Under the Hood: The UK IMC/IR(R) Rating

Like a good many private pilots, I was taught to treat clouds like floating mountains of granite.  Best avoided in the air and a source of frustration on the ground while waiting for them to clear (they never do). 

I’m from California, where clouds are something we read about in books and weather reports consist of three words, “sunny and 72”.  Learning to fly in the UK gave me an up-front and personal appreciation for perpetually unpredictable weather.  Dozens of days spent glancing between TAFS and leaden grey skies convinced me that if I was ever to get out of the circuit on a marginal day I had best learn how to use all the dials in the cockpit, not just the ones I look at when its CAVOK.

Having neither commercial aspirations nor a wealthy sponsor, I judged a full IR to be a bit of an extravagance.  Thankfully the CAA provides a middle ground in the form of an IR (Restricted), or as it is better known, the IMC.  15 hours, a skills test; one written exam and the clouds that once seemed so daunting become an inconvenience rather than an impediment.

That said, there is a reason that an IMC is considered a “get out of trouble” rating rather than an all-weather pass.  At 15 hours, the instruction time is less than half that required for a full-IR.  You can’t fly in airways and ILS minimums are higher.  There is no requirement to be taught holds (although Stapleford instructors do so) and the IMC is only valid in UK, Channel Island and Isle of Man airspace.  There are a few other restrictions as well so ask your instructor for details.

Before taking on the IMC, I received sage advice from a pilot friend: “As a weekend flyer, you shouldn’t start [the IMC] before you have 150 hours under your belt and feel comfortable enough with the controls so you don’t find yourself struggling to keep up with the aircraft.  That level of comfort isn’t there directly after your PPL.”  Wise words.

The course itself hits the sweet-spot between challenging and immensely fun but you don’t get to see much along the way.  From about 800’ on the climb-out to 800’ before the threshold on the return, your world-view is limited to the inside of a grey visor and the instrument panel.  It sounds terrifying at first but after a very short while you become accustomed to this new perspective and it becomes oddly peaceful. 

In the beginning, IMC training is something of a refresher.  There’s time spent flying straight and level, turning, climbing and descending; all the while getting used to looking only at, and fully trusting, your instruments.  Things get interesting when you start to practice recoveries from stalls and spiral dives.  The lead up to both can look surprisingly similar while under the hood.

Without a doubt, the navigation and instrument landing components of the IMC are the most satisfyingly demanding.  Acquiring proficiency in NDB and VOR tracking as well as ILS procedures are essential to pass both the practical and written exams.  They are also the navaids you will rely on during actual IMC conditions in the UK. 

Since real-life lacks a pause button, a desktop flight simulator can bridge the gap between book-learning and the real world.  While a sim won’t precisely represent the light touch it takes to maintain a glideslope, it will allow you to repeatedly practice finding and flying that glideslope without signing over your entire pay cheque to Southend.

In an age where a tablet running SkyDemon is a ubiquitous component of every fight-bag, there is something uniquely rewarding about tracking along the beam of a VOR; entering an NDB hold and carrying out an ILS procedure, all the while using technology that pre-dates the Beatles.

Later in the training, after navigating by compass alone, with gyro instruments covered, I developed a renewed respect for pilots who crossed continents and oceans with only the most meagre of instrumentation. 

Two-months after receiving my IMC rating, I found myself five-miles south-east of Stapleford telling Southend, for the first time ever, I was IFR.  Being alone in the clouds vs. under the hood with an instructor in the right-seat feels like the difference between hitting a few balls at the driving range and teeing off on the 18th hole of The Masters during a tie-break.  A sharp intake of breath followed by an inner voice saying, “you can do this.” 

Just past Sittingbourne I climbed through the muck and was temporarily blinded by a startling azure sky.  I was alone between a sea of candyfloss and a canopy of blue.  The radio was quiet, the wind calm.  Of all the times I’d been in the air, this was the first time I felt I understood what it was like to actually fly.

PPL Plus

I earned my PPL at Stapleford Aerodrome in Essex and it is still my home field.  I like the place.  It's always filled with pilots, want-to-be pilots and instructors; this makes it a good place to hang out, critique landings and chat about aviation.  The only thing pilots like to do more than flying is talk about flying so if you ever need an update on what "those idiots at the CAA" are doing or the proper spark-plugs to use in your Mooney M-18C Mite, a small airfield cafe is the place for you.

Apart from official ratings, PPL, CPL, ATPL, etc., Stapleford offers a variety of customised tuition designed for pilots who want to push beyond standard training and learn more advanced techniques.  I took one such course, the PPL+, and wrote about it for the club newsletter.  They had to cut a bit for space but here is the full-length version:

We were somewhere around Abberton Reservoir, climbing through 4,000’ when I began to wonder if this was such a good idea.  When I signed up for the PPL+ course I knew that the last hour would be spin training but I had tucked that bit of information into the part of my brain reserved for remembering distant aunt’s birthdays and train schedules.

At 70 hours past my PPL I started to get restless.  I’d visited nearly every airfield within easy reach of EGSG, plus a few in France but I was beginning to feel that hours flown did not directly correlate with experience gained.  I wanted to push the envelope a bit and Stapleford’s PPL+ promised to provide just such an opportunity.

When I discovered that Roy Copperwaite was the course instructor, the deal was sealed.  Roy and I have a history.  I did my PA28, Arrow and Technam differences training with him as well as my Night Rating.  During my PPL he was largely responsible for teaching me how to land without bouncing (repeatedly).

Any foolish notion on my part that the PPL+ was going to be a gentle review of what I’d already learned was quickly swept aside by Roy.  After a few demos by him and some ham-fisted attempts on my part, I found myself coming in from a ridiculously high base on a glide approach with no flaps and side slipping down to a greaser. 

A day and a bucketful of crosswind landings later it was out to Hanningfield for stalling.  Standard stuff until the “plus” part of the course kicked in:  60-degree banking turns with the stick pulled back, surfing the stall warner all the way around a tight 360.

Advanced stalling complete, I was back in the classroom for a pre-flight briefing on the confusingly named “constant aspect PFLs” taught by the RAF.  Trying to learn constant aspect PFLs in ground-school is like being taught about girls from an anatomy textbook. In both endeavours, experience is everything. Fortunately the PPL+ provides for plenty of practice (with PFLs, not girls). Roy took great pleasure in randomly pulling the throttle back, smiling and saying, “Your engine just went ‘bang’, land in the field beneath us.”  Sadistic instructors aside, once you get the hang of it you wonder why they would bother teaching anything else. 

