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#61
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![]() "Peter R." wrote: However, I no long harbor the notion that an IR is going to help us fly more, or longer, or more regularly -- at least not until we can afford something like a Pilatus. Now that I have several hundred hours since my instrument rating, I would never trade it in for a VFR-only rating. Ditto. Not having the instrument rating is like not being able to drive on the interstate highway system: you can get where you're going, but it's going to be difficult or inconvenient at times. My favorite illustration of this is the time I stopped for fuel at an airport that was under a low ceiling. On the ramp were about a dozen National Guard helicopters and in the FBO were their fretting pilots who were missing tee times, kids outings and hot dates because they had been waiting several hours to get out from under 500 feet of scud. Do without the rating? No way. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#62
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The real bottom line to this is having managed to meet the PTS for the
IR makes you a more proficient pilot ... And while skills need practice to keep them honed to a razors edge, being more proficient carries over into better decisions and safer flying overall... Insurance companies offer a premium discount to the instrument rating - must be a reason for this... Bottom line is every pilot should take the training for the IR... Even if he never uses the rating he will benefit.. denny |
#63
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I'd have to disagree with at least part of this. I don't deny that a
single station may be IFR only 5% of the time, but I've often overflown KIOW en route to Des Moines, and have found that weather can be fine VFR at both ends, while there is often uncomfortable cloud cover around the Mississippi River. I've had similar experiences flying up to Michigan - good VFR at both ends, but a choice between 1500 AGL and 10,000 en route to stay clear of clouds. In addition, I've flown over Lake Michigan in VFR weather but had to use instruments for lack of any visible horizon only 5 mi offshore. Flying into Chicago VFR, flight following is almost always terminated just when you need it most, while under IFR you can receive traffic advisories in a very active airspace. What the rating provides is comfort, knowing that in the absence of Tstorm activity and icing, I don't have to sweat about clouds. |
#64
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
ps.com... As another VFR pilot I am not surprised. I know you're not, Gene -- but you're the exception. You've flown more cross-country VFR flights than any active pilot I know. One thing I think the IR *does* give many pilots is the confidence boost they needed to launch on a truly cross-country flight. The fact that their enhanced weather-handling ability is largely illusory (again, unless they're flying a Pilatus) is irrelevant -- the rating gives them the extra confidence necessary to launch themselves into the unknown. "Oz didn't give nuthin' to the Tin Man, that he didn't already have..." My observation is that most pilots rarely leave their home state. Many local pilots rarely leave a five-county area. Hoooboy... My average CC is about 500nm, but then I don't do any business in my home state. I'd guess I've done IFR approaches to my old base, maybe a half dozen times in the past seven years, but nearly 100 at my destinations. -- Matt Barrow Performance Homes, LLC Colorado Springs, CO |
#65
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
ups.com... and a truly tiny set that were canceled due to "soft IFR" conditions that we would feel safe flying Atlas in. What conditions are those? Sounds like you would be comfortable making up your own rules. Would you be comfortable letting everyone make up their own rules? Ah, I guess that wasn't clear. That line should read: "...that were canceled due to 'soft IFR' conditions that we would feel safe flying Atlas in IF WE HAD THE INSTRUMENT RATING." Good thing you don't have a widely dispersed chain of hotels that you absitively had to go to! :~) -- Matt Barrow Performance Homes, LLC Colorado Springs, CO |
#66
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The fact
that their enhanced weather-handling ability is largely illusory (again, unless they're flying a Pilatus) is irrelevant -- say what? You think me and my cherokee can't handle IMC? IMC isn't just ice and thunderstorms. I said "largely" illusory -- not *entirely*. Here's why: It's IFR 5.4% of the time, and your IFR ticket will definitely help you fly out of that, as opposed to my VFR-only ticket. However, what makes the IR's weather-handling ability "largely illusory" is that your aircraft (and mine) can't fly in a (currently unknown, but suspected to be large)percentage of that 5.4%. Around here, I'd say it's well upwards of 50% of IFR conditions are unflyable in my plane, regardless of pilot rating. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#67
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My observation is that most pilots rarely leave their home state.
Many local pilots rarely leave a five-county area. My average CC is about 500nm, but then I don't do any business in my home state. I'd guess I've done IFR approaches to my old base, maybe a half dozen times in the past seven years, but nearly 100 at my destinations. You are clearly NOT the average pilot, Matt. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#68
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Good thing you don't have a widely dispersed chain of hotels that you
absitively had to go to! :~) If I did, I'd definitely have an instrument rating, and I certainly would not own a Pathfinder. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#69
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I think that is somewhat unique to your location.
Absolutely. If I were still living on the shores of Lake Michigan, I certainly would have obtained the IR by now, just to get up and through the scuddy crud that often seems to lay 10 miles inland from the lakeshore. The vast majority of the country, however, is not on a large body of water, nor mountainous, which is what makes the IR a low priority for many pilots. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#70
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Jay, in the northeast, about 10% of my preplanned trips are cancelled
due to IMC conditions my M20J and/or me are not able to handle. More than half would have been had I needed to fly VFR. Think of these trips being 300 to 700 mile XC on a predetermined schedule to various meetings. An instrument rating improved the effectiveness of the airplane for my use profile from about 50% to about 90%. I don't know enough about other parts of the country, but IMC, soft or hard, are likely to be found within a few hundred miles miles of my home base much of the time, and summertime low vis .with haze happens around cities where I want to go. On Mar 1, 11:58 am, "Jay Honeck" wrote: The fact that their enhanced weather-handling ability is largely illusory (again, unless they're flying a Pilatus) is irrelevant -- say what? You think me and my cherokee can't handle IMC? IMC isn't just ice and thunderstorms. I said "largely" illusory -- not *entirely*. Here's why: It's IFR 5.4% of the time, and your IFR ticket will definitely help you fly out of that, as opposed to my VFR-only ticket. However, what makes the IR's weather-handling ability "largely illusory" is that your aircraft (and mine) can't fly in a (currently unknown, but suspected to be large)percentage of that 5.4%. Around here, I'd say it's well upwards of 50% of IFR conditions are unflyable in my plane, regardless of pilot rating. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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