ask for so much detail. But, as you can see, I will not be in the normal situations (over a continent cluttered with cities) that make IFR a no brainer.
So someone out there. Please explain why one short sentence is so obviously correct, and all anyone needs to know... for the situation I will be in. If someone explains, I'll nod my head and say, "Oh, now I get it". But so far, I don't get it. Other factors seem more important than IFR/ILS.
There is more to IFR than weather. JFK Jr. didn’t make it 25 miles over the water on a moonless night, you are going 2500. Good luck.
A special flower though you may be, this bit right here scares the crap out of most pilots and CFI's. Your plan is essentially 'I've got an auto pilot so I don't need to know how to fly instruments beyond what I learned for my private training'. There a ton of pilots who have gone before you that had that same attitude and their stories can be found at ntsb.gov. I suggest you get familiar with some of them. If you're looking for a place to start, search for a guy named John Kennedy Jr....make sure the engine doesn't crap out when flown for several hours, practice letting GPS-guided autopilot fly me through [pretend] IMC to small rural airports, and so forth.
You write too much so I'm skipping a lot. This bit I quoted here describes myself almost exactly. I like to build stuff. I like to make stuff. I often like to do it in ways that I think it should be done instead of how everyone else does it. But trying to fly 1000+ miles VFR kills people dead and I don't mess with that. If you're fine it then go. But remember what I said earlier, being willing to die for your own pleasure is all well and good. But people will be obligated to find you and depending on the circumstances, one or more of them could lose their own lives in the process. Putting yourself in harms way is one thing. Putting others in harms way because of it is irresponsible. Those people have families. They shouldn't have to die looking because some bull headed asswipe that didn't want to listen.
As for the rest of your manifesto, yeah yeah yeah I get it. You're unique and smart and special and therefore you must do things your own way. Realize that believe it or not, you've just accurately described quite a few of the individuals who post here. They're not the average Joe. They're the above average Joe and they always made their way being successful at doing things everyone else said couldn't be done, just like you. And some of those folks are telling you they wouldn't try what you're intended to try. Food for thought there.
Sorry, I'm going to be the first to ask you, "What the ****?"
You have no PPL and are questioning the value of IR on the way to your mythical LSA flight to HI under VFR.
What else you got for us?
I fly over desert every week, some of it hostile for landings. I regularly cross 400 mile distances on a schedule and lots of airline pilots fly way bigger legs than that. Even though I know my routes and general weather patterns, I regularly have to alter plans for weather. I don’t think you realize just how much opportunity for bad weather 1500 miles represents.I have already flown several flight of hundreds of miles on moonless nights... a large portion of which was over completely black wilderness areas and national forests. And the airplanes I flew had no GPS or moving maps or autopilots or fancy gizmos. So if you think moonless nights will scare me, you're talking to the wrong astronomer! If you read all my posts in this thread, you'd already know that I got hooked on astronomy at a little kid, lived alone for 7 years at a remote mountaintop research station (observatory), and have spend more thousands of hours outside at night than anyone you will ever know (by a factor of many, many, many times).
I have a feeling JFK was in IFR weather when he lost control. I have no idea whether he had an autopilot or not.
However, your comment does raise an interesting point. I took my first two flight lessons back east. That was all I needed to know I was not interested in flying in the typical hazy conditions that are common back east. I didn't continue training until I lived outside of Monterey, California where visibility [above and away from the coastal fog] was infinitely better.
I wonder how many pilots here are too afraid to fly 25 miles across a lake or bay. I am certainly not. Of course I do prefer to stay in VFR conditions. In fact, I prefer to fly when actual visibility is measured in hundreds of kilometers, if not hundreds of miles. I wonder whether so many of you pilots are terrified of flying is because... you do live back east where I decided flying wasn't worth the effort due to the horrible haze, humidity, pollution and crappy weather. Who knows. All I can say is, it ain't the same out west, and it ain't the same near Hawaii either. From what I can tell so far (not conclusive), weather in most of the south-pacific is at least roughly similar to Hawaii. We shall see. Honestly, I feel sorry for you poor folks who must fly in terror due to eternally horrible and unpredictable conditions. You have my sympathy.
A special flower though you may be, this bit right here scares the crap out of most pilots and CFI's. Your plan is essentially 'I've got an auto pilot so I don't need to know how to fly instruments beyond what I learned for my private training'. There a ton of pilots who have gone before you that had that same attitude and their stories can be found at ntsb.gov. I suggest you get familiar with some of them. If you're looking for a place to start, search for a guy named John Kennedy Jr.