Cross Country Flight in the Twin

Author: John Kelly  |  Category: flight school, ground school

Why do I always start out my posts with an apology for taking so long to post. grrr

So I have been taking the required cross-country flights for my certificate this last few weeks while for my oral and practicing the single-engine commercial maneuvers in the club plane.  It’s keeping me pretty busy, but I love it.

I took a day cross country to Yakima, which was fun.  Rather uneventful though.  I took my night cross country to Paine Field in Everett, WA.  That was a lot of fun.  It has been a while since I have done any night flying.  It seams like every airport that remotely gets any traffic in the northwest is doing something to their runways/taxiways.  All the airports I was picking for my destination had runway/taxiway closures.  Paine had it’s two longer runways closed and left the shorter(3000 feet) runway open.  3,000 feet is the minimum Hillsboro Aviation will allow their Seminoles to fly into, and it’s the minimum I’d probably fly into as well in a twin.

We left hillsboro enroute for Paine with all the weather and NOTAMS and feeling very confident and excited about the flight.  Once we got within distance to pick up the ATIS report, we tuned in and listened to the long list of NOTAMS confirming that we are allowed to land on the planned runway.  However they mentioned something I wasn’t told when I called Flight Service about the flight.  The ATIS threw in at the end, “Pilot Controlled Lighting Inoperative”.  Now we both hear that thinking, uh, does that mean we can’t turn the lights on?  We radioed Seattle Approach asking if they could find out if the lights were on.  They replied that they believed the lights were on.  So we decided to continue with the flight and told Approach that if we didn’t see any lights we’d be coming back with intentions to land somewhere else, probably Boeing  Field.  Long story short, we were clicking the mic, trying to get the lights on, and I don’t know if they turned on from the mic clicking or if they were always on, but I didn’t see them til we were right over the top of the runway.  We landed, closed and opened our new VFR flight plan, and were off enroute to hillsboro.  That flight was fairly uneventful, just chatted with my flight instructor on the way back.

Ok back to studying. :-)

Passed Commercial Pilot Knowledge Test!

Author: John Kelly  |  Category: ground school

PassedToday was a good day.  After a month of I passed my Pilot Knowledge test with a score of 91%.  That’s an A in my book. :-)

So what does this mean and what do I do next?  Well this is just the first part of getting my Commercial License.  I still have my which consists of a flying portion and an oral portion.  I also am getting two different commercial licenses.  I am getting a Single-Engine Commercial, and a Multi-Engine Commercial.  And those are two different checkrides that I will either take back to back (if I’m feeling up to the long day) or I will take very close to each other.

Over the past few months I have been flying a lot in the Club Cessna building time trying to get closer to the 250 hours required for the commercial license.  Well I now have 222 hours and am close enough that I will spend the rest of my time practicing commercial maneuvers and wiping off the rust on my Multi-Engine skills.

As part of the requirements I get to do a 250 mile straight line cross-country flight.  So basically I have to fly to an airport 250 miles straight line distance away.  And I’m going to do it in the twin!  I’m thinking I’ll go to Lewiston, ID.  But haven’t settled for sure.  Anybody have any good ideas?

Passed Multi-Engine Checkride!

Author: John Kelly  |  Category: flight school, ground school

Well, I have that on top of the world feeling once again. I just passed my Private Multi-Engine Land ! It felt so good to log my first few hours of PIC multi time! Instead of paying all that money for non-PIC multi time.

I learned something from this multi-engine training experience. I am better at learning knowledge as apposed to learning a skill. This is the first checkride (since my private) that I had to learn a new airplane. And not just a new airplane, but brand new concepts to the plane. So what I took away from this was that I could learn the concepts of how things worked on the plane, and why the plane moved and operated the way it did. But actually flying the airplane was more tough.  I felt like I was back at square one when I learned to fly the Cessna 172.  I was an infant learning to walk with new legs.

Having said all that, my next step, my multi-engine rating, will be a very challenging one.  As I basically have to do the same checkride, but with stricter margins.  For example I have to do a short field landing on a point +100 feet, -0 feet.  As opposed to a short field landing on a point +200 feet, -0 feet.
I also have to study for my knowledge test.  I’ve gotten above 90% on all my other , and I would love to keep that streak going.  However, I have heard the commercial knowledge test is much harder than the Instrument and Private that I have already taken.  I guess that means I just have to study all that much harder.  Again, my strength, I believe, is in the knowledge, so I’m not sweating it too much.  I am more concerned about learning to fly the airplane to these stricter standards without paying an arm and a leg in aircraft rental (and instructor) fees.

