View Full Version : Aircraft Checkout Flights
john smith
December 30th 06, 09:56 PM
This is a companion posting to the one entitled Head Scratcher.
When I do an aircraft checkout, I will only fly them during the 
daylight. I don't want to be fumbling around in the dark in an 
unfamiliar aircraft trying to find the right thing-a-ma-jig to throw, 
pull or twist.
Once I am comfortable with the aircraft during daylight, I would feel at 
ease to practice night landings.
Do any of the instructors on this group perform initial aircraft 
checkouts at night as a matter of normal practice?
Even with an experienced pilot, a complex aircraft will provide a 
certain amount of learning curve before achieving proficiency.
Andrew Sarangan
December 30th 06, 10:06 PM
If the pilot wanting the checkout has never flown that type of aircraft
before, I do the checkout during the day. Otherwise I do the checkout
any time that is convenient.
john smith wrote:
> This is a companion posting to the one entitled Head Scratcher.
>
> When I do an aircraft checkout, I will only fly them during the
> daylight. I don't want to be fumbling around in the dark in an
> unfamiliar aircraft trying to find the right thing-a-ma-jig to throw,
> pull or twist.
> Once I am comfortable with the aircraft during daylight, I would feel at
> ease to practice night landings.
>
> Do any of the instructors on this group perform initial aircraft
> checkouts at night as a matter of normal practice?
>
> Even with an experienced pilot, a complex aircraft will provide a
> certain amount of learning curve before achieving proficiency.
Dan Luke
December 30th 06, 10:19 PM
"john smith"  wrote:
>
> Even with an experienced pilot, a complex aircraft will provide a certain 
> amount of learning curve before achieving proficiency.
The only time I ever got checked out in an unfamiliar aircraft at night, the 
alternator failed.
-- 
Dan
C172RG at BFM
Jose[_1_]
December 30th 06, 11:11 PM
> When I do an aircraft checkout, I will only fly them during the daylight. I don't want to be fumbling around in the dark in an unfamiliar aircraft trying to find the right thing-a-ma-jig to throw, pull or twist.
I think this is a good policy when checking out in a new type, or a 
significant cockpit variant.  However, if I've been flying Archers 
forever, and I go to a new airport where I (of course) need to get a 
checkout before they will let me fly =their= archer, I see no reason to 
have to do that one in the daytime.  So, it depends on what you really 
mean by a "checkout".
If you mean a checkout in an airplane which is significantly new to the 
pilot, then yes, I agree with you.
Jose
-- 
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
Morgans[_5_]
December 31st 06, 06:39 AM
"Dan Luke" > wrote
> The only time I ever got checked out in an unfamiliar aircraft at night, 
> the alternator failed.
You must be living right.     NOT ! ! !    <g>
I'll bet you are ready to jump into another one, and do it again, right? 
:-)
-- 
Jim in NC
NW_Pilot
December 31st 06, 07:09 AM
"john smith" > wrote in message 
...
> This is a companion posting to the one entitled Head Scratcher.
>
> When I do an aircraft checkout, I will only fly them during the daylight. 
> I don't want to be fumbling around in the dark in an unfamiliar aircraft 
> trying to find the right thing-a-ma-jig to throw, pull or twist.
> Once I am comfortable with the aircraft during daylight, I would feel at 
> ease to practice night landings.
>
> Do any of the instructors on this group perform initial aircraft checkouts 
> at night as a matter of normal practice?
>
> Even with an experienced pilot, a complex aircraft will provide a certain 
> amount of learning curve before achieving proficiency.
>
Check Out Flight Whats That????
Dan Luke
December 31st 06, 02:24 PM
"Morgans" wrote:
>> The only time I ever got checked out in an unfamiliar aircraft at night, 
>> the alternator failed.
>
> You must be living right.     NOT ! ! !    <g>
>
> I'll bet you are ready to jump into another one, and do it again, right?
One's enough.
The CFI who checked me out knew beforehand the alt. was flakey and didn't 
tell me.  As we have seen recently, having a CFI aboard doesn't necessarily 
confer any extra safety.
-- 
Dan
C172RG at BFM
Bob Noel
December 31st 06, 02:40 PM
In article >,
 "Dan Luke" > wrote:
>  As we have seen recently, having a CFI aboard doesn't necessarily 
> confer any extra safety.
Having a CFI aboard doesn't necessarily confer *sufficient* extra safety.
-- 
Bob Noel
Looking for a sig the 
lawyers will hate
Jim Macklin
December 31st 06, 03:16 PM
Flying a known "flakey" aircraft, day or night isn't wise. 
But the battery should keep plenty of juice for the time 
required to get back to the airport, as long as the pilot 
detects the alternator failure when it happens and takes the 
proper actions promptly.
You need NAV lights and a radio is nice to have.  You can 
crank the gear down in a complex aircraft and turn off 
landing lights, radar, autopilots, the stereo, ventilation 
fans, etc.
In fact, if the alternator didn't fail, I'd be tempted to 
pull the CB on it if the student had not seen what happens. 
But a night checkout if carrying the proper flashlights, I 
have LED headlights, penlights, full and mini Mag  lights 
(AA and D) and I carry the LED pen even in the daylight.
A "blindfold" cockpit check may not be a bad idea.
"Dan Luke" > wrote in message 
...
|
| "Morgans" wrote:
|
| >> The only time I ever got checked out in an unfamiliar 
aircraft at night,
| >> the alternator failed.
| >
| > You must be living right.     NOT ! ! !    <g>
| >
| > I'll bet you are ready to jump into another one, and do 
it again, right?
|
| One's enough.
|
| The CFI who checked me out knew beforehand the alt. was 
flakey and didn't
| tell me.  As we have seen recently, having a CFI aboard 
doesn't necessarily
| confer any extra safety.
|
| -- 
| Dan
| C172RG at BFM
|
|
Jose[_1_]
December 31st 06, 04:31 PM
> Having a CFI aboard doesn't necessarily confer *sufficient* extra safety.
It sometimes reduces safety, especially if the pilots suffer "instructor 
in command syndrome".
Jose
-- 
He who laughs, lasts.
for Email, make the obvious change in the address.
NW_Pilot
January 1st 07, 12:18 AM
"Morgans" > wrote in message 
...
>
> "Dan Luke" > wrote
>
>> The only time I ever got checked out in an unfamiliar aircraft at night, 
>> the alternator failed.
>
> You must be living right.     NOT ! ! !    <g>
>
> I'll bet you are ready to jump into another one, and do it again, right? 
> :-)
> -- 
> Jim in NC
>
And people wonder how bad maintenance habits are spread or taught to 
unsuspecting/knowlageable students/pilots. When I jump in to an unknown 
airplane I expect the worst that every thing has not been properly 
maintained and is going to fail!!! It don't matter if it's a flight school 
or private owner.... If a flight instructor told me the alternator was 
flakey I would say then shouldent it be fixed? how much money did you pay to 
earn your certificate to lose it becuse you knew somthing was flakey? or 
worse yet you knew it was flakey did not say somthing and someone died!
john smith
January 1st 07, 01:26 AM
In article >,
 "NW_Pilot" > wrote:
> Check Out Flight Whats That????
Right! In your business, a checkout consists of learning which switches 
are shiny or have the paint worn off.
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