Mon Mar 07, 2005 11:54 am
Eric,
Good points. This is going to sound really geeky, but PC-based flight sims are a great training tool. They can't be logged, but they really help with keeping your head in the game, and keeping your scan accumen sharp. Microsoft Flight Simulator or X-Plane, both are good. I frequently download instr approach plates, print them out, and fly them in FS2004. There's no seat of the pants feedback, but the academics are there and are pretty accurate. Pitch/power relationships are fairly accurate, increasing localizer sensitivity as you get closer to the runway, terrain, traffic, vectoring, it's all there. Once again, not loggable, but invaluable practice I think for keeping one's head in the game.
About a year ago I helped my primary instructor retrieve a 172 Cutlass RG from Camarillo, CA and fly it to Santa Barbara. Heavy marine layer was in effect, 600 ft ceiling, raining lightly. He knew I was interested in instr flying, and had been studying, but I had no hood time since my PPL training a year prior. One thing I had going for me though, is that I geek out routinely on FS2004 and fly approaches and departures from the real plates.
He let me fly left seat, he never touched the controls, he just did the radio work, got the clearances, and gave me direction and feedback, and of course helped me with the retractable gear which I had no experience with (at least not the manual deployment procedure.)
We entered IMC about 40 sec after rotating, and it was creepy. I had never flown in actual instrument conditions in a real aircraft. It was frightenly calm but very real. We immediately got on with Point Mugu Approach and were vectored on course to SBA. At about 3,500 we popped out on top to a beautiful sunset, and saw the FUJI blimp flying IFR down the coast! We actually did not go to Santa Barbara, but Santa Ynez, where I flew the GPS-B approach on the Garmin GNS430.
It was a really cool experience, and one that confirmed the value of instrument flying skills, but also that having had no official instrument training other than the stuff you get in the the Private training, the flight sim stuff I had been doing allowed me to pull it off. Being a geek has its advantages.
Z
Last edited by
Zzz on Fri May 12, 2006 11:35 pm, edited 3 times in total.