For “upset training” I was handed off to aerobatics instructor Tony Glover and it was with him that I found myself levelling off over Abberton, cinched up tight in a five-point harness and questioning all my life decisions up to that point.

“What people find frightening about aerobatics,” Tony said as we finished our HASELL checks, “is that they think the plane behaves randomly.  It doesn’t.  When handled correctly, it’s completely predictable.”

With that, he flipped us into a spin.  The sky vanished, replaced by green fields, then sky, then fields.  Tony’s recovery was smooth and precise.

My turn.  Nothing you read in a book can prepare you for the first time you take control of an aircraft and deliberately put her into a spin.  It’s not violent or frightening, just very, very, abrupt.  I counted two rotations then pushed full opposite rudder, stick forward, spin stopped, wings level, eased the nose up, dragging blood down from my head; straight and level again but 1,700’ closer to the ground.

Four times around and some steep turns later it was time to head back.  I would have quite happily spun the rest of the day away.  Apart from the unreservedly brilliant feeling of twirling a plane around in the sky, the Firefly is simply a beautiful aircraft to fly.  260 horsepower of pure, bright yellow joy. 

Later, in the clubhouse, an instructor said to me, “You’ve been up in the Firefly haven’t you?”  I asked him how he knew.  “You’ve got the post-spinning smile.”   There you have it: pushed out of my comfort zone, made to work harder to fly better and still smiling over a post-flight cup of tea, that was the PPL+ course for me.

Flying Colours

August 23rd. Flying skills test.  My instructor said I was ready, I was not so sure.

The night before I was all furrowed-brow concentration.  Plotting my course, reviewing emergency checklists, replacing headset batteries, gathering up a mountain of paperwork, compulsively checking the weather.   

Before turning in I laid out a sea of forms that needed to be completed before heading off to the airfield in the morning.  I set the alarm for six, crawled into bed and utterly failed to fall asleep.  I’m an insomniac at the best of times and the stomach-tightening anxiety that come before a PPL skills test is hardly a state of mind conducive to relaxing slumber.

I was up before the alarm; immediately checking the Met Office GA weather reports on my iPad.  Looking good.   Winds from the SW, broken clouds at about 4,000’, 15kt winds aloft.  I filled in my pilot’s log (PLOG), calculated my heading, groundspeed and time estimates.  With deliberate care I packed up my flight kit, saying aloud what each piece was as I put it away.

“Mass and balance sheet, completed”

“Log book up-to-date”

“Passport for ID”

“Headset batteries checked, noise cancelling checked”

“Diversion sheet completed; divert compass and airspeed ruler in knee-board”

“Stopwatch”

On and on until the table was clear and my bag was stuffed.

I was alone in the house.  My partner had gone to Devon to visit her family so there was no one around to offer encouragement or even say “good luck.”  I took a look around.  When I returned in the evening it would be, as the Greeks said before battle, “with my shield or on it.”  I would be a pilot or I would not and if I were not, better to suffer that indignity in isolated silence than try and explain the failure to disappointed eyes.

I donned my jacket, put on my cap, locked the door and was gone.

08:30, Stapelford Flight Centre.  The mist was still rising off the grass when my taxi pulled in.  We weren’t scheduled to be wheels-up until 11:30 but I am compulsively early, besides, I wanted to do the pre-flight checks and fuelling without feeling rushed.

The receptionist greeted me as I walked in, “Big day today.  Here’s Lima Oscar’s tech log, Alan’s not in yet.”  I accepted the binder from her and filled in the forms, listing myself as Pilot in Command and Alan, my examiner, as my passenger.

Alan Turner is a Stapelford institution.  He’s been with the flight centre almost as long as there’s been a flight centre.  He looks and sounds like your retired uncle, a bit wide in the middle with thinning grey hair and a predisposition toward wearing the same shabby ball-cap every day.  He is instantly likeable and too easily dismissed as a soft touch.  When I found out he was to be my examiner I relaxed a little.

Two-days prior to my skills-test I went to Alan’s office for a briefing.  “Allow an hour,” he told me; I only brought a single sheet of paper for notes. Three hours and half a notebook later I walked out feeling unsteady but strangely elated and reminding myself for the millionth time, never to take anyone at face value.

The first hour was all business.  He detailed what would be expected of me and in what order.  He told me what constitutes passing and failing; warned me of some of the most common, and uncommon errors students make and, reassuringly, said that just because I screwed something up didn’t mean I would fail the whole test.

When he finished with the syllabus he leaned back in his chair and said,  “I’m going to be writing a lot when we’re up there, taking a lot of notes.  This gets some people rattled.  I don’t want you to even think about it.  I have to put ticks in boxes and scribble a lot for the CAA.  The real thing I am testing you on, the one standard I will hold you to is this, ‘would I send my grandmother up in a plane with you?’”

“Is she still alive?”  I asked.

“Nope.”  He said and laughed a hearty uncle-type laugh.

I spent the next two-hours being impressed by Alan Turner’s comprehensive knowledge of everything with wings and engines.  I also saw that this seemingly mild-mannered man had a distinct edge to him.  It came out whenever he was describing particularly moronic stuns pulled by pilots that made them look idiotic, or dead, or both.  This is a man who doesn’t suffer fools gladly and I knew then and there that any thought I might have had that getting Alan as my examiner meant that I would have an easy time of it was misplaced.  He wasn’t going to be looking to see if I could perform the tasks correctly, he was looking to see if I could fly.    

With all this in mind I handed the clipboard back to the receptionist, grabbed the keys and walked out to pre-flight my aircraft.  As I was going out the door my instructor, Sam, was coming in. 

He smiled broadly, stuck out his hand and said,  “I’d wish you luck, but you don’t need it.”

“Thanks a bunch!”  I said.  The truth is, that gave me a massive confidence boost.  Sam believed in me and I’d be damned if I was going to let him down.  I strode a bit more purposefully out to the airplane.

Pre-flight checks done and Lima-Oscar all filled up, I still had over an hour before we were scheduled to leave.  I grabbed some breakfast in the café and waited for Alan to show up. 

About ten minutes after I finished eating Alan walks in carrying his kneeboard, a headset and a stack of charts.

