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Learn to Fly -
For All Pilots
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Wake Turbulence
One of the more interesting things to do on practical tests is to explore beyond a pilot certificate (or rating) applicant’s rote level of learning. As a matter of fact, one of the things examiners are required to do is evaluate an applicant’s aeronautical knowledge, in as practical a setting as we are able to create. Yes, I recognize the artificiality of a practical test. All of us know that the Practical Test Standards are certainly not everything one needs to know to be a pilot, and yet that is all so many instructors teach their students. The rating mills out there — we all know who they are — certainly can’t go beyond the rote level in the time they allow to complete a certificate or rating.
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Learn to Fly -
For All Pilots
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Runway Incursions
Runway incursions are aircraft incidents that most of us don’t think about much because avoiding them seems obvious. The FAA defines a runway incursion as “any occurrence at an airport including an aircraft, vehicle, person or object on the ground that creates a collision hazard or results in a loss of separation with an aircraft taking off, intending to take off, landing or intending to land.” At a towered airport, for example, who in the world would get onto an active runway without clearance? How could he do it? Why would he do it? We all know the regulations, and the ground controller will watch out for us even if we do make a mistake, right?
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Learn to Fly -
For All Pilots
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Airmanship
Something that creates a high level of frustration among examiners is the number of applicants who seem to be taught only the bare minimum necessary to meet the Practical Test Standards. This is not result of where the applicant did their training, either. It might have been at a 14 CFR 141 major flight school, a “mom-and-pop” FBO, or with an independent CFI.
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Learn to Fly -
For All Pilots
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The Accident Chain
Aviation accidents come in all shapes, sizes and colors. However, studies, research, safety articles, books, trend analyses and mishap reports all point to the fact that 80% to 90% of aviation accidents have human factors as the primary cause. We have met the enemy and it is us!
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Learn to Fly -
For All Pilots
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Those Terrible TFR's
I’ve got bad news … and worse. As I write this, the scoreboard reads: San Diego FSDO 21; Long Beach FSDO 20. (No, I’m not a fan of Long Beach and, no, Long Beach didn’t miss an extra point.)
Unfortunately, the score isn’t related to an intra-mural flag football game between the SAN and LGB Flight Standards District Office’s. It represents the number of airspace violations in the Presidential Temporary Flight Restrictions areas during George W. Bush’s visit to Southern California on August 21 & 22, 2003. That’s forty-one known violations, in just two days, of well-publicized temporary flight restrictions that were put in place because of the President’s visit. There were also reports that a number of general aviation aircraft had to be intercepted by combat aircraft and forced to land during those two days.
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TFR
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