Fun with Foggles
Sunday, November 4th, 2007My instructor and I in the Seminole.

This guy Tim wears a great hat. So Randy grabbed it from him, threw on the Foggles and now you have El Capitan Barton.

R.I.P.

My instructor and I in the Seminole.

This guy Tim wears a great hat. So Randy grabbed it from him, threw on the Foggles and now you have El Capitan Barton.

R.I.P.

I had Thursday off. I relaxed at home for a bit and got somethings done that I needed to do. Friday I went out to school and flew with my instructor for an hour to practice some engine failures. We determined that I would be fine as long as I went through the checklist and not try and race through it from memory.
The recheck was Saturday afternoon. It was a short flight, only 1.0. It was exactly as he said it would be. We went down to Coolidge, shot the approach single engine, I feathered it perfectly and we headed back for Gateway.
I was pretty relieved to get the ride over with. As I started to drive home, I realized I could fly an airplane without looking out the window. It’s pretty crazy when you think about it. I mean you obviously need to look for traffic, but if I were flying through clouds, at night, I could get to where I want to go. How cool is that?
Today I went in and started my CRM training so I can begin cross-countries on Wednesday. That should be exciting.
Well I busted, let’s just get that out of the way.
Here’s how it all went down.
300am.
Alarm goes off.
415am
Arrive at school. Make sure everything is in order, charts are updated, etc.
500am
Oral begins. The IACRA portion was pretty easy and over with in about 15 minutes. We sat back and discussed our aviation experiences for a bit and I started to get comfortable. Soon enough he started asking me questions related to instrument flying, weather, airplane systems, etc. Nothing too difficult.
Then I pulled out my flight plan which was to Las Vegas-McCarran. I walked him through the flight plan. From the departure procedure to arrival. He asked me a couple of questions about MEAs and MRAs and what the differences were.
Then we moved onto some scenario based questions. Mainly because he was asking me FARS and I didn’t have them memorized, but I knew how to follow them in the situation. For example, what happens if you receive your clearance, take off and lose comms. I explained what to do and he was happy because he prefers pilots who know what to do when things get crappy versus being able to recite acronyms.
The oral lasted for 3 hours, but it wasn’t all a test. We talked quite a bit so all in all I would say it was probably an hour and a half of oral exam.
800am
I head out to preflight the airplane. The weather was perfect so no concerns there. After all was said and done we took off towards the east. He had me intercept and track a radial. Then arc 15 DME from the VOR. Once we got to a certain radial he cleared me direct for a GPS approach to Coolidge. I entered the hold and as I turned back inbound to the fix, he failed my engine. And this is where it all went to crap. I tried to blast through the checklist by memory. In all of my infinite wisdom, I feathered the wrong engine. I realized it as I was half way down the gear lever but it was too late. He offered me the opportunity to discontinue but said he hoped I would continue because I was flying really well.
I wanted to keep going to he cleared me for the VOR approach to Casa Grande. He said to enter the hold and after he cleared me inbound I would go partial panel. I went missed and he cleared me for the ILS back to Gateway. I was about 10 miles out when approach had me break off and turn to the west because of KC-135s doing touch and gos. So we circled for a bit and then they re-cleared us. I flew the approach perfectly and made a soft landing on the 1000 foot markers.
1000am
We went back inside and talked with my instructor. He said overall, I was stellar. My oral was very good, the VOR approach was “meticulous,” and my ILS was also great. He said he was impressed with my situational awareness and how I stayed miles ahead of the airplane, but he couldn’t let my, brain fart as he called it, pass.
I am pretty pissed and crapped out. Not at the DE, but at myself. I screwed something up that was incredibly basic yet very serious. And I think what makes me even more upset is aside from that my flying was probably the best yet. I do the recheck either on Friday or Saturday so we shall see how that goes.
What a week.
I am still fighting the head cold I picked up in Vegas. I’m all hopped up on Vitamin C which is helping a bit. I also spent the week reviewing for my instrument checkride. My instructor and I went up today and I flew really well. Only a couple of small things to correct for. Hopefully I will do well tomorrow.