A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » rec.aviation newsgroups » Instrument Flight Rules
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

IFR retest (Long)



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old August 9th 04, 11:21 AM
Cecil Chapman
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default IFR retest (Long)

Great to hear Jeff!!!! Big congratulations! Be sure to celebrate!!!!!

--
--
=-----
Good Flights!

Cecil
PP-ASEL
Student-IASEL

Check out my personal flying adventures from my first flight to the
checkride AND the continuing adventures beyond!
Complete with pictures and text at: www.bayareapilot.com

"I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -

"We who fly, do so for the love of flying. We are alive in the air with
this miracle that lies in our hands and beneath our feet"
- Cecil Day Lewis -


  #2  
Old August 9th 04, 01:40 PM
Steven Barnes
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

[snip]

After the VOR was behind us, he played ATC again and vectored us back to
RHP. Once he got me back in the pattern, I 'broke out' and I was able to

do
a fairly smooth landing on 26. When I taxiied off and shutdown, he held

out
his hand and said, "Well done, congratulations".
--
Jeff 'The Wizard of Draws' Bucchino
Cartoons with a Touch of Magic
www.wizardofdraws.com
www.cartoonclipart.com


Cool. I've got my checkride scheduled for the 23rd. GULP! Hoping to have
only *one* post here after the ride.... ;-) We'll see.




  #3  
Old August 9th 04, 01:57 PM
Dave Butler
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Wizard of Draws wrote:


I jumped in and took off from runway 4, flipped up the gear handle and...
nothing. No transit light, just three greens still glowing brightly. Toggle
the handle, nothing. So I call crosswind and then downwind while I toggle a
few more times. Since Andrews-Murphy (KRHP) is in nearly the opposite
direction, Randall came on the radio and asked if I was coming back in. Just
then the gear came up. I quickly explained and peeled off from midfield back
to the north.


Congratulations on your new priveleges! Use them wisely. What was wrong with the
gear?

Dave

  #4  
Old August 9th 04, 09:24 PM
David Brooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Wizard of Draws" wrote in message
news:BD3C4654.1B2E1%jeffbREMOVE@REMOVEwizardofdraw s.com...
I jumped in and took off from runway 4, flipped up the gear handle and...
nothing. No transit light, just three greens still glowing brightly.

Toggle
the handle, nothing. So I call crosswind and then downwind while I toggle

a
few more times. Since Andrews-Murphy (KRHP) is in nearly the opposite
direction, Randall came on the radio and asked if I was coming back in.

Just
then the gear came up. I quickly explained and peeled off from midfield

back
to the north.


Congratulations, Jeff! Now go fly into some clouds.

But I was wondering: what was your state of mind as you hit the switch to
put the gear down at KRHP? We now know it worked...but you knew something
was wrong...

-- David Brooks


  #5  
Old August 11th 04, 04:17 PM
Rod Tomlinson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Good going Jeff! Time to put some actual instrument time in that logbook!

Rod


  #6  
Old August 12th 04, 12:37 AM
Wizard of Draws
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 8/11/04 11:17 AM, in article ,
"Rod Tomlinson" wrote:

Good going Jeff! Time to put some actual instrument time in that logbook!

Rod



Thanks Rod. After a little over 250 hours total, I've only got 1.8 of
actual.
--
Jeff 'The Wizard of Draws' Bucchino
Cartoons with a Touch of Magic
www.wizardofdraws.com
www.cartoonclipart.com

  #7  
Old August 13th 04, 08:03 PM
Andrew Gideon
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Wizard of Draws wrote:

We're not quite sure what the problem was with the gear. With all the
glitches just getting airborne, I was a bit apprehensive as I descended
into the pattern at RHP. But there wasn't any problem after that first
takeoff. It did feel a bit odd each time they came down, with the airplane
wanting to yaw right a tad. Perhaps they were coming down asymetrically? I
let the owner know when I got back and he's checking it out.


Hmm. I've only just recently started to fly a retract. But if I failed to
get the gear up as normal, I'm pretty sure I'd just land again and cancel
the flight. The 182RG POH has an emergency retract procedure, but if the
gear is already down and there's a nice runway right there...

Of course, one variable in my equation is that the 182RG has no backup in
case of a complete hydraulic loss. Lose all fluid, and you're going to
scratch the belly.

From what I understand, this lack is somewhat unusual.

- Andrew

  #8  
Old August 13th 04, 09:29 PM
gatt
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Thanks for the report! Getting ready to do my checkride at the end of the
month and getting nervous. What's more frustrating is when you ask five
pilots who the best DE is, and one guy recommends one and another says to,
by all means, avoid that guy. Congrats!

"Wizard of Draws" wrote in message
news:BD3C4654.1B2E1%jeffbREMOVE@REMOVEwizardofdraw s.com...
Background: July 11 was my first attempt at the IFR checkride. I failed

the
partial panel VOR with a full deflection, in part due to inattention and a
heavy left foot. The examiner, Mr. Jones was leaving on vacation the next
day, so a quick retest wasn't going to happen. Today I took the retest and
tried to keep my feet off the rudder pedals.

