courierguy wrote:I purposely didn't add any details, as I too thought it was pretty odd. BUT, I didn't pick up on the fact it happened at night, probably because I don't night fly, never have, so I guess I assumed it happened during the day, making it even more explainable. At least he got it down more or less in one piece. Assuming his GPS was working, it is a bit odd.
Why do you need to fly at night to get your license?? The only reason you are required to have night flight training is for your night rating. PPL does not require night flying.Hammer wrote:courierguy wrote:I purposely didn't add any details, as I too thought it was pretty odd. BUT, I didn't pick up on the fact it happened at night, probably because I don't night fly, never have, so I guess I assumed it happened during the day, making it even more explainable. At least he got it down more or less in one piece. Assuming his GPS was working, it is a bit odd.
How in the hell did you get a pilot license without any night flying???
And for what it's worth, I'm pretty sure a GPS isn't required equipment on an aircraft...pretty sure it's not even part of the PP test criteria, or at least it wasn't when I got mine.
Not saying it makes good sense to fly without one, but I don't think you can pass your PP flight test if you have to use a GPS to get where you're going. I guess I don't know where the assumption that the pilot had a GPS comes from.
Maybe he had one, maybe not. Doesn't matter...he identified where the airport was (incorrectly), then set up for a landing and couldn't come up with a Plan B in time not to hit the ground when he figured out it wasn't actually the airport. Not that strange a story...anyone who claims they haven't set up on the wrong piece of turf hasn't flown that much. Now whether they touched down or not is a different story...
Why do you need to fly at night to get your license?? The only reason you are required to have night flight training is for your night rating. PPL does not require night flying.
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I'm in Canada so that's what I'm thinking about. No night flying requirement here for the PPL. if we want we get a night rating tagged on and that's when we do any night flying.Cannon wrote:Why do you need to fly at night to get your license?? The only reason you are required to have night flight training is for your night rating. PPL does not require night flying.
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Just to clarify, night flying IS very much required for a PPL. In Alaska, you have 12 months to get the night time after the check ride, but your license becomes invalid if you don't.
Sport Pilots, otoh, are not required to get night time.
courierguy wrote:You can get a SEL without night flying, I did. BUT your ticket will state it as a prohibition, mine does anyway. I think most new pilots probably just get steamrolled over, it's assumed, that you want to fly at night, so night training is probably rolled into the training package. I was using my own homebuilt for the majority of my official training, so paying rent on a 172 for 3 hours for something I had no interest in rubbed me the wrong way. My SEL cost me less then $1000.00, by using my own bird as much as possible.
Hammer wrote:courierguy wrote:You can get a SEL without night flying, I did. BUT your ticket will state it as a prohibition, mine does anyway. I think most new pilots probably just get steamrolled over, it's assumed, that you want to fly at night, so night training is probably rolled into the training package. I was using my own homebuilt for the majority of my official training, so paying rent on a 172 for 3 hours for something I had no interest in rubbed me the wrong way. My SEL cost me less then $1000.00, by using my own bird as much as possible.
That's pretty cool...never heard of anyone doing that before.
FWIW, when I did the night flying for my PPL my instructor told me that the US was the only country on earth where pilots were allowed to fly at night without an IFR rating, and I should probably think about that some. Not sure if he was entirely correct, but it did make an impression on me regarding the risks of night flying.
Slightly off subject, but for a commercial ticket, even if you're already IFR, you have to do a one-hour nighttime cross country flight with a CFI. The fact that you could have been doing said flights fourteen times a week for the past 20 years with your PPL doesn't seem to matter...you have to do one with a CFI. Never understood that part of the commercial ticket.
courierguy wrote:You can get a SEL without night flying, I did. BUT your ticket will state it as a prohibition, mine does anyway. I think most new pilots probably just get steamrolled over, it's assumed, that you want to fly at night, so night training is probably rolled into the training package. I was using my own homebuilt for the majority of my official training, so paying rent on a 172 for 3 hours for something I had no interest in rubbed me the wrong way. My SEL cost me less then $1000.00, by using my own bird as much as possible.
If so, they can come after me and make me get a night rating, but I want them to look at my home airstrip first, and see if THEY would want to land it at night. It would seem to me that if I have a prohibition against night flying stated on my certificate (license?) and I DON'T fly at night, I'm golden, if not I'll apologize if ever called out on it. And challenge them to find a night flight in my log book. Case closed!Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests