Yee haw!
Congrats, I know it has been quite a pain to get it finished.
		
		
	 
It was a bit of a pain, but all ended well.
 
Here's the write up as I promised:
 
Arrived at the Santa Fe airport at 8 AM and met the DPE at the flight school (Same guy I used for my private). Got IACRA sorted out ( my flight school has a terrible internet connection, or as the DPE described it, "Nicaragua with a fax machine", so this took awhile). Once I signed my 8710, we went into the conferance room and got started on the oral. The oral was pretty darn easy (took 35 minutes). Subjects we discussed:
 
-I gave him a general synopsis of the weather for the X-C to KPUB I planned out (not the best weather, I made a no-go decision, the risk for icing + high MEAs over the mountains=not much of an out in case I were to encounter ice. However, the marginal WX was east of the Sangre de Cristo mountains due to upslope activity that is pretty common this time of year and we were severe clear on the west side of it.)
-He showed me an easy formula for calculating cloud bases.
-He asked my what the standard lapse rate was (2 degrees per 1000 ft)
-We went over some procedures for picking up IFR clearance at an uncontrolled field (He gave me the Nationwide clearance number , so I wouldn't have to mess around with 1-800-WX-BRIEF in the event of an out of service RCO)
-He pointed out random symbols on the low enroute (I lnew them all)
-Looked over an ILS plate and he asked me the components of an ILS ( I got them all except for the runway lights. Doh!)
-He had me calculate the climb gradient for one of the SIDs out of SAF based on a 30C day at max gross in a 172 (not a chance). He then shared a story about a Lifeguard King Air that got into a CFIT crash in Ruidoso (KSRR) due to the pilots deviating from the ODP to get around a storm. 
-A few questions about Icing and  that was it.
 
Flight:
 
Got the plane (a 1982 C172P with a GNS 430W-the same plane I took my private ride in) pre-flighted, and we went over a few things (why is the wing bent( washout) and what are the CDI sensitivities for an IFR A1 GPS..). Taxied out, took off and simulated one of the SIDs (ZIASE 2) for a few miles before breaking off to do some unusual attitudes (nose up) and partial panel work. Came back in for an ILS (I negotiated the approaches with tower, he gave me the choice of him doing it , but I prefer to do all the radio work as my instructor has had me do it all from the start). The ILS wasn't my best  (never went more than 1/2 of a dot on the LOC, but I got pretty high on the glide slope 2 or 3 times. the wind was pretty crazy (around 25-30 kts aloft and 12 gusting 21 at the surface with a shear zone at about 7500 feet), so he never said anything. We went missed and headed  out for a GPS approach (with a hold in lieu of a procedure turn). He asked my how I would enter the hold from my present position and I answered correctly (Parallel) so he counted the GPS course reveral as the hold (we were going to go to the VOR to hold as published origionally). He was being nice I guess, probably too nice, but I'm not complaining . The approach went well except for the fact that he wanted me to use the vertical guidance (LNAV+V) instead of  diving and driving. I get his logic, why be unstabilized when you don't have to be? Practice is one thing, actual is another. We then made a left turn to the VOR on the miss and did a VOR approach to a full stop and that was it. All in all, I think it went pretty well. Time to have some fun for 2 or so months before I get started on the Commercial Single and Multi.