Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Day 30 - Prepping for the Written
Monday, August 10, 2009
Day 29 - Off to Palm Springs [KPSP]
I finally got a chance to use my new headset! One word, amazing! The quiet nearly put me into a daze on our way up to Palm Springs [KPSP]. One downfall, I need to readjust my auditory senses to a much quieter airplane. For example, on one of the final legs to land, it sounded as if the engines were at idle long before they needed to be, they were so quiet. I had to double check my manifold pressure to verify they weren’t.
So, we flew to Palm Springs, for 10 night take offs and landings at a tower controlled airport. The pattern work was quick and straight forward. It seems like I have not had a chance to do a lot of direct pattern work in the past month, this was a nice refresher. On the seventh landing we turned base and we’re pointed directly at a 737 on final for the parallel runway, oh for fun. After my tenth landing, I was feeling comfortable enough to test out some tunes with the new headset, prior to our flight back home. Oh wow! Flying over the Californian mountains at 10,500’ at night listening to Stairway to Heaven puts a whole new perspective on music. For those of you wondering, the music mutes anytime ‘any’ communication is made, be it from ATC, the co-pilot, myself, traffic avoidance, etc. This will be a nice feature in my up and coming cross country flights.
The flight back on FlightAware.com.
I did my first ever full approach through IMC (Instrument Metrological Conditions) into home base [KMYF]. In other words, I got to fly through the marine layer (CLOUDS) on the ILS approach, completely in the soup. The effects from the NAV lights offered a new sensory experience. A lot of fun! 3.5 hours of flight time.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Day 28 - A Day of Studying
- Studying: 47 Hours - 5%
- Flight Planning: 7 Hours - <1%
- Flying: 30 Hours - 3%
- Simulator: 35 Hours - 4%
- Sleep: 203 Hours - 22%
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Day 27 - A Day to Study and Invest
Study, study, study. My instrument checkride is less than 2 weeks which means I need to pass the written as soon as practical.
I also got a chance to invest in the protection of my hearing. I picked up a new headset. A Lightspeed Zulu. As far as headsets go, this is one of the best. It is comparable to the Bose X, only $150 cheaper, Bluetooth capability, auxiliary input, and a trade-in program. I love Bluetooth, I will be connecting this thing to the plane, my phone, my computer, my car, my house, my dog, and anything else I can get my hands on. I can not wait to put it to the test in the actual aircraft.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Day 26 - To Phoenix [KIWA] We Go
The flight to Phoenix was great. 3.3 hours out and 3.2 back, with the following legs and missed approaches:
The leg from Montgomery [KMYF] to Yuma [KNYL] as filed: Flightaware.com to the VOR RWY 17 approach into Yuma. Runway 17 was actually closed, but ATC still allowed us to shoot the approach and go missed.
The leg from Yuma to Casa Grande [KCGZ] and onto Gateway Mesa [KIWA] as filed: Flightaware.com. Shot the GPS RWY 23 into Casa Grande and went missed and then ATC vectored us to the ILS or LOC RWY 30C approach into Mesa.
Mesa Gateway was a pretty neat airport, 3 parallel runways. I believe it was an old military base gone half civilian. William and I walked into town for a bite to eat before returning home.
The flight back was really neat. Flying over the mountains near Palm Springs in the dark was a new experience for me. We did have a near full waning gibbous moon which offered some neat shadow effects on the terrain below. We landed at French Valley Airport [F70] and Ramona [KRNM] to satisfy a VFR cross country flight requirement for my commercial rating. We landed in Montgomery sometime after 1 AM.
Day 25 - Long X-Country, A No-Go
Planned for my 250NM cross country to Phoenix. We had to cancel at the last moment because our plane was grounded due to a slash in the nose gear tire. We spent an hour and a half in the sim instead and I took practice tests for the Instrument Written from 6 -10.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Day 24 - Simulator.
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Day 23 - 4th IFR X-Country
- VOR/DME into Ramona [KRNM] (went missed)
- GPS RWY 5 into Hemet-Ryan Airport [KHMT]
- ILS DME RWY 28R Montgomery [KMYF] (single-engine, I think I flew this better than I do with two engines.)
Monday, August 3, 2009
Day 22 - Long day in the Sim
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Day 20 - 3rd IFR X-Country
- VOR-A into Palomar Aiport [KCRQ] (went missed)
- GPS RWY 5 into Hemet-Ryan Airport [KHMT]
- ILS DME RWY 28R Montgomery [KMYF]
Friday, July 31, 2009
Day 19 - 2nd IFR Flight
We spent four hours in the sim. It flew by, not really sure why. Was I actually enjoying it...no that can't be.
