Sunday, June 8, 2008

A Flight in the Clouds

Finally, after all my training so far, and flights with endless holds and manauvers, I have now got to put it all to the test in actual IMC (Instrument Meteorological Conditions = Clouds). With the clouds hanging between 1-2,000' today, I couldn't wait to get up into them and practice holds and do an instrument approach. I filed a flight plan and did a last minute check of the weather forecast before heading out to the plane for my preflight.


Jake and I departed KBED on an IFR flight plan that had us going to the BOSOX intersection to practice holds, before coming back to KBED. We tookoff and were immediately switched to Boston Approach who vectored us direct to BOSOX at 4,000'. As we approached 2,000' we climbed up into the clouds, and entered a "bright, white room." It was incredible how isolating the feeling was, and how there really is an urge to fly by instinct and not by instruments. I kept finding my heading slowing drifting off after looking down for a second or two, and would need to correct the 20 degrees or so of bank that I had inexplicable put in. Boston switched us over to Bradley and before long we had come up on BOSOX.
As we arrived at BOSOX and into the hold, there was a little bit of blue sky above peeking through, and we went through about 5 or six turns around the intersection before calling back to Bradley Approach to go home. They gave us vectors to go north, and I plugged in the autopilot so that Jake could give me a briefing on the approach procedures, since I have not yet got there in my training. It also gave me a chance to look outside into the vast nothingness and take a couple pictures!

Back on Boston Approach now, we were given vectors to intercept the ILS for runway 11. Jake talked me through the whole thing, and before long we were lined up on the glideslope and descending through 3,000'. At about 2,000', the coolest thing happened; we broke out of the clouds and the runway was dead ahead, lined up perfect!! It was really awesome to see that everything really does work exactly like you study it does. I decided to keep my head down to practice tracking the localizer and glideslope, and at 383' I looked up, pulled the power back and set her down nice and soft. (Chop and Drop style!)

Overall, the flight was a ton of fun and a lot of work. Not only was it good practice for my holding procedures and ATC communication, but it also gave me a look ahead at what to expect from the instrument approach segment of my training.
Things which do you no good in aviation:
  • Altitude above you.
  • Runway behind you.
  • Fuel in the truck.
  • Approach plates in the car.
  • The airspeed you don't have.

Friday, May 30, 2008

A Trip to the Islands

So this evening turned out to be a great night to finally make it over to Marthas Vineyard. Cam and I departed Hanscom at 5:40pm and headed south towards Needham. With the miserable traffic on Rt. 128 below us, this really does seem like the best way to travel. The winds were light and variable, and the ride turned out to be suprisingly comfortable as we targeted the waters ahead. Our route took us over Norwood Aiport, then down towards Taunton and Mattapoisett. We got a chance to get a good look at some big jets coming in from the East towards the 4s at Logan Airport too! As we approached Buzzards Bay, Providence Approach decided to terminate out flight following; but with the Vineyard visible in the distance just beyond Woods Hole, that was no problem. (Although I did climb a little bit to give us a little more distance between us and the cold waters below.)

Calling into Marthas Vineyard from 10 miles out, the controller cleared us onto the straight in for runway 15. We made the approach, and after a "pogo-stick" landing, I turned off on taxiway alpha and headed towards the approach end of runway 24 for departure via the controllers directions. The Vineyard was slow, and another pilot even commented on the radio to the controller about how the declining economy must be causing huge problems for the little guys wanting to fly to the islands.

Taking off, we made a left turn out and I headed out over the water so that we could fly over the famous Katama Air Field and beautiful South Beach. We overflew the beach, then I turned inland for a photo of the large grass strip below. Next time that will be my destination!! Now heading north, a quick check of the GPS and we were on our way back over the "open water."

The trip home was pretty fast, as we were making about 115 knots of ground speed. We crossed Buzzards Bay down at 2,500' before climbing to avoid the Delta airspace around New Bedford (EWB). The visibility was diminishing and combined with the sun setting below clouds in the distance, we were in a race to get back. While I can legally fly at night, I would have needed 3 landings in the past 90 days in order to take passengers up. Never-the-less we had plenty of time before the 8:15 sunset. Our flight took us first over New Bedford, then Taunton, before turning back in towards Norwood and the Rt. 128 loop. Once again passing Needham and the Needham towers, we were cleared onto a right downwind for runway 11 behind another couple cessnas. I started my approach pretty high, but by the time Cam got the camera up and running, I was back on the glideslope. The video of the landing is included below, enjoy!!





