Challenged
Pattern Altitude
You ever misjudge the climb performance of your airplane and/or the height of some clouds up ahead and inadvertently fly through them a little bit?
You ever misjudge the climb performance of your airplane and/or the height of some clouds up ahead and inadvertently fly through them a little bit?
You ever misjudge the climb performance of your airplane and/or the height of some clouds up ahead and inadvertently fly through them a little bit?
Inadvertently is when I do something that maybe is proscribed by rules. Deliberately is when you do something that is clearly proscribed by rules.define inadvertently
No because I’m not an inferior aviator.
You forgot to add, "Asking for a friend."You ever misjudge the climb performance of your airplane and/or the height of some clouds up ahead and inadvertently fly through them a little bit?
define inadvertently
Yeah, just asking because my wife and I were flying back home from a weekend away and I was trying to get above a low broken layer to stop the bouncy bouncy and it took a while to find a good spot to make that happen. I've never done this myself of course.
You ever misjudge the sense of humor in your audience and say something that was inadvertently hilarious or sarcastic yet the audience failed to recognize the clever humor because their heads are clouded with a non-sense of humor and complete lack of the ability to comprehend sarcasm?
nope. But while looking at something in the cockpit while flying below what I thought was a smooth overcast layer, I entered a lower shelf of clouds.
No, but I've gone around and done a climbing 360 to avoid doing it.You ever misjudge the climb performance of your airplane and/or the height of some clouds up ahead and inadvertently fly through them a little bit?
One of the maneuvers I train student pilots on is the 180* if clouds are encountered. Paid off once with a SP on a solo XC when she got into the clouds over a low mountain range (yes we have mountains in AL) so she didn't panic, did the 180, and return to base to tell me about it.
I call it Wyoming VFR. Nobody up there sez a word.A few years ago I was departing from the out-islands of the Bahamas (Marsh Harbor) on a showery summer day with a ceiling around 1500 ft and wet cumulus clouds all around. I flew for about 30 minutes maneuvering and avoiding clouds and trying to contact ATC (in miami) to get an IFR clearance. I could not make this work and I turned around, and headed back to Marsh. A rainshower was rolling in with a solid 20+ knot direct crosswind (in a tailwheel plane). I did not have any other options for a nearby alternate (no AWOS, no radar there). So I attemped the landing. I made it down, but it was a real mofo and I left rubber all over the runway. I would have probably been better served by cheating on my instrument clearance for a few minutes. Big sky theory and everything
I call it Wyoming VFR. Nobody up there sez a word.
Shouldn’t it be Montana VFR?I call it Wyoming VFR. Nobody up there sez a word.
You landed safe, can’t fault your decision, but technically had you decided it was safer to blow through the clouds without the clearance, you’d be covered by the “except in emergency” clause, right?A few years ago I was departing from the out-islands of the Bahamas (Marsh Harbor) on a showery summer day with a ceiling around 1500 ft and wet cumulus clouds all around. I flew for about 30 minutes maneuvering and avoiding clouds and trying to contact ATC (in miami) to get an IFR clearance. I could not make this work and I turned around, and headed back to Marsh. A rainshower was rolling in with a solid 20+ knot direct crosswind (in a tailwheel plane). I did not have any other options for a nearby alternate (no AWOS, no radar there). So I attemped the landing. I made it down, but it was a real mofo and I left rubber all over the runway. I would have probably been better served by cheating on my instrument clearance for a few minutes. Big sky theory and everything
NoShouldn’t it be Montana VFR?
I've watched someone else do it while sitting in the back seat and wondering what in hell this guy is thinking. If the object is moving down in your windscreen you will clear it. If it's not, and you're trying to outclimb it, you're going to hit it.You ever misjudge the climb performance of your airplane and/or the height of some clouds up ahead and inadvertently fly through them a little bit?
Shouldn’t it be Montana VFR?
You landed safe, can’t fault your decision, but technically had you decided it was safer to blow through the clouds without the clearance, you’d be covered by the “except in emergency” clause, right?