TangoZulu is a pilot and aircraft owner in the Washington D.C. area. His IFR training started in January 2009 and is still in progress. As a blogger, he documents everything and publishes one post per lesson. This is full of lessons for IFR pilots wannabes and potential owners. Use the links below to read more from each post.
Lesson One
We started with straight-and-level flight on the gauges. I practiced my “scan”, looking successively at each of the main “6-pack” of gauges. Each gauge tells me somewhat different information. And each has a different set of possible errors. Pitch or heading information is shared across multiple gauges.
Lesson Two
My instrument scan isn’t consistent. I’m getting fixated on one or another instrument. I’m told that I need to split my attention across the instruments. But, it’s more like time sharing of software in a computer. Check each in turn and move on to the next.
New Starter
My airplane’s starter wouldn’t start the engine. It’s been a couple weeks now, but the starter’s replaced. I also asked them to check and signed off an AD (airworthiness directive) on the alternate static air valve. But they found out the valve was stuck and needed replacement. This a good thing to fix, but it’s just one more expense unfortunately. After all, the starter wasn’t cheap either!
Lesson Three: Sysiphus the Pilot
My headings were pretty much on target as were my altitudes, I had a few “excursions”, but not too large. I’m pleased to find the airplane was more stable than the simulator. I was worried about my ability when on the sim. But not I’m sure I can learn to do this. (…) The airplane is more sensitive in pitch than in heading. I seemed to oscillate between 200 feet per minute and 700 fpm when I was trying to pin it on 500 fpm descent or climb.
We scheduled the simulator again tonight. I’m not looking forward to this, I have a hate vs tepid friendship with that simulator. (…) Now, I’ve never managed to land a simulator very well. I can land a plane in a gusty crosswind, but not a simulator in no wind. Go figure. And I didn’t manage to exceed my past experience in this sim either.
Five: Unusual Attitudes and My First (Real) Localizer
Next, I was to fly with my eyes closed. This was to teach me to trust the instruments and not my own sense of balance. I knew how this would go, pretty soon I’d fall off the left or right, and loose track of level flight as well. (…) M then took control of the plane and I kept my head down and eyes closed. He flew up and down and turned various directions to disorient me, the gave me back control and said, “Recover!”
Six: Partial Panel, Unusual Attitudes, and Helicopters
We did some self-induced unusual attitudes next. I flew with my eyes shut to get a feel for what happens if I don’t pay attention. I proved again that humans can’t fly like a bird does. I need to trust and use my instruments. (…) After one or two of these then instructor R takes the plane and I get a closed-eye E ticket ride. Well, not quite. Nothing as bad as a roller coaster, but enough to make me loose touch with what the plane’s doing. Then, “Recover”.
The tolerance in the FAA’s test standards is 100 feet in altitude and 10 degrees in heading. I seem to have taken that as permission to be 100 feet off altitude. M is expecting better of me, “Own that altitude, don’t let it change from 3000 ft!” This gets more interesting crossing the ridge with some temporary light turbulence. I do a little better and I’ll get a lot more practice in future lessons.
The VOR tracking went well we all do this in the private pilot training. And I’ve used VORs since too, I use Campbell’s method which works and is simpler, but tends to confuse others. All was uneventful as I have to demonstrate practical competence rather than follow a certain method.
I’m flying with instructor R today. He briefs the lesson and it all seems so straightforward right now, here on the ground with no turbulence and no plane to fly. My job as a pilot with NDBs is to maintain the necessary heading to or from that beacon. In a crosswind I need to adjust for the wind direction by angling the plane toward the wind somewhat. (…) Once R and I are in the plane and I’m tracking toward the NDB this all becomes harder. I’m still having to keep the plane straight and upright by instruments alone. And we’re getting bounced around a bit.
I’ve been diagramming ADF and DGs from the last lesson. I’ve been reading up on holding patterns, and I think I’m really prepared now. (…) I see a bunch of numbers and can’t make sense of them. I find the heading for the VOR and turn to it. But I have no idea how to enter a hold or where to head in the hold.
Eleven: Holding in the Simulator
Back to the sim today. After the last lesson Instructor R and I start the sim to practice VOR and ADF holds and hold entries. Afterwards it is clearer to me. Also, using the sim is getting a little easier. The sim, or more accurately, the PC flight training device, is more sensitive in the controls from the real airplane.
Twelve: In the Clouds! – ATTENTION ORIGINAL LINK IS WRONG
It seems the weather forecast is for a no-fly day for VFR flights, but would be a good day for a beginner IFR student like me. Clouds, but not too much, some ground visibility, but not very much, and freezing conditions not likely. (…) This approach worked well enough, the airport came out of the haze about three miles out and we landed normally.
I’m banking on the idea that practice with x-plane and the controls I have attached to my computer will make me more accurate on the controls in the real plane and improve my scan. So while I can’t log this home simulator time, as far as the real goal of flying better it seems to be working.
We track that around the arc and I’m late on wind correction as we swing around the VOR. I slide out of the 7 mile arc past 8 miles. I tell M, “I just busted my checkride, I’m over a mile off.” I start working to get back in, but I’m also turning in as well. So it takes a pretty big turn to get re-established. By then I’m almost on my outbound radial so start turning outbound.
Thirteen: GPS and Stage Check Two
The annual is finally finished. Not that it took very long in the scheme of things; only three days. But when you’re waiting it can seem longer. (…) My altitude control is pretty good too, most of the time it’s well within the +- 100 feet. I make an excursion later on the GPS approach that’s not good, but the sim work at home is helping.



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Thanks for posting this about my IFR flying lessons and learning adventures! I’m having fun with the IFR and hope that this will give others a bit of an idea what it is like.
Thank to you for sharing, TangoZulu. I saw that http://www.golfhotelwhiskey.com also posted about my post about your posts… you’re becoming a web-star !
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