VWGhiaBob
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2013
- Messages
- 884
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VWGhiaBob
Think it will never happen to you? Think again...what would you have done in this situation?
The set up: A friend took me flying with a friend of his I'd long wanted to meet. He seemed like he might make another great flying buddy, and he owns the kind of plane I may buy. We're using the guy's plane because my friend couldn't start his (flooded).
The 3 of us are headed to a fly-in breakfast in So. Cal. I'm in the back seat. First, the guy tells me to check the weather while we're taking off (wrong assumption #1: He's the pilot and he checked it).
The answer: 1,500 foot ceiling AGL. Oops...isn't that MVFR or right on the edge? Wrong assumption #2: This guy has 1000's of hours...he must be IFR, right? Nope.
Just then, only minutes after takeoff, the soup starts to cloud in around us. He says, "I've done this before...we'll slip under it at 1000 feet." Trouble is, we're in a hilly area, and visibility starts to decline to the point we can only see the ground to the right side, and only because it's a hill (we're below the crest of the hillside). We can see people in their cars.
This is how people get killed. I'm imagining the headline, "Three VFR pilots enter IMC and hit hillside just outside Los Angeles."
He says, "No worries". I've done this before.
Stop here...what would you do? It's awkward at best. Even my friend is embarrassed to say anything, because we asked for a favor to go with the guy. It's easy to say you'd insist he turn around, but it's hard!
OK...here's what I did. I lied.
"Guys...Foreflight now says our destination is Low IFR, below minimums. Airport is closed to all traffic."
"Darn," he says. First time this has happened. Full power. Minutes later we're above it all, and my blood pressure goes back to normal.
There are many lessons learned out of this. I'll let you decide if you find any insights. For me, it's that maybe I'm more careful than some. Next time, I'll check the weather myself, and will never fly with someone I don't know without at least some forethought!
The set up: A friend took me flying with a friend of his I'd long wanted to meet. He seemed like he might make another great flying buddy, and he owns the kind of plane I may buy. We're using the guy's plane because my friend couldn't start his (flooded).
The 3 of us are headed to a fly-in breakfast in So. Cal. I'm in the back seat. First, the guy tells me to check the weather while we're taking off (wrong assumption #1: He's the pilot and he checked it).
The answer: 1,500 foot ceiling AGL. Oops...isn't that MVFR or right on the edge? Wrong assumption #2: This guy has 1000's of hours...he must be IFR, right? Nope.
Just then, only minutes after takeoff, the soup starts to cloud in around us. He says, "I've done this before...we'll slip under it at 1000 feet." Trouble is, we're in a hilly area, and visibility starts to decline to the point we can only see the ground to the right side, and only because it's a hill (we're below the crest of the hillside). We can see people in their cars.
This is how people get killed. I'm imagining the headline, "Three VFR pilots enter IMC and hit hillside just outside Los Angeles."
He says, "No worries". I've done this before.
Stop here...what would you do? It's awkward at best. Even my friend is embarrassed to say anything, because we asked for a favor to go with the guy. It's easy to say you'd insist he turn around, but it's hard!
OK...here's what I did. I lied.
"Guys...Foreflight now says our destination is Low IFR, below minimums. Airport is closed to all traffic."
"Darn," he says. First time this has happened. Full power. Minutes later we're above it all, and my blood pressure goes back to normal.
There are many lessons learned out of this. I'll let you decide if you find any insights. For me, it's that maybe I'm more careful than some. Next time, I'll check the weather myself, and will never fly with someone I don't know without at least some forethought!