So begins the Commercial Knowledge Test .  Back to the King Videos. :-)

Multi-Engine Training Update

Author: John Kelly  |  Category: flight school, time building

So I need to apologize for taking so long to write this post.  I keep putting it off, and partially I feel I have nothing super exciting to write about.

The last couple weeks we have been practicing steep turns, slow flight, power-on and power-off stalls, Vmc demo, and of course lots of operations.  For the most part I feel like I’m getting the maneuvers down.  I think the only thing I need to work on is memorizing the power settings for the different maneuvers.  But all in all, I’m beginning to feel comfortable flying the plane (unlike at first, when everything was just CRAZY).  I also got to fly for my first time in an ( Device).  Which is basically a flight simulator with all the controls and a cockpit cutout, but doesn’t move (like a full-motion simulator).  That was kind of fun, it was helpful because we would be 50 feet above the runway, and then my instructor would kill an engine.  And I got to see “somewhat” what that would be like, and how incredibly fast you need to recognize what’s going on. I’ve got Identify, Verify, and Feather stuck in my head.  Those of you who have taken multi-engine training I’m sure know what I’m talking about.  Sometime in the next few lessons I will be doing a single-engine instrument approach!  Which I think sounds crazy hard, but Chris (my instructor) assures me that it’s not as hard as it sounds.  We’ll see. :-)

On another note, I have been doing some time-building in the club plane here and there.  I shot the VOR-A approach into North Bend all the way to , could barely see the airport, and went missed.  Picked up my clearance back to Salem and shot the ILS, went missed, then turned around and shot the back course to a full stop.  What a mentally busy day!  The weather wasn’t “terrible” in Salem, but the approach in North Bend was TOTALLY in the soup and was a lot of fun!

Finally the weather started clearing up and I flew to corvallis, then west out to the beach, then north up the coast, and then east to Hillsboro for my multi-engine lesson.  What a great flight!  Not a cloud in the sky, the beach was beautiful!  I can’t remember the last time I flew to the beach in conditions (without the hood on).  Flying north up the coast I even saw some Whales!  I scrambled for my camera and circled around, but was too late.  That had gone back down and I couldn’t find them again. :-(  Sorry.  However I did take a bunch of pictures of the coast.   Hope you enjoy!

Alright, back to .  I’ll try and keep you all more up-to-date and not take so long on posting this time around.

Also, wanted to mention, if you aren’t subscribing to the RSS feed and want to receive email notifications when I post a new blog entry, be sure and subscribe here.

Thanks for reading,

John

Multi-Engine Private Day 1

Author: John Kelly  |  Category: flight school
The Piper Seminole I flew

The Piper I flew

Well I FINALLY had my first day of Multi-Engine .  I was sick on Wednesday and the weather was terrible so I wasn’t able to have a lesson that day.  But Friday was an awesome day to fly!

I can basically sum up my first multi-engine lesson with one word. Overwhelming!  There are only twice as many engines as I’m used to, but there is about 3 times as many things to do.  Not only is this my first time flying a multi-engine airplane, it is my first time flying a complex airplane.  So retractable landing gear, and the constant speed prop are all new things to me, on top of having double the engine controls and instruments.  We flew over to to do some maneuvers.  We did Steep Turns, Power-off stalls, and 4 touch-and-goes.  The first touch-and-go was crazy!  Trying to keep track of the manifold pressure, propeller RPM’s and look out the window, AND look at my checklist was just crazy.  But by the 4th time, I think I was starting to pick up on the cues and memorize the checklist items.  That’s the best way for me to learn, repetition.

All in all it was extremely fun, and when we started heading back to Hillsboro, I felt like I was starting to get it.  Oh yeah, one thing I have to start memorizing is the stinkin’ cowl flaps.  Holy cow, cowl flaps up, cowl flaps down, cowl flaps up, etc.  Thank God for checklists.  My instructor said that he thinks I have the basics down pretty good, and our next lesson will be all single-engine operations.  Yay!

Ok, on to pictures, I didn’t take a ton of pictures.  But here are the ones I did take of the plane.  Enjoy!

My Plan

Author: John Kelly  |  Category:

This page will update as my plan(s) change. Comments/advice are welcome and greatly encouraged.

What I have:

  • Single-Engine Land
  • Commercial Multi-Engine Land
  • Instrument Rating

What my next goals are in chronological order:

  1. (Certified Flight Instructor)
  2. Work for a
  3. CFII (Certified Flight Instructor Instrument)
  4. MEI (Multi-Engine Instructor)
  5. After reaching around 1200 TT (Total Time) hours, I will begin to job hunt
  6. ATP ( Transport Pilot)