jrh
Well-Known Member
Airdale said:I'm not sure why'd you want to fly without a landing light - period.
I had one blow out with a student once while we were doing night T/O's and Landings, we had to stop because you couldn't judge your height very well. Almost got dangerous!
I teach all my students to land without a light for this exact reason...fly long enough at night, and sooner or later you're going to need to land without a light for some reason (breakers pop, lights been out, alternators fail, etc.). You just use your peripheral vision with the spacing of the runway lights to judge height. I've become very comfortable with it.
This skill is also very useful to have if you really want to make a trip at night and find the landing light burnt out. This exact situation happened to me while I was building time for the instrument rating. I wanted to fly a night XC with a buddy and we both thought a burnt out light was a lousy reason to cancel a perfectly good night of flying. Since we had done night landings without the light in our training, it was no big deal, and we decided to go anyway. Want to know the hardest part of that trip? Navigating the taxiways at Spokane International without a light. It turned in to me holding a Maglite (sp?) out the window while he taxied, and him doing the same for me while I taxied. Haha...good memories...