Who Wants to Go Flying Next???

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Graveyard Shifts and Flying Don't Mix

After 3 weeks off I returned to the skies today, and made a very simple discovery. I learned that flying the day after working the 3rd shift at work is NOT a good idea. Who would have thought that exhaustion would affect your mental capacity to learn in the turbulent, cramped cockpit of a Cessna.
Now before anybody starts yelling at me for compromising the safety of the flight, understand that I am differentiating between my ability to fly, and my ability to learn while I am flying. At no point was I not in complete control of the plane, I just found that with the hood over my head and the plane bouncing around, trying to retain all of the new information my instructor was feeding me was just not happening.

Live and Learn I guess, now back to flying on my days off until I can get myself out of this graveyard shift!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Flight with the Old Man

After a year since our first flight together, and my first flight with a passenger, my Dad and I again returned to the skies to venture up to Keene, NH.





Taking him up in one of the new 172S models that I have been training in, he got to see what flying is like in a plane that is a little newer than the models he used to train in 25 years ago!

Departing out of BED on a beautiful, clear, calm day, I dialed KEEN into my GPS and we climbed up to 3,000' for our trip. Without having to do all the hand flying that my instrument requires, I was free again to try out the autopilot. Being sure to set it up right and keep the throttles set appropriately, I turned out the system and instructed it to hold 3,000' and fly direct to Keene Airport. Piece of cake. The only problem was...it's not fun! You still need to pay close attention to be sure that everything is working, so you are doing all the same work without the fun of flying. So I kept disconnecting it and hand flying until I wanted to try another feature out, or be able to focus out the window to take a picture or two.

After we passed Mt. Monadnock, the runways came into sight and I set up on the downwind to bring us in. With no other plane in the pattern, the approach was normal and we landed without any issue. Taxiing over to the ramp, we parked and took a few minutes to stand up and stretch our legs.

On the way out, we watched a Hawker 850XP corporate jet, and an old WWII Waco depart ahead of us. Talk about the old meeting the new! On our climb out we flew right over my old roommate. Ben's, home and sandpit in his back yard, before turning to head back to BED direct. The flight back was a little faster with a slight tailwind, and since Hanscom was now very busy, they had me do quite a bit of maneuvering in the pattern before clearing me to land.

Overall another great flight! Training is fun and interesting, but nothing beats getting someone else up in the air to enjoy what makes me so happy.

"To some, the sky is the limit.
To those who love aviation, the sky is home."

Friday, April 4, 2008

Lono and Goose Take to the Skies!

So it finally happened. I was able to trick Marky into putting his life in my hands and taking to the skies with me. Since he was to lazy to actually drive down to Bedford, I agreed to pick him up at Pease in Portsmouth, and begin our journey from there. We really couldn't have asked for a better day either. With the cold front having moved through the day before, the skies were clear as far as you could see.


Unfortunately, as in EFA tradition, they switched aircraft on me at the last minute and gave me the biggest lemon in the group. N65719 is a beat up 1983 172, that was also experiencing problems with its ground handling. I was warned before the flight, that on the ground, the aircraft would not turn left without applying the left brake. Superrrrr. I also discovered as I rolled down the runway at Bedford, that the shimmy dampener was broken and the damn plane shook like crazy when you were going about 30 knots on the ground. This was going to be one hell of an experience for Marky!

After picking him up from Pease, we got permission to do a few passes over downtown Portsmouth so that he could take a few pictures. As usual, I could hear his camera snapping away, and after making a pass over the River then in towards Portsmouth High, I turned us North and we climbed up to a more comfortable cruising altitude of 3,000 feet. With relatively smooth air and light winds, we made pretty good time up to Ossipee, where Marky was able to get pictures of White Pond and Mount Washington in the distance.


