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Engine instruments green, airspeed is alive

Congrats Lindley.

I've always loved the ideal of flying and planes, but I'll be damned if you could drag me on a plane :lol:

Congrats, Lindley. :bolian: Now you just need to find an old cargo plane, hire a group of eccentric misfits and start taking on questionable jobs. :D
So, work for one of the major airlines then :p
 
Congrats, you live in a great part of the country to do fall flying. Go rent and fly for awhile. Take a couple of friends somewhere for lunch. Have fun.


I personally recommend a tail wheel endorsement next.
 
Congratulations.

I predict a very successful future for Lindley.
[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxDxPIDZUdQ[/yt]
 
Hmm, I was thinking it might be fun to put together an East Coast pilot's meetup. Certainly those of us with wings could attend from a wider radius than most meetups can manage.
 
Fortunately money hasn't really been a problem so far. My income exceeds my costs on that front.

Of course, this may be partially due to the fact that I took 2 years to get the rating.

Next up is instruments. I may also go for the 182 type rating so that I can get places a bit faster.

Hell with the 182, you need something quaint. Maybe a 150 taildragger. But better make sure you add the STOL kit to it. :lol:

Well, the 150s and 152s are certainly a lot *cheaper* than most of the other options, buying-wise. So one might not be a bad option for time-building. However, for actually getting anywhere, they're far too slow.
 
Welcome to the family of airmen (and women). Got my ticket in Sept. 1974 and collected 890 hours and an instrumenty rating along the way. Best advice I can offer - never be embarrassed to turn aroung and go back where you started from. Continuing into adverse conditions can be the worst decision you'll ever regret.
 
Welcome to the family of airmen (and women). Got my ticket in Sept. 1974 and collected 890 hours and an instrumenty rating along the way. Best advice I can offer - never be embarrassed to turn aroung and go back where you started from. Continuing into adverse conditions can be the worst decision you'll ever regret.

+1, hell +whatever

Take your time and enjoy the adventure....
 
One thing that's struck me is how quick people are to say "return to starting point". Sure, that's a good option if your route is well and truly blocked by weather, but that usually won't happen if you've done your preflight planning well.

It seems to me that at the first sign of difficulty, you should call Flight Watch and get their opinion about the weather ahead. If it's problematic but transient, just find the closest airport, set down, and wait it out. Only think about turning around entirely if it's going to be there for a while.
 
Get yourself a plane, install a bed in the back and start offering Mile High rides :devil:
 
Unfortunately impractical until you get into fairly large planes. It's a center-of-gravity thing.....
 
Very unlikely, heard a story once about a single engine crash, and how the occupants where arranged and dressed. Not good.

But on the turn around thing, it's not that you have to go back. Just don't force the destination. You have a plane after all, the destinations are nearly limitless...
 
Agreed. You can't truly understand the nature of get-there-itis until it's sitting on your shoulder. I think because, like a devil, its temptations vary from person to person.

I once experienced a night electrical failure when going between Chicago and BWI and turned around to put down in PIT, with equipment following me in. It was a business flight (self-travel). A senior pilot asked me calmly "If you were doing this for yourself, would you have started off at night?" I realized then the devil got me that evening. Not with weather, like normal, but with the hazards of single engine night. I was within 50 miles of the DC ADIZ and probably without a transpoder.

Just maintain reasonable expectations. Something to consider when going for your commercial long cross country flights or when you dare go into IMC.
 
Another pilot told me.."It's far better to be on the ground wishing you were in the air than in the air wishing you were on the ground!"

plan for the worst and hope for the best..

most of all, enjoy!
 
Fortunately money hasn't really been a problem so far. My income exceeds my costs on that front.

Of course, this may be partially due to the fact that I took 2 years to get the rating.

Next up is instruments. I may also go for the 182 type rating so that I can get places a bit faster.

Hell with the 182, you need something quaint. Maybe a 150 taildragger. But better make sure you add the STOL kit to it. :lol:

Well, the 150s and 152s are certainly a lot *cheaper* than most of the other options, buying-wise. So one might not be a bad option for time-building. However, for actually getting anywhere, they're far too slow.

Oh i never said you'd get there fast....;) It would just be quaint.. Nice and slow...
 
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