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#121
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This is a complex sociological subject and will require a book, not a
usenet email to analyze... The issue here is the professional, 40 something usually, intelligent, aggressive results oriented, no excuses, person who has spent most of the first half of his life getting 20 or more years of formal education, another 10-15 years of building a prefessional reputation and growing his business, who can now afford the payments on a $600K machine... There are issues of deferred gratification, a sense of having to look invulnerable, and lots of other stuff I will only allude to but otherwise ignore... He is goal oriented (going to be here, there, and over there, and so on, today), time driven (can't be late), and has relatively low pilot experience, both in logbook time, and calendar time... Now the profession doesn't matter... I like the old "fork tailed doctor killer" attribution because it wraps up the whole package in one pithy statement... But it is also the guy with three franchise restaurants, doctors, lawyers, and maybe even indian chiefs... It is the personality set that matters, not the business that makes it financially possible... The airplane is also variable... Used to be the venerable fork tail, now it is the SR 22 currently the favorite yuppie status symbol with that "parachute" Now, I don't know what I would have done had that been my son I was picking up at that airport that night... My view of the world is colored by years of flying... I fly in the Great Lakes ice machine out over those fresh water seas and often at night... So I fly a clapped out old twin, for the second motor and other reasons that don't matter here not much of a status symbol, eh... Given this airport down in a hole, a pitch black night, no horizon, rapidly rising ground, and low clouds; given that I been up since 5AM and worked a full day and that it was now some 16 hours later; given my family was on board, I might have refused the takeoff and waited for light... denny |
#122
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On 2008-03-21, Dan wrote:
The Mooney must be more efficient, given it's narrow surface, but you can't wear a hat and you have to really like your co-pilot! The M20F, at least, has at least as much shoulder room as an S-35 Bonanza. The thing I don't like about Mooneys though, is the tank slit like visibility and the top of the panel being so high. You sit up much higher in a Bonanza, and it's a bit taller, and has a MUCH larger glass area to look out of. Still, I wouldn't turn a Mooney down. -- From the sunny Isle of Man. Yes, the Reply-To email address is valid. |
#123
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On Mar 21, 5:18*am, Larry Dighera wrote:
I believe Part 97 may have prohibited the pilot from departing IFR on runway 27: No, it's not a prohibition for Part 91 flights. "91.175f: Civil airport takeoff minimums. This paragraph applies to persons operating an aircraft under part 121, 125, 129, or 135 of this chapter. (1) Unless otherwise authorized by the FAA, no pilot may takeoff from a civil airport under IFR unless the weather conditions at time of takeoff are at or above the weather minimums for IFR takeoff prescribed for that airport under part 97 of this chapter." |
#124
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#125
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On Mar 21, 8:04*am, Denny wrote:
Now, I don't know what I would have done had that been my son I was picking up at that airport that night... Given this airport down in a hole, a pitch black night, no horizon, rapidly rising ground, and low clouds; The dark and clouds shouldn't have been prohibitive, given the IFR flight plan. The airport wasn't in a hole--terrain was flat for two miles west and forever to the north and northeast (the direction of the destination). What puzzles me is not the decision to take off, but rather the low climb rate and the decision to use runway 27. If the weather resembled what was reported nearby at OKV, runway 9 would have had a negligible tailwind component. |
#126
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On Mar 21, 8:57*am, Peter Clark
wrote: On Fri, 21 Mar 2008 05:26:43 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Mar 21, 5:18*am, Larry Dighera wrote: I believe Part 97 may have prohibited the pilot from departing IFR on runway 27: No, it's not a prohibition for Part 91 flights. "91.175f: Civil airport takeoff minimums. This paragraph applies to persons operating an aircraft under part 121, 125, 129, or 135 of this chapter. Would a weather minimum exemption (ceiling and visibility) also exempt the requirement to use a DP/ODP if assigned to that runway? It wouldn't. But the qualification at the beginning of 91.175f isn't just a weather-minimum exemption. It scopes over all of 91.175f, including 91.175f1 (weather minimums) and 91.175f3 (ODPs). Of course, what's permitted may not be wise. |
#127
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On Mar 20, 2:07*am, Roger wrote:
