Update

June 1st, 2007 by aspilot2be

Its been a little while since I have written here.  So here is an update:

  1. I did my solo cross country to Talkeetna.
  2. Graduated from High School.
  3. Waiting on the weather so we can get long cross countries out of the way.

Thats where we are now.  I almost died the other day in my solo crosswind landings.  I bounced and nearly got blown off the runway.

Dual Cross-country

May 18th, 2007 by aspilot2be

Well, I just got back from my dual cross-country.  We spent 2.5 hours in the air, and what a beating it was.  I am severly overwhelmed.  My ability to track to VORs are good.  But, just being introduced to all this new stuff was overwhelming.

 Our flight took us from Palmer to the Big Lake VOR, and directly to the Talkeetna VOR.  We did three touch and goes in Talkeetna, flew to Wasilla, and did three touch and goes and then returned to Palmer. I was glad to be back.

 Tomorrow I do the same route solo, then I return to Southeast on Sunday.

Update

May 10th, 2007 by aspilot2be

Today I did my second solo. My landing were much . It was one touchdown per landing;)

Yesterday was practicing S-turns and turns around a point. Then we came back and did touch and goes.

The day before, I had a stage check that went well.

Other than that, not much has been happening. Oh, we did almost a street sweeper today.

Solo

May 4th, 2007 by aspilot2be

I soloed today. Took the plane for three trips around the pattern. I think I was too busy to be nervous. I was having a blast by the third landing. It went by far too fast.

Update

May 3rd, 2007 by aspilot2be

Just more touch and goes. Should be soloing this week,

Here is a Beech Sierra that the school owns, it is a beautiful paint job.
http://i7.photobucket.com/albums/y296/ASpilot2be/DSC00199.jpg

Update

April 27th, 2007 by aspilot2be

Well, just an update since I missed a day.

Today we went over to Wasilla to do touch and goes because of high winds here in Palmer. When we returned to Palmer, we had a 15 knot crosswind. We nearly got blown off the runway here due to the winds. We watched a Super Cub hover in place, and then turn.

Yesterday was a busy day also. We worked on touch and goes, and did teardrop returns, forward slips and unexpected requests by ATC. It was an overwhelming day. We did 1.1 hours in the morning and .5 in the afternoon.

Review

April 24th, 2007 by aspilot2be

Today was a review of what I have learned so far. We did slow flight, power on and power off stalls, S-turns, steep turns, and turns around a point. It went pretty darn well. S-turns, and turns around a point were much easier today. I still need some work on stalls and steep turns.

On another note, the weather man doesnt like me. It was flat calm this morning. As soon as I stepped out to preflight the aircraft the wind picked up. It wasnt so bad, but on the way back, we got some pretty good up and down drafts.

Ground Reference maneuvers

April 23rd, 2007 by aspilot2be

Today we continued our practice of ground reference maneuvers. We were getting some pretty good winds off of the mountains, which made it harder than it should have been. I found S-turns to be pretty simple once you get used to them, and turns around a point werent much harder. Probably the easiest for me was the rectangular course. Its just like flying a regular traffic pattern.

The weather wasnt bad today. We just had some strong winds out of the Knik valley. When we came back to land, the winds were reporting 180/18. So the landing on runway 16 was a bit bumpy.

The Palmer airport is a fascinating one to learn to fly at, especially with the State Foresty aviation division being based here. We share the patter with Beavers, Twin Commanders, Pilatus PC-7s, and soon the DC-6 firebombers.

Update

April 21st, 2007 by aspilot2be

Ok, as an update I am on lesson six of my training.

Here is a brief outline of the lessons.

Lesson One: An introductory flight where the instructor taught me the fundamentals. We did climbs, descents, and turns to headings. I also got to do the takeoff, which was fun.

Lesson Two: This lesson basically consisted of the same stuff as lesson one, but we added climbing and descending turns. We also did some touch and goes. The turn from downwind, to base, to final was the hardest part. I had a hard time not pulling back during the turns.

Lesson Three: This was the funnest, and most educational lesson yet. I went under the foggles. I was only able to see the instruments. It gave me a better understanding of handling the aircraft.

Lesson Four: Lesson four was slowflight and stalls. Slowflight was a blast. Stalls, however were quite nerve racking at first. However they were much better when I was in control.

Lesson Five: This was by far the most stressful lesson yet. Emergency maneuvers. The instructor would pull the engine back to idle and make you glide to the runway. Between running checklists, staying coordinated, and achieving the glide speed, it was hard.

Lesson Six: This was steep turns and ground reference maneuvers. My left handed steep turns were ok, but my right hand turns left alot to be desired. My S-turns also need some work. However the weather was awesome. Not a breath of wind. Warm, and sunny. The rivers were flat calm. It was a great day to be flying.

I will keep this updated as I go.

Hello world!

April 17th, 2007 by aspilot2be

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