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Nice going Kevin...sounds like you had a good workout on the ride. Now stay
proficient! Greg Norwalk, CT "Jim Macklin" wrote in message ... No problem, nobody has every done a "perfect" check-ride and that includes me. Fly as often as you can. "kevmor" wrote in message oups.com... Oh ok, 50 ft. isn't a set allowable limit? I don't remember reading 50, but my CFI told me that and the examiner didn't correct me on it. Thanks for your input! -Kevin On Mar 20, 4:57 pm, "Jim Macklin" wrote: DH, you make a decision AT DH while in a descent on GS, so if you decide to go-around you will be below DH before the airplane starts back up. It isn't 50 feet, you just have to decide and either continue or discontinue the approach. You can use the approach light rabbit to continue below DH, but only to 100 feet unless you get more of the required visual cues. Ice is aerodynamic spoiler, not weight. VOR check, to check properly, swing the OBS and make sure you get the proper deflection, 10 ° should be full scale 80° and the TO/FROM flag should be switching, if it doesn't your VOR has low sensitivity and may not should course deviation at 25-50 miles, the needle will just center while you drift off course... Other than that, congratulations. -- James H. Macklin ATP,CFI,A&P -- The people think the Constitution protects their rights; But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome. some supporthttp://www.usdoj.gov/olc/secondamendment2.pdf Seehttp://www.fija.org/more about your rights and duties. US Court on DC gun law...http://pacer.cadc.uscourts.gov/docs/...3/04-7041a.pdf "kevmor" wrote in message ps.com... |I passed my instrument checkride last Tuesday. I waited 2 months to | try and do the checkride from when my CFII told me to schedule it. | Problems with my examiner's medical, scheduling with another examiner, | then going back to the first one, and weather delayed it. | | Here is how my IFR checkride went from what I can remember. | | We went into one of the conference rooms and he asked to see all my | paperwork: pilot certificate, medical, application, picture ID, and | logbook endorsement. He started asking a few questions and my | answers: | | What is required to be current for IFR? | Everything for VFR, plus 6 approaches, holding procedures and | intercepting/tracking courses | (He was looking for more...) | I said you have 6 months to meet this then if you don't, you have | another six months. After that you'll need an IPC. | Who can give an IPC? | A CFII, examiners, FAA... | What instruments are required for IFR? (GRABCARD) | How do you check the VOR? | VOT +/- 4 deg., Air checkpoint +/- 6 deg., Ground checkpoint +/- 4 | deg. (dual VOR, but I didn't get to that) I started to explain where | to find these (AF/D), but he went on to the next question: | Using a VOT, must you be in a certain location on the airport? | No, as long as you can receive the frequency. | Does it matter which way your airplane is facing? | No (I hope nobody would get that wrong!) | What should the VOR indicate? | 360 deg. with a FROM when needle is centered, 180 TO. | If the needle is centered and it reads 356 FROM, is that legal? | Yes | Would you apply this error to navigation? | No, this is a tolerance and you shouldn't adjust your courses because | of the error. | He then explained if your VOR was 4 degrees off and you applied that | to tracking a course outbound, how you could get very far off course | the further you got away from the VOR. He said it may be 4 degrees | off on one radial but not on the other. I related this to flying | different headings with a compass using a compass card, and you | shouldn't do this with the VOR errors. | Was my aircraft certified for known icing? | No | How could I determine freezing levels? | I said a freezing levels chart, winds aloft... | He asked how from the winds aloft? (He sort of acted like I gave a | wrong answer at first) | I said from the temperatures you could determine the freezing | altitude | (He was still looking for something else...) | I said a very crude way would be to use the average lapse rate from | the temperature at the ground... | He confirmed it would be very crude, and said not to overcomplicate | this. | I got it right with just saying call the FSS and get the freezing | levels at the airports on the route. | Could I fly if the freezing level was 4,000, the cloud bases at 3,000, | and an MEA in the clouds, legally? | Legally, yes | He asked what was the major problem with ice? | I said the accumulation of the added weight. | I sort of hesitated on the known icing questions, and he stated that | there is no clear definition of known icing in the regulations. He | said he wanted to ask these questions as there has been those legal | rulings on pilots flying into known icing and whether "conditions | favorable to icing" was "known icing" or not. | The general consensus was (legally) the FAA may question if you fly | your non-icing-certified aircraft in "icing conditions", but it is | legal as long as it is not "known icing" such as an actual PIREP. | He said he flies in an icing certified airplane