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mindenpilot wrote:
From the time I hit Tahoe, until I get to Placerville, there is literally NOWHERE to safely put it down. In fact, I don't think I could even walk away from the plane if I had to put it down. With that in mind, what difference would it make if it was light or dark outside the plane? I'd be dead either way, right? Sounds about right. There are certain situations where VMC/IMC and day/night make no difference (provided the pilot is prepared to control the plane by reference to instruments) - and those situations are where the terrain is uniformly bad (overwater) or uniformly good (nothing but fields). Maybe the Sierras really are uniformly bad. Thing is, while I've never flown the Sierras, I've made three crossings over the Rockies doing the Houston-San Francisco run. Two of them were day-VMC, and one included night and IMC flying. The day-VMC crossings had a very low pucker factor, in spite of being in a low power airplane. I flew my route so there was always someplace reasonably flat to set down. Not good enough to save the plane, but probably good enough to walk away. Maybe. But I didn't fly a straight route. I mostly followed I-10 and flew the passes. The crossing that included the night and IMC time (and some night IMC) was in a much higher powered and much better equipped single (a full-IFR A-36) but I must say the pucker factor was high. I flew the airways because the OROCA's were too high and we had no oxygen. I knew that if the engine decided to take a dump, our chances were not good. I did it because I had a schedule to keep, a plane to move, and the guy who hired me didn't hire me to sit on my ass because the engine might quit. And the engine was in good shape, and the plane had a good annual and several hours after the annual to shake out the bugs, and so I judged the risk to be fairly low. In a typical rental, I might not have done it - and I sure wouldn't do it all the time. The odds will catch up with you eventually. Michael |
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