hotrod150 wrote:RobBurson wrote:....I don't BS myself either. No hard IFR for me. I don't even want to fly in the clouds. I want to be on top and drop down to land with 1000' ceiling. Rob
I'm not trying to start trouble but....after you get your ticket, do you plan to file & fly under an IFR flight plan? If so, what do you do when your clearance and/or other direction from ATC sends you into hard IFR? Tell them "I wanna fly VFR IFR"? Even if you go on a not-so-bad day, the chances are very real that it will turn ugly and/or they will send you where it is ugly. Now say you shoot an approach down to min's & it's still white outside.... then what??
I also have no interest in actually flying IFR, that's one of the reasona I've never pursued the ticket. Planning for "light IFR" kinda reminds me of the joke about being a little pregnant. If you're flying IFR, you'd better be ready able & willing to actually fly IFR- not VFR under an IFR plan.
No offense intended (so don't flame me please), I'm just curious as to the thinking here.
Eric
I really wanted the ticket for added safety. Lower insurance is a plus too. My plane is set up pretty good so I didn't have to dump money into that. I don't plan to fly in hard IFR. If you plan right IMO getting trapped in hard IFR with no alternates should be rare.
If you leave on a decent day and it gets bad, stay on the ground. If you are in weather and you don't like it ask to divert. I have xm weather in the plane. I don't fly in moderate or worse rain.
I live in a river valley. Being able to take off and land with a solid over cast say 1000' will be great. We get a lot of days that the whole state is clear except in the Willamette valley, and you have the 1000' ceiling.
If I get down to minimums and it is white, I messed up. Pretty simple though, go to your alternate. Don't push the weather to the limit, you will lose!
Last winter we had a pilot die shooting an approach to PDX in minimums. 10 minutes away was CAVU. This is not some video game. You make a bad choice, you die.
Rob