Been a few stories involving check rides lately that I found entertaining; anymore more good tales out there?
I I thought my check ride was pretty cool so when I get to a computer I'll post that story.


whee wrote:I finished my PPL at Interstate Aviation in Pullman, WA. The day of my check ride arrives and I'm really nervous. My instructor was awesome so I felt confident but I was still sweating bullets as the oral portion started. About 30min in the DPE (I'll call him Joe), also the chief pilot for Interstate, gets called up front. Lewiston is IMC and a load of cargo from UPS needs to be picked up and hauled to Grangeville, Joe was the only IFR current pilot so he had to take the flight. He comes back to the table I'm sitting at, I'm thinking "dang, going to have to start over tomorrow," and tells me to get my headset "We'll talk in the plane."
Out on the ramp we preflight the C207, jump in, taxi out, open our IFR flight plan and takeoff for Lewiston. I really don't remember much about the questions he was asking me on the 30 min flight to LSW but I assume they were the typical oral exam questions. The only thing I do remember is Joe had Com 1 tuned to LWS tower and Com 2 tuned to Seattle Center, both going at the same time. He seemed to understand everything they said, I didn't understand a word. The entire river valley where LWS sits was fogged so he shot the ILS to 26. It was a really weird feeling to not be able to see anything out the window and knowing we were below the canyon rim. We came out of the clouds somewhere around 800' agl, just high enough that tower let us cancel the approach and switch to landing on 30.
Joe parked the 207 next to the UPS plane, who already had the packages piled outside his plane. We get out and Joe asks me if I'll load the packages in the plane while he does some paperwork, "no problem." I have to weigh each one and he reminds me to put the heavy ones in the front and the light ones in the back. I get them all weighed and was stacking them in the plane when Joe came and helped me finish. After securing the load with a cargo net we get in the plane, open the IFR flight plan and takeoff. As soon as we break through the clouds Joe cancels the IFR plan. "Sqwak VFR" the tower tells us. Joe looks at me and says, "change us to VFR." I stare at the Xponder for a second, I've never touched one let alone operated one. "Umm, I don't have one of those in my plane so I've never used one before. I can't remember what the code for VFR is." "It's 1200" Joe tells me. I reach for the knobs to change the code while thinking to myself, "isn't there something about changing the code in a certain way? Crap, I'm so screwed." I change to 1200 like I know what I'm doing, Joe didn't say anything so I figured I did ok. He asks me a bunch of other questions when en route to GIC.
He lands at GIC, we unload into the UPS truck and depart for PUW. On climb out he takes to opportunity to teach me some about fuel flows and power settings, I was so overwhelmed I don't remember any of it. Once at cruise he turns the plane over to me. I kept thinking, "please don't ask me to touch those red, blue and black knobs...I don't have a clue what to do with them". He didn't. He has me do a few simple maneuvers then tells me to track some radial to the Pullman VOR. "I've never used a VOR." I tell him. I was feeling more confident at this time so I say, "but I learned about them in ground school (a year ago) so I'll give it a shot." I tune in 122.6 on the nav and whatever radial he wanted me to track, I intercept it and track it for several minutes. Then he asks me intercept a new radial so dial in that radial and intercept it. I was glad something was going well at that point.
We arrive back at PUW, Joe lands the plane and taxis up to the hangar. There was fog moving in but he said go get your plane ready. By the time we were ready to go there was a 300ft tall vertical fog bank that covered the west half of the runway, it looked just like a basalt cliff face. Joe walk up and says. "that fog hasn't moved for 10 minutes so if your good to go I'm good." I probly should have waited but I was young and stupid so off we went. We take off from midfield and head east toward Moscow mountain. Joe tells me he hasn't flown anything that was side by side with sticks since he flew helicopters in the military and asks if he can fly. "Sure" I respond. He does a bunch of maneuvers and seemed to be having a good time.
I didn't have any nav equipment in the Luscombe but Joe had told my CFI that he would be ok with a handheld gps as long as it had a CDI indicator. I didn't have a gps like that, all I had was a Garmin etrex, so the owner of Interstate loaned me his personal Lowrance for the check ride. After Joe was done flying the plane he turned it back over to me and said turn on the GPS. So I did. He said good job, you can turn it back off if you want. I looked at him puzzled. "You already showed me you can navigate when we were in the 207, I just needed you to use some nav equipment during the official check ride." About that time someone from Interstate gets on the radio, "hey Joe, that fog is moving down the runway." "We'd better head back," Joe tells me so I turn back towards PUW. It is mid December so everything is covered in snow, there are several ag strips around but they are under several inches of snow so our closest alternate was LWS. About 3 miles out Joe reaches over and pulls the power. "You're engine just quite. What are you going to do?" There were farm fields all around us but we were pretty high so I say "we can make the runway." "Oh yeah," Joe responds with doubt in his voice. "Show me." I pull on the carb heat to be safe and pitch for 70mph while Joe cleared the throttle every couple minutes. We wouldn't have made the runway without those small bursts of power from when Joe cleared the throttle but I wasn't about to say anything about it. We had close to half the runway available and I executed a firm but ok landing. I apologize for the landing but Joe said it was fine and that we were done.
I passed! I was thrilled and exhausted. 1.1 hours of dual logged in a C207 while doing the oral portion of the exam then a flight in the Luscombe with one landing while half the airport was covered in fog.
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