Snaggletooth
Line Up and Wait
When do you guys normally write your Flight Plans? The Day before the Flight based on Forecasted weather, or the Day of the Flight based on current Weather?
Depending on the length of the flight I may start weeks before I go. Especially if it some place entirely new.When do you normally write your Flight Plans? The Day before the Flight based on Forecasted weather, or the Day of the Flight based on current Weather?
This works for me too, even though I have my certificate.For Student Pilots preparing cross-country flight logs for training, I generally teach to prepare the outline the night before with checkpoints, courses, distances, frequencies, etc, and then to finish the final timing and heading data on the day of the flight when they get useful wind data.
Generally that is good advice. But I think in today's world one may need to think ahead on long XC a bit more. This would be due to the lack of easy access to sectionals. If you wait to the night before and then realize that you are flying past a sectional boundary you take the risk of getting to the airport and them either not having the one you need or not even carrying sectionals at all. For a lot of people these days they have to order charts.For Student Pilots preparing cross-country flight logs for training, I generally teach to prepare the outline the night before with checkpoints, courses, distances, frequencies, etc, and then to finish the final timing and heading data on the day of the flight when they get useful wind data.
Generally that is good advice. But I think in today's world one may need to think ahead on long XC a bit more.
There's just something about physically drawing the course line on a sectional that lights up brain parts to register landmarks, terrain and all kinds of other good stuff that I think are easy to miss using computer assistance.
I just need to add the final heading calculations and it will be done.
And don't forget that actual winds are frequently different from the briefing you get before you go. Being able to calculate the changes in your head, or at least with an E6B (not a calculator) will let you adjust and not get flustered when your neat and tidy plan gets knocked off kilter. Planning is a great thing, but being able to adjust is just as important.
Trapper John
Thanks for all the input guys! Just what I was looking for!
I have the Flight Plan for my long dual XC pretty much done. I just need to add the final heading calculations and it will be done.
And that's why I think using sectionals for planning is a good thing, even if they take a little effort to get these days.. There's just something about physically drawing the course line on a sectional that lights up brain parts to register landmarks, terrain and all kinds of other good stuff that I think are easy to miss using computer assistance. Plus, it's kind of neat to stash the old charts in a box and pull them out years later along with logs to bring back a lot of neat memories.
Trapper John
Fli-..pla-...
What? Huh?
Plans are only made to be changed! Of course, that's after you get your private certificate. As a student, I would draw the lines on the sectionals, place bold dots where the checkpoints where, and measure out the distances the day or night before, and put them in my nav log. Then I'd get the winds right before I would depart, and fill in all my times, and double check to make sure that I had enough fuel for the trip. The last time I did any of that was when I was an IR student. Now, with 6+ hours of fuel on board, I fly till I gotta pee.
Do you fly IFR?
Yep. /G
Here was my last flight:
http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N727DS/history/20100213/1827Z/9D9/KSRQ
I had an hour of fuel left when I landed.
Then you spend some time on a flight plan -- at the very least submitting basic data, altitude, and route.
Now, with 6+ hours of fuel on board, I fly till I gotta pee.
I thought that's what empty Gatorade bottles were for?
The biggest problem I used to have with XCs was making sure I had enough charts.
That was a problem for me too. But that's all been solved with the EFB. Every chart for the US is in it, and it's velcroed right next to the 430. The only paper in the plane is a scratch pad for reroutes, frequency changes, and wx information.