 “All checked out?”  He asked.

“Yep.”

“OK, let’s go.”

At the aircraft I had to do all the checks again for him.  He asked me questions as we went around the plane.

“Why do you check the static port?”

“If you lose vacuum pressure in flight what should you do?”

“What’s the purpose of the raised strips along the ailerons?”

“What’s the procedure for an engine fire at start-up?”

I managed to answer everything but the strips along the ailerons question.  I had never noticed them before.  Alan used it as a teachable moment and told me about counterweights to prevent instrument flutter.

We strapped into the aircraft, I went over my pre-ignition checklist and started her up.  I called the radio room to get airfield information and then I moved her forward, tested the breaks, and taxied to the power-checks area.

The very best advice I received regarding the skills test was from a student pilot friend of mine who did his a few weeks before me.

“Follow your checklists and then do what he asks.”  He said,  “You know how to do all this stuff, don’t think about it, relax and do as you are told.”

Turns out he was exactly right.

I proceeded down my checklists, taking perhaps a bit more time than normal and making sure I called out each item as I did it.  Alan made notes.  By the time I had eased the plane back onto the apron and stopped at the holding point for 22L I was only dimly aware that he was there.  500’ off the runway and he was just a shape in the other seat that made it harder for me to reach the flap lever.  When I levelled off at 2,200’ I had completely forgotten that this was my major, huge, scary, skills test.  I was flying an airplane and that’s all that mattered. 

I turned onto my heading and for once remembered to mark the time down.  I checked in with Southend to get a Basic service and settled in for the cross-country part of the test.  Alan and I chatted; he scribbled.

The cross-country bit was a breeze, pun intended.  I knew that sometime after my first turn point I would be told to make a diversion so I made sure I had my diversion calculator and airspeed ruler handy. 

“Alright,” said Alan, “Your primary destination is fogged-in, divert to Clacton.”

Excellent!  I actually knew where Clacton was.  I picked a decent reference a few miles ahead as my turning point and plotted the diversion on my chart.  In case you are ever called upon to do the same, here are the steps:

1.     Figure out where the hell you are

2.     Decide where you are going to turn onto your new course

3.     Draw a line on your chart between your turning point and your new destination (make sure to mark the half-way point)

4.     Use a cool little tool called a diversion heading calculator to figure out your new course

5.     Using a handy wind-velocity cheat sheet that you prepared earlier determine your actual heading and ground speed

6.     Calculate your new ETA using a speed/distance ruler

7.     Turn onto your new heading, make a note of the time and your ETA to the next waypoint

8.     Hope for the best

Keep in mind that you must do all of the above while actually flying the aircraft, usually with your feet.  Spend too long looking down at the chart and by the time you look up again a nasty surprise could be waiting.

I did all that and got us turned toward Clacton, I could even see it about 10 miles ahead. 

A few minutes passed.

“You think you might call Southend?”  Asked Alan.

Oh shit!  I forgot to tell Southend RADAR why I just deviated off course and was heading back toward them.

I put in the call and told them what we were doing.  Damn, my first mistake (that I knew of). 

We reached Clacton on time but I had trouble finding the airfield.  I knew where it was supposed to be but a grass strip in a grass field surrounded by other grass fields isn’t the easiest thing to spot from 2,200’.    I banked right and left to get a better view.

“What are you doing?”  Said Alan, sounding annoyed.

“Looking for the airfield.  I know it’s here somewhere.  I bet you can see it huh?”

“Yep.”

“Damn, damn, damn!”  I thought.  Thankfully by about the third “damn” I spotted the field and pointed it out to Alan.  I wondered if that counted as a mistake.  I got us there on time and the reason I couldn’t see the field was that it was directly underneath us.  Good navigating, mediocre observing.

Alan had me turn toward Blackwater estuary and climb to 5,000’ in preparation for the general handling part of the test.  I took a moment to relax a bit and wait for his instructions without trying to anticipate what would come next.

He gave me headings to fly; I flew them.  Speeds, levels, sharp turns, stalls, slow flight, fast flight, recovery from a spiral dive, instrument flying, one after another he told me what to do and, with as little thinking as possible, I did as he asked.

Once or twice I heard the heading wrong and he growled at me a bit but, truth be told, it was kind of fun playing around with the aircraft.

After all the various stalls and dives we’d worked our way down to about 3,000’.  Alan reached over and pulled the throttle back to idle,  “OK, he said, your engine just quit, land and try not to kill us.”

About the only things I ever did well from the get-go were practiced forced landings (PFLs).  I have no idea why but I seem to be able glide an aircraft into a farmer’s field without too much trouble.  This is one skill I really, really, hope I’ll never have to use in real life.

Thankfully this time was no exception.  I picked a nice big field, did the engine failure checks and dropped us down, nice and easy until Alan called “go around!”

500’ up on the climb out from the go around he kills the throttle again.  “You’ve lost your engine on take off, land it.”

No problem.  Pitch down to 65kts, look for a field 45 degrees on either side, secure your harnesses and hope for the best.  Flying involves a lot of hoping for the best.

Convinced that we’d make it to the field in one piece, mostly, Alan told me to climb back up to 2,000’.   Once at altitude I had to use the navigation radio to track a VOR signal back to Stapelford.  Along the way I used the second nav radio to cross-reference our position.

We’d already been flying for two hours by the time we joined the pattern at Stapelford.  Two-hours of uneventful flying behind the controls of a small plane can make anyone tired, sore and more than a little bit anxious to see a nice smooth runway in the near distance.  I’d just had two-hours of manoeuvres, emergency drills and navigation exercises and I was flat-out knackered.

Normally when you are in flight training the trip back to the airfield means that the hard part is over for the day, during the skills test, the worst is yet to come: four different types of landings and a go-around.  My back was killing me and my headset was stuck to my ears, yet the most physically and demanding 40 minutes of my fight training still lay in front of me.  No more putting my brain on autopilot and simply doing as I was told.  From this point on it was all down to me. 

My first landing was a standard touch and go that lead directly into a bad-weather circuit: a short, oval-shaped, pattern at 800’ instead of the normal 1,200’.  There is no real base leg in a bad weather circuit, you make a smooth arch from downwind onto a short final all the while dropping flaps, doing your landing checks and making your radio calls.