We then departed on my second IFR cross country flight and shot the following instrument approaches:
- VOR-A into Oceanside Airport [KOKB] (Went Missed)
- GPS RWY 5 into Hemet-Ryan Airport [KHMT] (we landed here to justify a cross country flight, seeing as it is over 50NM from Montgomery)
- ILS DME RWY 28R Montgomery [KMYF] - We circled north to rwy 23.
This was a new airplane to both my instructor and I. N572AT, It was flown in earlier last week by some cross country students and exchanged for N263AT. Well, the DG was having some major precession issues. It would be 15 degrees off in less than 5 minutes, this was in slave mode. Anyhow, this forced me to fly off the old magnetic compass as I took orders from ATC.
It was busy up there today. We requested towerenroute and ATC was non-stop chatter. A little overwhelming for my second IFR flight, but nonetheless fun.
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Day 18 - Yep, the Sim
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Day 17 - The Sim...Again
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Day 16 - More Sim
Monday, July 27, 2009
Day 15 - First IFR X-Country
We requested a tower enroute IFR flight to Hemet Ryan Airport (KHMT). Hemet is over 50 NM from Montgomery Field and therefore counts as a cross country flight. As seen on the flight overview picture, we cancelled our IFR flight plan just inland and requested VFR flight following for the remainder of the flight. Seeing as this was an IFR training flight, I got to wear my instrument glasses (http://www.blockalls.com/.) For those of you that don’t know, these limit my vision to the cockpit instruments and simulate flying in the clouds or IMC, I log this time. The GPS approach into Hemet-Ryan Airport was my first official approach in a Twin-Engine Aircraft. After departing Hemet, William, my instructor acted as ATC and “barked” out orders. We also had flight following, so the “real” ATC was handing out vectors as we approached class Bravo around San Diego. We shot the ILS 28R approach into Montgomery.
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Friday, July 24, 2009
Day 12 & 13 - Instrument Ground Underway
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Day 11 - VFR Cross Country
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Day 10 - VFR X-Country Planning
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Day 9 - Multi-Engine Add-On Checkride
The practical exam, or flight portion, went by rather quickly. We only logged 0.9 of flight time. As you see in the flight track picture we did something very similar to yesterday. The flight overall, was almost identical to every maneuver practice flight I had done the week prior except is was twice as fast. Joe was very helpful on the radios, seeing as I am from the quiet midwest, which does not compare to sunny southern California in terms of flight activity. After our maneuvers, we headed to Gillespie for a short field landing. We taxied back and for a normal takeoff into the pattern. He simulated an engine out shortly after takeoff and I was required to land on a single engine. Everything went just as planned. After landing Joe said "his plane" as he took the controls from me. He then took off, flew to Montgomery, and did the full landing. I was a little nervous and unsure as to why he decided to fly the aircraft back to base. I do know however, that if you fail, the examiner must tell you right then and there terminating the test portion of the flight. After we got back to the building Joe told me he had not flow in a while and simply wanted to have a practice landing. I can now say I have officially logged 1.4 hours of Multi-Engine Pilot-in-Command time!Monday, July 20, 2009
Day 8 - Preparing for the First Checkride





Saturday, July 18, 2009
Day 6 - Rush Hour


Friday, July 17, 2009
Day 5 - Into the Wild Blue Yonder
I did not have internet in the apartment until Wednesday and have been quite busy settling in. The last couple of posts were written earlier and all posted only minutes prior to this one.
Day 2 and 3 both consisted of 2 hours of ground training and then 2 hours in the FTD (flight training device.) The FTD is an extremely touchy, overly sensitive, expensive, collection of hardware that I am going to spend 50 total hours in….ahhhh. The hardware has a tendency to produce a lot of heat and the AC in the flight school is set somewhere in the high 70’s. Needless to say, I was sweating by the end of the first day. However, my instructor was kind enough to position a fan on the cockpit the second day, making the experience much more comfortable. The FTD’s main purpose at this point is to offer practice in regards to twin-engine maneuvers and handling characteristics. Near the end of our session on the first day in the FTD, my instructor killed an engine on me. This caught me by surprise and my reaction was expectedly slow. This lead to me ultimately flying the plane upside down and backwards (not very realistic.) After the aircraft eventually settled (crashed) to the poor graphical representation of the San Diego landscape, my instructor advised me that the FTD will begin to do goofy things when it has been on so long. A potential calibration problem.