August 8, 2004 9:30 1.2 hrs.
Mr. Jones is back. The weekend was forecast for beautiful fall-like temps
and turned out to be just that. Saturday was a southeast wind out of

mostly
blue skies and Don had said that we would do the VOR partial panel retest

at
Toccoa (KTOC) instead of Knoxville if it stayed that way. The forecast was
pretty firm for that so I flew the heck out of the Toccoa VOR/DME 2
approach, thinking that was the one that he wanted to do since I thought

it
would be faster. Doh! As it turned out the VOR or GPS 20 was today's draw.
Not a disaster, but I had only studied it for a little bit and didn't fly

it
at all on the simulator. Hell, that made me even more nervous than I

already
was.

I arrived at the airport early and preflighted the plane. It needed

topping
off, but when Randall and I pulled it down to the pumps, they weren't
working. So we went looking for the gas truck driver and found him in the
main FBO. We asked for and got, a priority on our plane. Well, it almost
seemed that 'someone' didn't want me to take the test today, because now
with the truck nozzles in the wings, the truck wouldn't pump either. The
driver fiddled around a bit in the cab, then came out and realized he hadn

't
flipped a crucial switch. Voila, 18 gallons of avgas.

I jumped in and took off from runway 4, flipped up the gear handle and...
nothing. No transit light, just three greens still glowing brightly.

Toggle
the handle, nothing. So I call crosswind and then downwind while I toggle

a
few more times. Since Andrews-Murphy (KRHP) is in nearly the opposite
direction, Randall came on the radio and asked if I was coming back in.

Just
then the gear came up. I quickly explained and peeled off from midfield

back
to the north.

At Andrews-Murphy, Mr. Jones and I really had nothing to do before taking
off for the test except brief the approach and give the plane an

abbreviated
preflight. So we climbed in and did an intersection departure. Down with

the
hood and he gave me mock ATC vectors to intercept the Blairsville VOR 118
radial to Foothills VOR at Toccoa. At about 9 miles from Foothills VOR he
failed my attitude and DG instruments and the test began in earnest. Deep
breaths and try to remember to relax. Surprisingly, the wind was pretty
strong at that altitude and I was having to hold a big correction to
maintain the needle, so I was making mental notes about the correction I'd
have to hold once I was established on the approach. We arrived over the
Foothills VOR, turned outbound and it took a bit longer than I'd like for
the needle to come back in (I saw him glance at his watch), but it did and

I
captured it to about a dot off center. A procedure turn that went very

well
with the wind pushing me back in and on course right quick. But it took
nearly a 30 degree crab to hold the needle, and I was sweating bullets by
now even though I was able to keep the needle within 1 and 2 dots of

center.
A quick 8 second left dogleg over the VOR, turn, time, twist, throttle,
talk, gas, undercarriage, mixture, prop, and I was on the home stretch. I
leveled off at 1900' right where he wanted it to terminate, and then he

had
me lift the hood. There was the airport and (I assumed at this point) my
ticket. Down came the hood, off came the stickies and he told me to

execute
the missed, a climbing left turn to 5000' and back to the VOR.

After the VOR was behind us, he played ATC again and vectored us back to
RHP. Once he got me back in the pattern, I 'broke out' and I was able to

do
a fairly smooth landing on 26. When I taxiied off and shutdown, he held

out
his hand and said, "Well done, congratulations".
--
Jeff 'The Wizard of Draws' Bucchino
Cartoons with a Touch of Magic
www.wizardofdraws.com
www.cartoonclipart.com



  #9  
Old August 13th 04, 09:33 PM
Dave Butler
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default



Andrew Gideon wrote:
Wizard of Draws wrote:


We're not quite sure what the problem was with the gear. With all the
glitches just getting airborne, I was a bit apprehensive as I descended
into the pattern at RHP. But there wasn't any problem after that first
takeoff. It did feel a bit odd each time they came down, with the airplane
wanting to yaw right a tad. Perhaps they were coming down asymetrically? I
let the owner know when I got back and he's checking it out.



Hmm. I've only just recently started to fly a retract. But if I failed to
get the gear up as normal, I'm pretty sure I'd just land again and cancel
the flight.


That was my thinking, too.

  #10  
Old August 13th 04, 10:02 PM
Matt Whiting
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

gatt wrote:

Thanks for the report! Getting ready to do my checkride at the end of the
month and getting nervous. What's more frustrating is when you ask five
pilots who the best DE is, and one guy recommends one and another says to,
by all means, avoid that guy. Congrats!


Well, if you are at all well prepared, it shouldn't make a lot of
difference which DE you get. Sure some will be more fun than others,
but I've yet to met one who took pleasure in issuing a pink slip.


Matt

 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Checkride bust (long) Wizard of Draws Instrument Flight Rules 9 July 14th 04 12:53 AM
Ultralight Club Bylaws - Warning Long Post MrHabilis Home Built 0 June 11th 04 05:07 PM
Flight test update - long nauga Home Built 1 June 5th 04 03:09 AM
SWRFI Pirep.. (long) Dave S Home Built 20 May 21st 04 03:02 PM
IFR Long X/C and the Specter of Expectations David B. Cole Instrument Flight Rules 0 February 24th 04 07:51 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:35 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.