From the bad weather circuit I rolled into a glide approach.  This is another short final circuit only this time about halfway through the base leg you cut the power and glide in to land.  It’s very similar to the PFLs I tend to be pretty good at, my only concern was judging when to cut the power.  Too early and I’ll never make the field, too late and I’ll be too high over the threshold.  I erred on the too-high side but managed to pull it out in the end.

The next circuit was a go-around and then I was back up in the pattern for my final challenge, a flapless approach.  These have a bit longer finals so that you can settle into a good glide speed, 70kts in a C172 and angle.  The wind was on my side that day, meaning it wasn’t too strong and there wasn’t much of a crosswind.  You always drift long without flaps but I still managed to bring her down well before the end of the asphalt.

I put on the breaks, pulled off the runway and stopped to raise the flaps, push in the carb heat and assess the situation.  I was buzzing.  I wasn’t even thinking about how I’d done, I was so happy to have simply done it.  I actually felt good to put into practice everything I’d learned over the past nine months all in one shot.  I’m pretty sure I was smiling.

I taxied along to the parking stand, pulled the mixture out to stop the engine, turned off the radio, avionics, removed the key and turned off the master switch.   I removed my headset and let out the breath I had been holding in for the past two and a half hours.  My bum was melted to the seat.  I looked over at Alan.

“I think you know how you did.  Let’s get some tea.” 

“I’ll bet I’m buying.”

“You better believe it.”

I gave Lima-Oscar a thankful pat on the fuselage (how many times had she been a part of this right of passage?) and didn’t so much walk as float to the clubhouse.

That was some great tasting tea.

Testing, testing...

In case you may be wondering what a PPL student is tested on when he or she undertakes a skills test.  These points may prove useful to those of you who are preparing for the test or are thinking about getting your wings.

On the day

·      In the morning look at forecast, text Examiner with decision if you want to fly

·      Go to airfield

·      Check-out aircraft and fill with fuel

·      Meet Examiner

·      Check weather again, is weather still OK?  It’s the student’s decision whether or not to fly

 Pre-flight

·      Plan Route

·      Mass & Balance calculations

·      Take-off and Landing performance calculations

 Documents

·      Medical Certificate

·      Passport

·      Log book

·      Valid Certificate of Course Completion

·      Evidence of completion of all theoretical exams

·      All airplane tech documents

·      Charts for route and airfield info

·      Narrow route NOTAMS

·      PLOGs (two copies)

 Pre-flight prep

·      General knowledge questions on the aircraft

·      Instructions as to the purpose of the flight and the expectations

·      Weather and cross-wind calculations to be done by student

·      Brief the Examiner: exits, emergency procedures

·      He can look for traffic

·      I can initiate conversation during the flight if I wish to

 Departure and takeoff

·      Normal check-list items

·      Tune in VORs

·      Assess the cross-wind component and tell the Examiner what it is

·      Inform Examiner of take off and climb speeds

·      Hold runway heading

·      Carry out (and say) climb-out checks

Part I: Navigation

Student’s responsibility is Radio, Navigation, Safe conduct of flight

·      Inform Examiner of altitude, heading and ETA to waypoints and turning points

·      If I want to revise, communicate new ALT, HDG, ETA

·      Do a gross error check at each turning point

·      Set the DI and compass after each turn

·      Do iFREDA checks every 15 minutes

·      Arrive at turning point

·      Identify by pointing out at least three features

·      Turn onto next heading

·      State altitude, heading and ETA

On second leg, examiner will ask “Show me on the map where we are” and will point to a diversion on the chart

  • It’s my decision from where I want to divert from
  • Draw a line on the chart to new destination
  • Mark ½ way point
  • Note heading and distance
  • Correct heading for drift
  • Give Examiner altitude, heading and ETA
  • Turn onto heading and make the radio call: position, now routing to...
  • Gross error check and revise heading along the route if necessary
  • Note time at ½ way point
  • Arrive at divert destination

Part II: General Handling

Examiner’s responsibility is Radio, Navigation

Student’s responsibility is safe conduct of flight

 The following can be done in any order

 DO LOOKOUTS BEFORE EACH MANEUVER!!!

·      Straight and level

·      Full throttle

·      Pitch down slightly

·      Trim

·      Climb at Vx (best angle)

·      Climb at Vy (best rate)

·      Climb to specified altitude

·      Descent to specified altitude

·      30º turns onto specified headings

·      Climbing turns left and right

·      45º bank turn through 360º

•      Maintain altitude and airspeed

 3 Stalls with minimum loss of altitude and a recover to a climb

·      HASELL and HELL checks

·      Full stall; recover when nose drops or on command

·      Base to final stall

·      Approach (final) configuration stall

·      Slow-safe without flaps

·      Steep gliding turns

·      Spiral descent: recover to level flight with minimum loss of altitude

•     Instructor will put the plane into a spiral descent

Simulated IMC

  • Put on hood
  • Ask Examiner to clear turn
  • Execute a 180º Rate One level turn
  • Maintain heading and/or climb

Emergency engine failure

  • Identify wind direction
  • Identify field
  • Once heading toward field carry out restart checks
  • Identify 1000’ point to turn onto base
  • Mayday call
  • Continue to go-around

 Engine failure at take off immediately follows

  • Flaps up (if still in the go-around from the emergency landing)
  • Continue until go-around

 Other emergencies may come up (touch drills)

·      Engine fire in flight

·      Electrical failure

·      Radio failure

 Intercept a VOR

  • “QDM” to VOR or “Get us to XXX ”
  • Turn OBS so that it is centered and the “TO” flag is showing
  • Turn onto that heading and then go past to intercept
  • Anticipate the heading as the needle approaches the center
  • Once on track take into account wind!

 Position fix with second VOR

  • Fly along radial established by first VOR
  • Dial in station (set station pre-flight)
  • Tune in other radial
  • Mark position on chart
  • Confirm with visual references

 After this the Examiner helps with direction and hands over full control back including radio calls and navigation

 Request join to pattern and perform the following landings:

·      Flapless approach

·      Bad-weather circuit

·      Glide approach

·      Normal circuit

·      Perform a go-around when necessary or instructed

·      Precision approach (Bad-weather but with heavy braking when landing)

·      Taxi, park, breathe

·      Tea

Putty in their Hands

Let me tell you a little bit about the brave men that have been teaching me to fly.  Next to bullet-proof vest tester it is difficult to imagine a more dangerous occupation than flight instructor.  Sure test pilots and astronauts get all the glory but long before a Red Arrow pulls high-G rolls 100’ from the deck some nameless flight instructor strapped in beside the guy in a spindly aluminium box and said, “OK, this is how you turn the engine on.”

