Hey gang, just wanted to drop that I passed all of my sims , check rides, and evaluations. I am now a 737 captain for the "world's largest airline." 8 year old me would call me a "bus driver," but I'm pretty proud of myself.
average_joker said:
Hey gang, just wanted to drop that I passed all of my sims , check rides, and evaluations. I am now a 737 captain for the "world's largest airline." 8 year old me would call me a "bus driver," but I'm pretty proud of myself.
A passenger on an overnight flight from California to Massachusetts recorded skyscrapers just barely peeking out from the dense fog surrounding Boston. https://t.co/UBfAJ7ewjD pic.twitter.com/4eXSAwMhn0
— ABC News (@ABC) December 27, 2023
average_joker said:
Hey gang, just wanted to drop that I passed all of my sims , check rides, and evaluations. I am now a 737 captain for the "world's largest airline." 8 year old me would call me a "bus driver," but I'm pretty proud of myself.
i do not know john emerson unfortunately but good luck on your ride. i just passed my ifr checkride and i can tell you one thing you might not have heard about is what are type certificates? buddy of mine took his ppl oral not too long ago and they asked him that question so i looked it up. lo and behold i was asked the same thing on mine.boredatwork08 said:
PPL checkride is scheduled for middle of May!
Anyone familiar with John Emerson out of KLCH?
is there a single forum on this board you don't post on?trouble said:
The bigger one would like you to know that he's pretty impressed you flew in a straight line.
Dallasag517 said:is there a single forum on this board you don't post on?trouble said:
The bigger one would like you to know that he's pretty impressed you flew in a straight line.
I've read a couple WW2 fighter pilot books lately and one had a suggestion that stuck with me.Dallasag517 said:
I passed my IFR checkride last Friday. Anyone have suggestions for a first solo flight ifr? weather conditions, min ceilings, visibility etc. I have my personal minimums set up as 5 miles and 2K feet, the dpe suggested i start with 5 miles and 5k ft.
Dallasag517 said:
for the practical, i would recommend if you aren't already, practice talking out loud about what you are doing which will help you stay ahead of the airplane and also give the dpe a good view into your airmanship and decision making. if you make a mistake, and you will, you are talking out loud about how you are correcting it and that's what they want to see. you recognized the mistake (much sooner than later of course ) and you are properly correcting for it. good luck, i know you'll do great.
i plan to do my commercial later, but right now i'm tired of studying! yeah, i think they want to see good decision making and that can bail you out. good for you and glad you got through it. are you an instructor now or doing other things aviation wise?CenterHillAg said:Dallasag517 said:
for the practical, i would recommend if you aren't already, practice talking out loud about what you are doing which will help you stay ahead of the airplane and also give the dpe a good view into your airmanship and decision making. if you make a mistake, and you will, you are talking out loud about how you are correcting it and that's what they want to see. you recognized the mistake (much sooner than later of course ) and you are properly correcting for it. good luck, i know you'll do great.
Great advice, I did that and it kept me from failing my commercial check ride. I was pretty sloppy starting my steep 360 turn the left, talked through how I screwed up and how to get back on altitude, and proceeded to nail the turn to the right without issue. At the end of the ride, the DPE said he was prepared to fail me over it, until I talked through the correction.
CenterHillAg said:
You fly them a little easier when you pay the maintenance bill instead of Uncle Sam.
for those looking for a tad more context: https://t.co/h92h0Cr2MR
— 🇺🇦 JonNYC 🇺🇦 (@xJonNYC) May 9, 2024