with his son, which | is equipped with deicing equipment, and it melts it off as fast as it | accumulates. He said the icing area is about 10 degrees either side | of freezing temperatures, and a lot of people don't know that you can | climb above it into below freezing temperatures where it will bounce | off the airplane, which isn't a problem. | | He then asked for me to get out my enroute chart to ask a few | questions. What does the V mean on victor airways? | I couldn't figure out what he wanted, I said it was just an airway. | After a while I finally got it, it would be J on a high enroute chart. | How high is this chart good for? | 18,000 ft. | What is the change over point (pointing to a straight course, no COP | marked)? | The halfway point. | Is it regulatory that you change it there? | Yes | He then explained how you could still have a centered needle past the | halfway point but be drifting to the side because maybe your VOR was a | few degrees off. Where is the COP on this course (pointing to one | marked with DME)? | The mark. | He then explained how this is because one of the VORs doesn't have as | strong a signal. Then he very thoroughly gave me a scenario of flying | out from KRBL (I think), with a MCA fix a few miles after takeoff. He | asked if I lost radios just before reaching it and I was assigned | 3,000, expect 9,000, what should I climb to? | The highest of assigned/expected/minimum altitude, so 9,000. | What if I was 3,000 upon reaching the MCA fix (with a MCA of 5,000)? | Hold at the fix while in a climb to the MCA. | Continuing on, if I arrived at a fix from which an approach begins (he | pointed to an airport near the coast), what would I do if I arrived | early? | Hold at the fix until EFC or ETA expires. | If I arrived late? | Begin approach immediately. | If there are VOR, NDB, GPS, ILS approaches...which one? | Any approach. | He then asked to look at the SMF ILS 16R approach. What are the | minimums? | 1800 RVR visibility, 226 decision height. | What is MDA? | Minimum Decent Altitude | When you get to DH, what do you do? | That is when you make the decision to go missed or continue. | What if you are on the ILS and ATC calls you and says, "the RVR just | went to 900, what are your intentions?" Must you go missed | immediately, continue the approach, or? | I knew you couldn't descend from the DH if it's below minimums, but I | didn't know about before that. | He asked me to sort of guess. | I said because I haven't read anything you couldn't continue to the | DH, I said you can. | He said that was correct, he said part 135 and others must go missed | immediately, but part 91 can descend to the DH. If I descend to DH | and it's 900 RVR, can I land? | No, it's below minimums. | He explained how someone had gone below the DH in this scenario and | went off the runway on landing because the visibility was too poor. | They lost their flying job and had their license suspended. Somehow | we got to talking about being cleared to land, as they can't clear you | to land with the Wx below minimums. He said the tower responded with | "Roger" when the pilot contacted him, never clearing him to land. | | Can you go below DH? | Yes, by 50 ft. | He then explained how a jet is unable to go from a descent in the | landing configuration, start retracting the flaps, gear, and starting | a climb without going below the DH. What about MDA? | You can't descend below MDA at all, and you are level so there's no | reason to go below it. | | He then said he had one more question he forgot to ask, he went to a | white board and drew a runway, was very clear on the altitude I was at | (circling altitude) and where the airplane he was drawing was circling | around to land on the opposite end. As he drew the line he said to | tell him when I could descend to land from circling minimums. I told | him when he just started to turn in on final. He said this was a | little late, but was fine. He said many people thought they could | descend on downwind or base, etc. | | | Flying portion: | | He gave me a clearance while still on the ground. Cleared to | Stockton, SAC V585 ECA Direct, 4,500, 1200. I asked him if he could | tell me in advance before I request the approaches (so I'll know what | to ask for when they ask for what's next). He said we'll do the SAC | ILS with vectors, VOR own nav, then LOC own nav. He told me ahead of | time to be sure to make all reports (entering hold, etc.) if ATC loses | radar, which he'll be simulating. He played ATC for the cross country | portion. | | I setup all the radios, etc and did the instrument check, departed MHR | and identified the SAC VOR. As we're getting fairly close to it, he | says ATC has lost radar and report reaching 4,500 and the SAC VOR. I | report both fine, and track onto V585. | | He says he has holding instructions when I'm ready to copy. He says | hold at WAGER as published, maintain 4,500 (and says normally you'd | get an EFC). I was correcting to the right and the entry was on the | borderline of being parallel, but I didn't want to do a parallel...I | said I'd be ... read more » |
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