My fight instructors do have names, Sam, Nayen, James and Roy and the reason I am here to tell you about them is because they have been, to a man, superb.

The obvious question is “Why so many?  Were you that hopeless that it took four different guys to teach you how to fly?”  Not at all.  Well, OK, maybe a bit.

Like most want-a-be pilots I booked myself in for a trial lesson to see if the exhilaration of flying overcame the terror of being carted along several thousand feet above the ground by a single propeller.

Flight instructors, like hairdressers and taxi drivers, get paid a cut of the business they bring in.  Trial lessons and “experience” flights are their chance to hook you onto both the airfield and their services.  A tiny minority of those who do a trial lesson continue on with a course and an even smaller subset actually receives their PPLs.

Thus it is with a mixture of both hope and resignation that instructors take on trial flights.  On the plus side they actually get to fly the aircraft for a bit and even show off a little.  On the downside, taking streams of punters out over the exact same route and giving them the exact same spiel six or eight times a day would get very old very fast.

Who you fly with on that first day is, of course, the luck of the draw.  You hope for someone about 55, grey hair and a voice like Chuck Yeagar.  I got Sam Gowan.  Tall, lanky and shaven headed, with a disarming smile and a Home Counties accent.  15 years my junior and sporting the Stapelford Uniform: black trousers, pressed white shirt with epaulets and a clip-on tie that was four inches too short. You would not think him out of place teaching A level maths at a public school.  No one would ever look at him and say “pilot.”

My first flight with him was both a lesson and a trial.  As we did the pre-flight checks he asked me loads of questions.  Although he never said so, I am sure he was gauging whether or not I was just out there for a jolly or if I actually had any enthusiasm and/or aptitude for flying.

I’m assuming he was suitably impressed by my answers (and the fact that I knew the phonetic alphabet) because as we lined up on the runway he said, “OK, you can take off.”  I pushed the throttle in, steered clumsily with the rudder pedals and at 60kts launched us inexpertly into the air.

Our flight took us about 20 miles to the east of the aerodrome, over Hanningfield reservoir and the Blackwater estuary.  For the most part Sam let me do the flying while he told me what to do, handled the radio and watched out for other traffic. 

As we turned to make our way back to the airfield he asked me what I took as a very leading question, “Do you get motion sick?”

I looked at him. “Nope.” I said.

“Good.”

He took the controls and put the little Cessna into a wicked banking turn.  He levelled off and did the same thing in the opposite direction.

“Want to go zero-G?”

“Oh yeah!”

Full power and a steep climb; at the top of the arch he cut the throttle and pitched us nose down; we floated into our harnesses.

“THAT WAS TOTALLY COOL!”  I shouted.  Sam just grinned his schoolboy grin.  No fear.  Total confidence in the aircraft and his abilities.  This man was a professional and I felt slightly ashamed for thinking him too young

A few manoeuvres later Sam pointed us back to the airfield.  He flew the pattern with a precision that I would only later appreciate fully (after struggling with it myself) and lined us up on final.  He let me take the Cessna most of the way in, helping me out on the flare. 

We pulled off the runway and taxied back to the stand.  I would like to say that I had an epfany at that point and realized that I belonged in the sky.  Sadly, this was not the case.  I was buzzing with excitement and liked the adrenaline rush but there was an undercurrent of fear as well.

As I rode back to the Tube in the taxi I contemplated what continuing with flight training entailed, and how much it would cost.  Part-time, it would take me months to complete the minimum hours, not to mention the theoretical exams, navigation and skills test.  Nothing, at that point, felt natural.  Every action had at least two other unexpected reactions that were completely beyond my ability to predict or anticipate.  I had no confidence that I possessed either the coordination or mental capacity to complete the course.

Then there was the actual flying.  One of the great ironies of my life is that I have always adored airplanes, worshiped pilots and have been completely terrified of flying.  I would go years without setting foot on a plane and when necessity dictated that I must go aloft, I did so with fear and trepidation.

Years of being forced to fly for business finally beat most of the fear into the back of my consciousness.  I always figured that the real fear wasn’t of flying, it was being in a position of powerlessness.  In a small aircraft, under my own control, I reasoned that I would be more at ease, even if the actual piloting was challenging.  It turns out that this line of thought was spot-on.

Surprisingly, there is no formal sign-up process for flight school, you simply keep showing up and they keep giving you lessons.  It took me a while to realize that there was any kind of order to what I was being taught and that the lessons themselves had names and numbers (this oversight became a problem when I submitted my log-book to the CAA).  I kept things loose, always figuring that I was just doing this for fun, not to get a license and that I could walk away at any time.

Yet week after week I was booking in sessions with Sam.  I bought a knee board and headset, I read the course books constantly and took mock quizzes on-line.  When Sam wasn’t available I went up with my other instructor, Nayan, just so I wouldn’t go too long without a lesson.  What started out as a bit of fun was becoming something I was taking seriously.  Something that I cared about and suddenly I started being afraid I would fail.

I’m not good at seeing things through.  It is a miracle I finished high school, let alone college.  I only stay at jobs as long as they are fun and best not ask me about relationships.  The deeper I got into flying the more terrified I became that I would wash-out; that I would flunk the ground-school exams, get lost on my cross countries or punt my skills test.  Like so many people I had constructed a life in which I didn’t have to try too hard at anything and now I was being pushed well outside my comfort zone.

And no one pushed me harder than Sam.

Sam Gowan has a way of getting you to do things you don’t want to do.  He has a reputation around Stapelford of taking students up into weather that is right on the limits of what is flyable.  Some might consider this a bit reckless but I would disagree.  One rarely encounters a perfect day for flying, especially in England and if you don’t learn how to deal with difficult situations you’re going to be ill-prepared when you find yourself in one.

Sam sticks to the rules, or as he says, “Does it the right way.”  One knot over the acceptable crosswind limit and we stay on the ground.  However, one knot under and we’re going up.  Sam holds an Airline Transport Pilots License (ATPL) with a full instrument rating, has a couple thousand hours under his belt and flies 100+ hours each month.  Needless to say, in the air he is Total Confidence incarnate. 