We didn't spend much time loitering up there, since the forecast was calling for the winds to pick up a bit, so after making a low pass over the pond, and another low pass over Gary's house I turned us towards home. Marky was a bit of a wuss and didn't want to try his hand at flying, but that's about what I would expect from him. Wuss. (Kidding of course)

The flight back was relatively uneventful. The air was pretty smooth and there was not any traffic to worry about until we were back in Portsmouth Tower's airspace. As we came back into the pattern, there was a Navy P-3 Orion doing touch and goes, using the call sign Lancer. We flew the pattern on the opposite side of the field as him, and Marky was able to get some great pictures of him as he turned to final just ahead of us. I still think the C-130 is a lot cooler...but the P-3 is growing on me a bit.

Our landing was pretty uneventful, although that damn shimmy dampener shook us like crazy. But by the time we turned off the runway, we were going slow enough that the shaking had subsided. I dropped Marky off after a brief visit inside Port City Air, and before long was back in the plane preparing for departure. Marky had gone over to the little viewing area off the end of the approach end, and was able to snap a picture of meet waiting for the giant Navy plane to land before I would be cleared to depart.


Overall this was a really great day, and I'm always thankful and humbled when someone trusts me enough to take them up into the skies. Thanks Marky!






Sunday, March 30, 2008

Stage Check #1 - Pass

So I have officially made it one third of the way through my instrument program. The basic instrument work is done, and now it's time to move on to holds, DME arcs, weather and approaches. Now is when things get interesting and more challenging.

I took my part one stage check with Ed Keins, the chief flight instructor at EFA and somehow managed to weasel my way into passing. Ed is an Air Force Vet who flew in B-52 Stratofortresses and now runs all flight operations at Executive Flyers. He is very much by the book, and wants to have you talk yourself through each maneuver so that he can tell what you are thinking.

After a brief discussion on the ground, we took off and flew out to the practice area. Once there, he had me go through some basic clearing turns then set up to do stalls. I did 3 or 4 stalls under the hood, followed by a couple steeply banked turns to the left and right. Next he put a cover over my attitude indicator and directional gyro, and had me do some unusual attitude recoveries and a couple more stalls.

The last thing that we worked on where the wonderful compass turns. First I did 3 or 4 turns, calculating the headings that I needed to roll out on to reach the desired heading. Then he had me do several timed turns, all of which I nailed.
After flying back, Ed let me know that I was exactly where I should be in my training, and even a little bit further a long. But he again let me know that from here on out, things would get more difficult not only in the air, but academically as well... Great...

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Stalls - The Tallest Rollercoaster Around

Imagine this: you are flying along, climbing up higher and high, then all of a sudden the plane starts to shake, a warning horn blares, the nose drops, and your left wing falls sharply. Now imagine doing this without being able to see the outside world through your windows. Welcome to the wonderful world of stalls under the hood.



For our flight, we went out west from Bedford towards the Mt. Wachusett Reservoir, climbing up to 4,000 feet to give us plenty of recovery room below us. After doing our basic instrument work to warm up, I set the plane up to do some departure stalls. First you bring the speed way down, and try to hold 4,000 feet, with the idea being that 4,000 feet is your "runway" and you want your speed to be the same as the speed you would normally lift off the runway at. As soon as you hit that speed, you jam in full throttle, and yank back on the yoke, pointing your nose up near 30 degrees.

What makes this a little more exciting, is when you do pull back hard, and the nose comes up, it never wants to just fall back down forward. Because of some complicated turning tendencies, one of the wings is going to drop and the nose will want to fall sharply to the side. The idea is just to step on the rudder pedal opposite the turn and your plane should straighten out as your push the nose back forward. All the while, you have to be back to straight and level before you reach that imaginary runway at 4,000 feet.


(Sample Departure Stall with very little wing drop)


Now, as if all of this wasn't exciting enough, after doing about 5 of these, we started doing them with a 20 degree bank angle in, and with my attitude indicator covered up. Trust me when I say that doing about 15 of these will not only make you sweat a bit, but since I had the hood on, it took me about 2 hours after my flight to get my stomach to settle back down!

While stalls can look intimidating, they are a lot of fun, and at the same time teach you a lot about aircraft control. To prevent the aircraft from entering a spin, you need to be very precise in your control inputs, and be quick to react to the stall itself. While it was a blast doing stalls under the hood, its still much more fun to do them when you can watch the windshield go from blue skies to filled with the earth instantaneously!