EdFred
Taxi to Parking
Not quite. It's less than double.At least with a twin you doubled your chance of an engine problem
Not quite. It's less than double.At least with a twin you doubled your chance of an engine problem
can you explain that?Not quite. It's less than double.
What about a turbine single?
So why is ‘Real IFR’ limited to single engine????How many pilots fly single pilot, single engine in actual IMC conditions? I'm not asking about flying around in vcm weather and on an ifr flight plan and the only thing ifr about it is talking to control.
Wholeheartedly concur.If I cant fly to minimums I shouldn't be in the air.
The value is priority and separation. VFR Flight Following is just not the same.I really don't see much value of filing an ifr flight plan and flying those altitudes and routes when it is good vmc outside.
Very true. It was extremely nice to have a working A/P while departing Jacksonville last night. Sure, I could have hand flown, but it definitely would have been more stressful.Hand flying real IFR, single pilot, from TO to Landing at minimums is a skill, but it’s not the best way to do it. The AP is an important tool that makes the flight safer, even if it’s just used to give the pilot a rest during cruise in VMC.
IOW, turbine is your placebo.Same as a twin turbine.
IOW, turbine is your placebo.
To me it's still a single engine airplane and will be treated as such. I've had enough turbine engine failures to know it can happen.What about a turbine single?
To me it's still a single engine airplane and will be treated as such. I've had enough turbine engine failures to know it can happen.
Maybe I've got a million hours in turbine airplanes.So according to the FAA there is a turbine failure every 375,000 engine hours and you've had a few of them? Man you're 'unlucky'.
There are numerous and varied reasons to trust a turbine over a piston.
That's not only a smaller number, but an exponentially lower number.:
Not quite. It's less than double.
Maybe I've got a million hours in turbine airplanes.
My turbine airplane has windows.Glad you can still hold a medical at 114. Guess you’ve never seen the world outside your turbine airplane.
Warrior with steam gauges, and based in the Midwest (specifically southwest Michigan). My home field only has non-precision approaches, but just a few flight-minutes away I have a larger feeder airport with multiple ILS approaches. Those 2 times I've had to go missed were due to low ceilings and I couldn't get into my home airport, so I had to fly the ILS nearby to "wait it out".What do you fly and where?
Just this past Monday I flew IFR to Canadian Rockies International airport, YXC, the Airliner in front of me called missed approach, and was hesitant about going around for another attempt, or just heading to his alternate. The controller asked me if I had heard the 737 Pirep, I assured them yes I did, and they cleared me to land, it was not bad at all, done much tougher approaches, behind me a private King Air landed no problem. So the 737 decided that since we landed fine, he would try again, and another miss, he left to his alternate after that. A 210 was holding waiting for the 737 to land for his turn, now gone finally, the 210 was cleared to land, and did so with ease. This is not a tight runway either, at 8,000' it doesn't get much better than that, so I was shocked when the 737 missed twice. Later I find out that the crew is not new to coming there either, they are regulars and still couldn't get it done. It makes me wonder if they actually do real IFR often, or are too used to just being on AP or IFR on top which is really just glorified VFR. Before I was in my rental car driving away another plane landed without incident on their first try.
Wow, you're just so....awesome!!
Hahaha!!!! Your statement is truly silly.It makes me wonder if they actually do real IFR often, or are too used to just being on AP or IFR on top which is really just glorified VFR.
Just this past Monday I flew IFR to Canadian Rockies International airport, YXC, the Airliner in front of me called missed approach, and was hesitant about going around for another attempt, or just heading to his alternate. The controller asked me if I had heard the 737 Pirep, I assured them yes I did, and they cleared me to land, it was not bad at all, done much tougher approaches, behind me a private King Air landed no problem. So the 737 decided that since we landed fine, he would try again, and another miss, he left to his alternate after that. A 210 was holding waiting for the 737 to land for his turn, now gone finally, the 210 was cleared to land, and did so with ease. This is not a tight runway either, at 8,000' it doesn't get much better than that, so I was shocked when the 737 missed twice. Later I find out that the crew is not new to coming there either, they are regulars and still couldn't get it done. It makes me wonder if they actually do real IFR often, or are too used to just being on AP or IFR on top which is really just glorified VFR. Before I was in my rental car driving away another plane landed without incident on their first try.
That kind of things has happened to me a few times but it always leaves me thinking, “did I push it too hard”?
Is there a possibility that their company operating standards were higher than the FAA mins?
A 737 is whole lot more aircraft than a 210 or whatever.
I believe that experience always informs.
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Above 700-some-odd feet and a couple of miles vis?Actually it seems that there are two regular crews for the early morning Westjet flights. Locals say the one crew rarely has to go to an alternate even in weather to minimums. This crew is known locally as the "Chickens" they always bale out before minimums, and this time of year weather is often less than ideal, so they don't land regularly. If I was the owner of Westjet, they would be served their walking papers. It wasn't that bad, I have done a hell of a lot worse, and considered Monday's landing on the scale of difficulty from 1 to 10, about a 2. No it was not VFR which would have rated a 1, but it was a simple IFR approach and runway in site above minimums, basically no wind to speak of, and I was not loading up on ice either.
If they couldn't stick that landing, maybe they should consider a new career, possibly package puller for Amazon, nice indoor job, and easy, no risk, no fog.
Actually it seems that there are two regular crews for the early morning Westjet flights. Locals say the one crew rarely has to go to an alternate even in weather to minimums. This crew is known locally as the "Chickens" they always bale out before minimums, and this time of year weather is often less than ideal, so they don't land regularly. If I was the owner of Westjet, they would be served their walking papers. It wasn't that bad, I have done a hell of a lot worse, and considered Monday's landing on the scale of difficulty from 1 to 10, about a 2. No it was not VFR which would have rated a 1, but it was a simple IFR approach and runway in site above minimums, basically no wind to speak of, and I was not loading up on ice either.
If they couldn't stick that landing, maybe they should consider a new career, possibly package puller for Amazon, nice indoor job, and easy, no risk, no fog.
Then there’s this gem:Between saying that making a $1 mil a year is so-so of a salary and these comments, I think that Shushwap is a professional troll.
Just this past Monday I flew IFR to Canadian Rockies International airport, YXC, the Airliner in front of me called missed approach, and was hesitant about going around for another attempt, or just heading to his alternate. The controller asked me if I had heard the 737 Pirep, I assured them yes I did, and they cleared me to land, it was not bad at all, done much tougher approaches, behind me a private King Air landed no problem. So the 737 decided that since we landed fine, he would try again, and another miss, he left to his alternate after that. A 210 was holding waiting for the 737 to land for his turn, now gone finally, the 210 was cleared to land, and did so with ease. This is not a tight runway either, at 8,000' it doesn't get much better than that, so I was shocked when the 737 missed twice. Later I find out that the crew is not new to coming there either, they are regulars and still couldn't get it done. It makes me wonder if they actually do real IFR often, or are too used to just being on AP or IFR on top which is really just glorified VFR. Before I was in my rental car driving away another plane landed without incident on their first try.