On one of our first lessons Sam told me, “There are old pilots and there are bold pilots but there are no old, bold pilots.”  That has been my flying mantra ever since. 

Flying is all about risk avoidance.  No matter what you see in the movies, no one jumps into a jet and ten seconds later roars off.   The start up checks for a 747 are pages long and even my little Cessna has nearly a hundred pre-flight checks that have to be preformed each an every time: half of those are before you even turn it on. 

There are instrument checks every fifteen minutes in the air, navigation checks ever five minutes or so and the constant listening watch on the radio.  Flying a light aircraft is the most focused activity imaginable and Sam was an expert at pointing out and correcting my multitude of mistakes.

For a PPL you are required to do a certain amount of flying on instruments.  Normally this entails wearing a hood that blocks out your vision of everything but the instrument panel.  The standard training consists of being able to maintain straight and level flight and do a basic rate 180 degree turn in case you inadvertently fly into a cloud.  Sam never had me wear the hood; instead he just had me fly into the clouds.

I used to SCUBA dive.  From day one my instructor would tell me that when visibility drops to zero underwater it is easy to get disoriented and swim down when you mean to go up.  I never understood this.  I experienced lots of blackout conditions underwater and I always knew which way was up because I could always drop or dangle something and see which way it fell.  This doesn’t work in the air.

Flying into a cloud means losing all sense of direction, balance and perspective.  The motion sensors in your ears short out and your eyes are no help at all.  Even the pressure of gravity pushing you into the seat seems to fail.  It is a helpless and utterly confusing situation.

It also happens to be totally cool, as long as you don’t kill yourself.

Inside a cloud there is no feeling of motion and nothing to gage speed or bank against.  Instructors drive home the point of looking outside the aircraft to judge the correct angle of attack and bank; those rules don’t apply in zero vis.  Your eyes are riveted to the dials and your focus gets very, very, sharp.

“So, you’re flying straight and level?”  Sam asked.

“Uh…yeah?”

“You might want to check that.”

30 degrees of bank and a descending turn.  Shit.  I corrected.  Two minutes later I was off kilter and dropping again.  This time I was better prepared and levelled off before Sam said anything.  The lesson progressed along these lines until I was able to hold course, speed and altitude with no visual references at all.  Then came the really impressive part.

Sam told me to climb to 4,000’ holding my wings level.  At about 3,500’ we popped out of the clouds and into dazzling sunlight.  I’m telling you now, there is no experience on the rocky confines of earth that can match the beauty, the joy, of tiptoeing over candyfloss mountains in the sky.  We were both struck dumb by the sight of it until Sam broke the silence and said, “This is why we fly.”  Amen to that brother.

Little Engines That Can (most of the time)

The Cessna I fly is older than a lot of the guys I work with.  It is also better maintained, drinks less and, arguably, produces fewer toxic emissions.

By design a C172 is a resilient little bastard.  The boffins at Cessna knew ham-handed apes like me would be learning to fly in them and built them to be ridiculously forgiving.  They are stable on each axis, recover well from stalls and the main gear seems to be made from a mixture of aluminium, rubber and magic.

The C172 does everything well but nothing exceptionally well.  It’s the ultimate light-aircraft all-rounder.  More 172s have rolled off the assembly line than any other aircraft in the history of aviation.  43,000 at last count, with no end of production in sight.  Its detractors, of which there are few, call it a “flying bathtub” and while no one has ever said a 172 is sleek or stylish to me they are sex with wings. 

Unless the competition is a riding mower, a 172 is likely to lose a race where speed is an essential requirement.  Its little 150 horsepower engine is only marginally more powerful than what can be found in a four door family saloon and technologically speaking the basic design would feel familiar to the guys who built Stonehenge.

Four pistons, a cam shaft, oil pan, an alternator and…that’s about it.  My 1966 Mustang had double the cylinders and almost twice the horsepower; it probably used more fuel too.  Although I would never claim an over-abundance of mechanical skills, I get the impression that finding my way around the power plant of a C172 would be like strolling along a well worn, if oil splattered, path.

This is not to say that the team of mechanics that keep my aerodrome’s fleet of Cessnas flying are not miracle workers, they are.  My very life depends on their knowledge and skill with a spanner and torque wrench.  I kiss their grubby work-boots. 

What I am saying is that complex engines lead to complex problems, just the kind you don’t want on the ground or in the air.  Simple, reliable, easy to service: that’s the kind of engine you want in your airplane, the 172 delivers in all three respects.  It’s a trustworthy friend.  Until you let your guard down and then it’s an unforgiving bitch.

In flight school we are taught three things:

·      Never trust a fuel gauge that reads full

·      Always trust a fuel gauge that reads empty

·      Assume your engine will fail any time it damn well feels like it

We mitigate the first two points by manually checking fuel contents before each flight and calculating how much is left at points along the route.  The third is slightly more problematic.

As soon as we get a few take offs and landings under our belts, all student pilots start to hear their instructors say, “If your engine quits now, what would you do?”  The most obvious answer, “crash” is not what they are looking for.

Returning from my second cross-country navigation flight my instructor said, “turn onto 340” a heading that would take us away from our airfield. 

I make the turn.

He pulls on the carb heat and closes the throttle.

“Your engine just quit.”

Is he smiling at me?  That bastard.

Fine.  Let’s do this.

2200’, I’ve got twelve hundred feet before I’m really in trouble.  Nose up to the best glide airspeed and trim. Which way is the wind?  30 degrees off my tail, I’ll need to turn her around to land into the wind.  Scan the ground.  Give me a field that’s long enough, smooth enough and has the fewest sheep. 

"What’s your field?”

“The big green one.”  I can be a smartass too.

I describe the field; it has small buildings to one side and low hedgerows.  It is about 45 degrees behind my left shoulder.  I’ve lost almost a third of my original altitude now.

“What’s your 1000’ point?”

This is key.  By the time you reach 1000’ you need to make damn sure that you can land where you are planning to land and not in a tree, lake or farm house.  Up to that point you spend every second assessing if you’ve made the right choice.  Up until that point you still have the altitude to veer off.  After that point options become limited very, very quickly.

I point to a clutch of trees next to a farmhouse.  “That’s my point.”

“OK, put her down, I’ll tell you when to go around.”

I should note that to avoid frightening and/or royally pissing off the local farmers, we don’t actually land in the fields.  We do however get within 10-20’ of the deck before climbing out. 

