IsAmerican[your flight school] hiring?
Nice pics ryan1234! Are you a member of the Black Diamond Jet Team? I saw one of your L-39s last summer when one of our blimps stopped in Scranton/Wilkes Barre, PA last summer. Pretty neat.
Probably this
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Nice! Are the butterflies always chewing away at your stomach? That has got to be one of the most challenging things to do in aviation, aside from commuting.
The coolest thing for me in an airplane was last November when I passed the $200,000 mark for pay for the year while still a first officer.
Nice pics ryan1234! Are you a member of the Black Diamond Jet Team? I saw one of your L-39s last summer when one of our blimps stopped in Scranton/Wilkes Barre, PA last summer. Pretty neat.
Daytime isn't so bad. Basically you hit certain wickets going around the pattern......600' at the 180/abeam, 500' at the 90 (base) at 3-400 fpm, 380 crossing the wake at the 45 with 6-700 fpm, and roll out in the groove not over or undershooting with about 760 fpm descent rate referencing your position on the ball. Day is nice because you have a lot of visual references, and you can sort of develop a sight picture for what a good approach turn looks like. Big corrections early (the name of the game) are easier for the same reason. When you turn the lights out we fly straight ins, and the corrections can be trickier due to the lack of cues aside from a blob of lights and the IFLOLS. I always feel pretty high at night, even on glideslope due to the position of the fresnel lens and the pit of darkness below it which is the ramp and also the water, which are indistinguishable from one another when there isn't a real bright moon. You have other things like ICLS, ACLS (if either are working) and LRLS to help you out as you approach the boat, but at 3/4 mile, the only things you are looking at are meatball, lineup, and AoA. Night traps suck, but they are at least satisfying when you are hanging in your straps in full blower in the LA when the deck dude gives you the throttle back signal.......
The coolest thing I've done was my first grass landing. It was completely unsupervised, and only the third flight I had taken since getting my PPL. The runway was 2000' long with trees on both ends but there was a paved runway running perpendicularly through it, so I decided that I would stop before that. I brought it in about 20 feet over the trees and then dropped it right onto the runway, and made a perfect soft-field landing stopping just short of the 1000' point. It was just so much fun being able to just go and do something that I had never done before, with no instructor, because I had my license.
Second place goes to the aerobatic and spin flight I took in December. That's a whole new way of seeing aviation. It was also my first time flying a taildragger, which I landed 7 times and only almost-crashed once.
Nice! Are the butterflies always chewing away at your stomach? That has got to be one of the most challenging things to do in aviation, aside from commuting. There was a documentary on Smithsonian Channel about carrier ops, that had pilots landing while the carrier was tilting due to rough seas, AT NIGHT. That was nuts.
View attachment 23026
Somehow, we've convinced the world that doing aerobatics off of Cape Canaveral is a required test point for a test program I often fly.
Some of the other cool stuff:
-Going to Sweden to fly a Gripen
-Flying with MiG-29s in Bulgaria
-Flying a F-16.....as it departed controlled flight.
-Flying the first flight of a kick-ass new radar in the F-15E
-Dropping the first JASSM off an F-15E
And....saving lives
(Hacker15e did not look good his nylon short-shorts and an unruly mustache)
It's weird to think that the coolest stuff is probably already behind me....
Landed a broken down, screwed up, should-have-been-in-the-boneyard-in-1980 BE99 in a hurricane at KPNS. Total coincidence that the identifier was KPNS, btw. DHL van couldn't drive out on the ramp because of the wind. In retrospect, dumber than owl poop and I wouldn't do it again, but as a memory? First tier. There are others, but they, if I had done them, which of course I wouldn't have, were all illegal.
View attachment 23026
Somehow, we've convinced the world that doing aerobatics off of Cape Canaveral is a required test point for a test program I often fly.
Some of the other cool stuff:
-Going to Sweden to fly a Gripen
-Flying with MiG-29s in Bulgaria
-Flying a F-16.....as it departed controlled flight.
-Flying the first flight of a kick-ass new radar in the F-15E
-Dropping the first JASSM off an F-15E
And....saving lives
(Hacker15e did not look good his nylon short-shorts and an unruly mustache)
It's weird to think that the coolest stuff is probably already behind me....