On Wed, 19 Mar 2008 22:49:23 -0400, Dudley Henriques wrote: Larry Dighera wrote: On Wed, 19 Mar 2008 21:17:19 -0400, Roger wrote: In these planes you have to have "It *all* together". *Piloting skills, attitude, judgmental skills, and weather knowledge must all be present and polished. I've spent many hours just mucking around in marginal conditions in a Cherokee 180 and in the Deb. *In the Cherokee I could almost always say, "well it looks like it's getting a bit thicker and worse ahead so we'd better turn around" While in the Deb at near 200 MPH it basically goes from marginal to "where'd everything go?" in the blink of an eye. Even being able to file you still have to have every thing ready and the mind set to fly IFR. When I say being ready to file I mean *competent* and polished not just current. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Well said. * To accomplish such polished competency requires regular use and maintenance. *I'd say a minimum of a cross country flight or more weekly. I think it depends on the pilot and the pilot's relationship with the specific plane. * Here I agree with Dudley. *Unless you are out in "weather" that is beating the snot out of you the cross county , even *in the clouds can be relatively relaxed and even hand flown although that begins to become tiresome after *a couple of hours and that 's the time you are going to need to be your sharpest. *It's flying those new approaches with the little unexpected things popping up that really build up the polish. The cross country is the easy part. It's working the pattern and the airplane at and near the left side of the envelope in all configurations that really completes the currency picture. These airplanes require their pilots to simply go out and PRACTICE with them perhaps more than they do. PERHAPS? *:-)) * I think "purely personal opinion" based on 1300 hours in the Deb over the last 12 years, these aren't exactly forgiving airplanes. *They may be pussycats *(OK Streak excepted) compared to the big military fighters, but they do not suffer lack of proficiency well.:-)) *The pilot really needs to know just about everything there is to know about the specific plane when coming in to land be it an approach or VFR pattern and they have to be flexible. *Side step, circle to land, missed and published holds, going missed on ATC's command, traffic avoidance, doing things without hesitation or having to stop and think. *And this is assuming every thing works.:-)) *Are we tilting a little, do I have the leans, or is the AI dying? *Man, what a time to go partial panel. Joining the ILS right at the outer marker when you have a tail wind of 20 or 30 knots (90 degrees to the localizer) really messes up your nice turns. Follow the guy ahead and expect the visual. Eh? I can't see the guy ahead or the airport and I'm supposed to FOLLOW HIM? * (Ben there, done that ) *Ahhhh... Approach, I can't see the twin ahead or the airport. *It's solid IMC up here. *OK, *maintain heading (what ever), expect vectors to the visual on 09. Circle left for the visual to 27. *Say what? *There's a whole string of airliners departing 09. *Oh! Then circle right for 09. *I think they do that *just to see if you are paying attention. And multitasking. *Why is it that approach always manages to squeeze a 5 minute transmission into 20 seconds telling you what to do for the next 15 minutes right at the outer marker when you are busier than a cat covering crap on a marble floor and hauling dirt two miles. *This can be particularly interesting if there is only one ILS, it has a tail wind of 20 knots and you have to circle to land WHILE departing traffic is going the other *direction. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)www.rogerhalstead.com- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hi Roger, Sort of off topic, but I was browsing your sites again and saw that you are/were building a G-III. Yuor last entry was in 2006 if I'm not mistaken. Are you still at it? If so, how far along are you now? Wil |
#128
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#129
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On Mar 21, 11:08*am, Peter Clark
wrote: Um, since the beginning of 91.175f in it's entirety is "[...]" where do you see that it's anything other than a weather-minimum? * (f)1 (f)2 and (f)3 define standard visibility requirements for takeoff referenced to how many engines or helicopter, nothing about DP or ODP. The first sentence of 91.175f (exempting Part 91) occurs prior to f1, f2, and f3, and scopes over all of those. Please re-read 91.175f3; it does refer to ODPs. Part 97 says what the takeoff minimums and ODPs are. But 91.175f says which flights the Part 97 resrictions do or don't apply to. |
#130
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On Mar 21, 11:08*am, Peter Clark
wrote: Um, since the beginning of 91.175f in it's entirety is "Civil airport takeoff minimums. Unless otherwise authorized by the Administrator, no pilot operating an aircraft under parts 121, 125, 129, or 135 of this chapter may take off from a civil airport under IFR unless weather conditions are at or above the weather minimum for IFR takeoff prescribed for that airport under part 97 of this chapter. [...]" Oops, I shouldn't have snipped your FAR quote from my previous reply; the quote is the crux of the matter. What you've quoted does not match the CFRs as currently given on the government's web site (just google e-CFR). There, 91.175f begins as I quoted it previously. Perhaps you're referring to an obsolete version? |
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