I make my turn; I’m just above 1000’.  The field looks a long way away.  The power lines, which I have only just noticed, look much closer.

“I don’t think you’re going to make it.”  Says my instructor.

“I will totally make it.”

He shifts uncomfortably on his seat.  “You’re sure about that huh?”

“No problem.”

I keep the dial on the airspeed indicator nailed to 65kts.  The field that looked luxuriously long and flat at 2200’ appears far less so at 500’.  I have the feeling that I’m about to land on an upturned dinner plate.

“No problem.”  I say again, more to myself than my instructor.

I clear the power lines.  I clear the hedgerow.  I’ve got 600m of beautiful, smooth field in front of me and I didn’t even have to lower full flaps.  50’ above the ground my instructor says, “Go around.”

Full power.  Fly level.  Drag flaps up. Carb heat off.  Positive climb; safe airspeed.  Next stage of flaps up.  Positive climb and safe airspeed, next stage up.  Established climb, clear of obstacles, last stage up.  I have a clean aircraft.

“I didn’t think you’d make that.” 

“I find your lack of faith disturbing.”  I say with a smile wondering if he’ll get the Star Wars reference.  He didn’t.   I feel very old.

We climb back up to 2,000’ and give it another go.  Again, I pick a field and a 1000’ aiming point.  Again my instructor says, “There is no way you are going to make that” and again I do. 

Repeat.

Repeat.

Repeat.

He keeps changing my heading, height and location and for reasons that I can’t explain, none of it fazes me.  I just cut the engine, find a field and fly her in.  Over and over again.   It turns out that the only thing I’m actually good at is the one thing you hope I never have to do.

Going Around In Circles

Rain.  Relentless rain.  Days and nights of drizzle, showers and downpours.  Fields turned into lakes and roads to rivers and still the rain came.

Except for Wednesday.

A small blip of high pressure pushed through an ocean of low and for a few hours on Wednesday blue sky met the soggy landscape, the winds died down and I managed to get the last training slot for the day.

When I arrived my instructor gave me an odd look and said,

“You didn’t expect to solo again today did you?”

“Uh…” I said helpfully.

“You have to be on the ground an hour before sunset.”  He looked at his watch, “Which means you should be landing about now.”

I gave him my best sad puppy eyes, which, it has to be said, are not all that puppy-like.

“Can’t we do something else?  I just want to fly.”

Which was true.  At this stage every hour in the air is valuable, even if I just fly in circles.

He stood up and said, “Let me look at your training log” and disappeared into the back office.

A few minutes later he emerged shaking his head.

“You’ve done everything except solos and navigation.”

“I figured you’d say that.”

He smiled, “Feel up for a challenge?”

“Oh yeah!”

“Let’s go!”

Fifteen minutes later we were downwind in the circuit, holding a nice and steady 1200’.  My instructor said, “I have control.”  I gave him the airplane and he swung us into a sharp left bank, well short of the normal base-leg turning point.  He made a radio call,

“Golf-lima-oscar, glide approach, touch and go.”

“OK, “ he said, “You decide when you think you can glide her in for a landing and then pull off the power.”

I glanced at our altitude, took a look at the runway, waited…waited…waited…

“Now.”  I said and pulled the throttle back.

If you have never been flying in an aeroplane when the engine power is cut I can assure you that the silence is far from comforting.  I should note, for the sake of honesty that we didn’t turn the engine off.  I’m not that kind of crazy.  Still, with power set to idle the cockpit is a disconcertingly quiet place.

Any glider pilot will tell you that you don’t need an engine to fly.  Every aircraft, from an A380 to the tiniest of micro-lights, has engineered into its design a glide ratio, the distance you go forward for every foot you drop.

As counterintuitive as it might seem, the glide ratio is independent of the mass of the aircraft.  A fully loaded 747 will fly seventeen feet forward for every foot it loses in altitude while my little Cessna will only go nine.  When you hear a pilot say “altitude is life” this is what they are talking about.

US Air flight 1549 had just climbed past 3,000’ when their engines lost a game of chicken with Canadian geese.  At that altitude their A320 had a little less than ten miles to run before it cratered.  Captain Sullenberger and his enormous testicles rode that baby down to the deck and ditched so perfectly that it added a new chapter to the textbook of flying. 

Get your engine knocked out at 3000’ in a Cessna 172 and you have about five miles to play with.  And by “play” I mean “search quickly for the best looking field and hope you only roll over once.”  This is one of the reasons that you don’t see small aircraft overflying central London: with an altitude restriction of 2,500’ there is no way most single engine piston aircraft could glide clear if their power plant packed it in.

I mention all this so that you will gain an appreciation for the fact when I cut engine power at 1,100’ I had less than two nautical miles in which to land, preferably on a runway and not in the field of a soon to be very angry farmer.

In a Cessna 172 the best glide airspeed is 65kts.  Perhaps not coincidently that is also a normal approach speed.  It is SOP to get configured for 65kts on the base leg and I was on that now, albeit a mile or so closer to the runway than normal.  I got my airspeed right, trimmed and made a 40-degree banking turn to the left to line up on the runway.

Power or not, I was still high and close to the runway threshold so I dumped flaps, being careful to never let my airspeed drop one tiny bit below 61kts and settled into a steep approach.

I’m all about steep approaches, much to my instructor’s frustration.  For whatever reason I seem to always come in high, drop down quickly and flare at the last possible second to avoid bouncing…mostly.  It’s a bad habit and I’m trying to correct myself but in the case of a glide approach it served me well.  I cleared the threshold, held off, floated for a bit and touched down nicely.  Flaps up, full power, carb heat off and we were back in the air again. 

The next bit of fun for the day was a “bad weather circuit”.  This is used when you’ve taken off into questionable weather and discovered that the cloud cover reported at 2,200’ is actually 1,000’ and you had best land quickly while you can still see the ground out the windscreen.  It’s also used by instructors who are tired of flying full circuits with idiots like me and would rather get back to the clubhouse quickly for a nice cup of tea.

In a bad weather circuit you dispense with the normal rectangular pattern and switch instead to a tight oval.  The turn on climb-out is still at 800’ but instead of continuing up to 1,200’ you stay at 800.  The downwind leg is much, much closer to the airfield than normal and you turn directly through base onto final without pausing to reconfigure.