I also had a chance to meet my FAA examiner. His name is Joe Leoni and he seems like a really nice guy. The instructors at the school say he is a pretty laid back examiner and I can see how that is possible, he was wearing a Hawaiian shirt.
Day 4 was great! We spent an hour and a half on the ground reviewing many items I had learned prior to acquiring my private pilot’s license. A lot of information I will need to review and have down pat by my checkride next Tuesday.



Day 5, today, was much like yesterday, 2 hours in the FTD and 2 in the airplane. The flight was much like yesterday; we practiced each maneuver once this time in the Northeast practice area. I am proud to say each maneuver was within PTS (Practical Test Standards.) I am however, a little slow on my memory checklists leading to some slow recoveries. It is after all my second time flying a twin-engine aircraft. We then proceeded to Ramona Airport where I made my second landing in a multi-engine aircraft. We did two more landings at Ramona, two short field landings. The first was a little long, I came in over the threshold at 85kts and no the preferred 75kts. My second landing was within PTS, I touched down just beyond the numbers. We took off from Ramona and flew a straight in final to Montgomery. All and all, it was a very fun day.
Monday, July 13, 2009
Day 1 – The Training Begins
My wife’s flight back to Minneapolis left San Diego this morning at 9:50. My aunt was going to initially drive her to the airport. However, my instructor called me Sunday evening to reschedule our ground lesson from 8:00am to 1:00pm. This was a nice surprise seeing as it now allowed me to bring my wife to the airport and see her off.
I have been waiting months for this day to come! I am excited to finally be back into the realm of aviation! I was more than impressed with the ATP Airline Career Pilot Program binder I received today. The organization of the program’s syllabus gets me really excited. I wished they had sent the binder out earlier so I could have planned more appropriately. I assume they avoid that to protect their program from those students whom quit before Day 1. It is nice to be involved in a program that is so organized. I am sure these 90 days are going to ‘FLY’ by.
I arrived at the airport at 12:45pm for my 1:00pm ground lesson. It wasn’t until about 1:30pm that I noticed my instructor had left a message on my phone letting me know that he bumped my lesson to 2:00pm. That was ok though, it allowed more time to study. The first couple hours consisted of the filling out of paper work, log book audit, training contracts, etc. I was also given a 50 question multiple choice test on private flight knowledge. I scored a 78%. I will admit, I am a bit rusty. However, every question was familiar; it was only a matter of knocking that rust off. If I took the test again, I would definitely score 100%.
From there we began to cover the systems of the Piper Seminole. When I had come down in June for my interview, the San Diego school had only 1 1979 Piper Seminole and 1 Cessna 172. In the past month they have traded the 79’ Seminole in for 2 2000 Seminoles and a DA40 Glass Cockpit. It will be nice to operate newer equipment. Although the 79’ and 2000 Seminoles have a lot in common, we have been covering the systems for the 2000. We also covered the practical test standards for multi-engine. This was something none of my instructors in the past had ever gone over with me. Not sure why, now that I see the advantage is gives.
We also took a trip out to the tarmac to familiarize me with the airplane. We pulled some numbers out of the POH and used them to calculate numbers from all of the performance graphs as well as weight and balance.
I will be studying for a couple hours tonight and tomorrow morning before my 10 o’clock lesson.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Day 0 – Moving In
Early this morning my aunt and uncle, my wife, and I moved all of my things into the apartment. The apartment supplied to me through the flight program is located in a wonderful area only 5 miles from the airport/flight school. As of now one other guy and I share a large 2 bedroom apartment. My roommate is only here for 2 more weeks. Not sure when I will get another.
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Day -1 – A Key
On our way to take the boat out into the San Diego harbor for the evening we stopped by the flight school to pick up my key to the apartment. I am excited to shovel all of my things out of the car and into my living quarters. We will be doing that tomorrow.
Friday, July 10, 2009
Day -2 – Late Arrival
My wife and I arrived in San Diego late Friday night after a week long drive from Minnesota (visit hasetosan.blogspot.com.) My aunt and uncle were kind enough to open their home to us for the weekend as I settled in.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
10 - Still Alive
Monday, April 20, 2009
09 - Documents Received
Monday, April 13, 2009
08 - Even Better News!
- Apply for financing
- Reserve a starting date ($1,995 payment to reserve spot, goes towards total cost)
- Schedule an Interview ($100 payment to cover instructor fee, any ATP school nation-wide)





