Everything happens very, very, quickly in a bad weather circuit and the danger of turning too sharply and stalling increases substantially.  Like a glide approach, you seem too high and too close to ever land safely.  It took me hours and hours of practice to even begin to handle the tasks associated with a normal circuit and landing, now I was being asked to do it all in half the distance and a quarter of the time.

Looking back on it now I can’t honestly remember what I did, I kind of went into an autopilot mode I didn’t know I had.  All I know is that as soon as one bad weather circuit was done we went right back into another one.  The same thing happened, I can’t really remember the steps but I guess I did them because, well, I’m still alive.

Our last exercise for the day was a manoeuvre I failed miserably when I attempted it previously: flaps-up landing.

A flaps-up landing is just that, a landing where instead of lowering the flaps to gain lift and lose airspeed, you keep them up and rely on pitch and power to get you down.  My first exposure to the technique was during an otherwise lovely training flight in Santa Barbara.

Over my annual winter sabbatical to California I decided to get a few flying lessons in on my home turf so I booked a couple of training sessions in Santa Barbara.  I’ll save the details for another post but the very last thing we practised was a flaps-up landing and I completely cocked it up.

Runway 25/7 in Santa Barbara is just shy of 1nm long.  They land proper commercial jets there and back in the day DC-10s would come into Santa Barbara for maintenance.  It’s wide enough that you could almost land on it sidewise and has all the lights and navigation aids one would expect at a scheduled aviation airport.

In contrast I fly out of a tiny airfield in Essex with a sloping, bumpy asphalt runway 3,100’ shorter than what they are using in Santa Barbara.  In Santa Barbara they vacuum and clean their training aircraft at the end of each day.  In the UK I have to scrape the mud off my flaps and make sure birds aren’t nesting in the engine manifold.

But I digress.

It was nearing the end of the lesson.  My instructor, seated next to me and dressed in surfer attire, asked if I had ever done a flaps-up landing.  I assured him that I had not so he requested clearance from the tower to give one a go.

I was still profoundly struggling with landings and was just coming to grips with the concept of what flaps were used for and now I was about to get them taken away.  I was hopelessly unprepared for what I was about to attempt but being a man in the presence of another man meant that I was duty bound to go through with it even if I killed myself in the process.

I got lined up on final but it didn’t take me long to realise I was too high and too hot.  I passed the threshold, cut the power and pulled back to flare but the aeroplane glided and kept on gliding.  I was ¾ down the runway and still about 10’ off the deck; the end of the tarmac was looming ever closer and my instructor was very, very quiet.

“I have control!” he said, well past the point I judged as the last second we could recover had passed.

He dumped full flaps and the plane dropped like a stone.  We bounced hard and flat and I expected the front gear to buckle.  The fact that it did not is a tribute to the engineers at Cessna who undoubtedly understood that their aeroplanes would be piloted by morons and designed them accordingly.

Braking hard he turned us off onto the last taxiway before the bushes.  I sat in sullen silence feeling like a failure.  Later, in the debrief, we talked about what went wrong and how I could have fixed the mess I got us into.  The truth is, halfway down the runway, when I saw that we weren’t losing any height, I should have done a go-around.  I was taught to never force a landing.  Abort and go around, do not attempt to land if the landing starts to turn pear shaped.  If I wanted to keep walking away from my landings, I had better learn that lesson quickly and well.

Back in the UK all this was running through my mind when I lined up on final and pushed the lever to raise my flaps.  This time however my instructor walked me through each step:  “Keep her at 70kts.  Your approach will be much more shallow.  Keep your aim point the same but know that you will touch down further along the runway.  Use your throttle and pitch just like normal.  You got this.”

And I did.

In Santa Barbara I ate up nearly a mile of concrete and didn’t manage to touch down.  In England I brought her in flaps-up on a 1,968’ runway and didn’t even use half of it.  I was elated and ever so proud of myself.  I also understood better than ever before that there is nothing more valuable to a student pilot than having the right instructor sitting next to you.  One who understands your weaknesses and is willing to work with you until they become strengths and who sees your strengths and pushes you further than you thought you could go.

Pushed out of the nest

Anyone watching the news has seen that it’s been a miserable couple of months here in the UK as record rainfall turned the southern half of the country into a swamp.  Apart from all the flooding and property damage, it’s really put a damper on my flying; from the middle of Jan to the middle of Feb I only got two hours in.

I managed to get an hour of touch-and-goes in last week but I figured I was still pretty far from doing it on my own.  Today we continued with circuits, I did four decent landings, one go-around because the runway wasn’t clear and one go-around because I ballooned on my flare.  When we were back in the downwind leg of the circuit I said to my instructor, “As frustrated as you are that I’m not getting this, I’m about 1000x as frustrated that I can’t make it click.”  He gave me a tight little smile and said, “Watch your altitude.”

I turned onto base, reconfigured for slow flight, turned onto final and called for a touch-and-go.  Nice and steady, 65kts, crabbing slightly into the cross-wind.  Over the threshold, ease back, cut power, let the aircraft bleed off height and speed, pull back, glide, rear wheels touched, hold back pressured, nose wheel touched.  Not too bad.  I reached for the flap switch to raise them for the touch-and-go and my instructor said, “Nope, make it a full-stop.”  I figured he'd had enough of me today.  I put on the breaks and made a hard U turn on the runway.

Because of the rain our grass runways and taxi areas are unusable so we have to “backtrack” down the paved runway we land on.  This is a bit disconcerting if you are the aircraft on final and you see that the runway isn't clear.  If you happen to be the aircraft on the runway heading towards the landing planes the best you can do is hope that they see you and will do a go-around.

As I was backtracking my instructor says, “OK, pull off to the eastern edge.”  I thought that was a bit odd considering the parking area is to the west but in the cockpit he is the Voice of God so I do what I'm told.  I turn off to the east and swing around facing the runway.

“OK.” he said, “Now it's your turn.”

"What?!”

“Yeah, you up for it?”  It was more a command than a question.  “You can do this.”

I looked at him.  I’d imagined this moment since the day I started flying.  Mostly I imagined being pee-in-your-pants scared.  A rock formed in the pit of my stomach and then, don’t ask me how or why, but 1/2 a second later a switch was thrown in my head and the fear turned to exhilaration.

"OK.  Cool.  Alright.  Let's do it!”

We went over a few last-minute items:  I had to preface my call-sign with “student” so other aircraft could give me a wide berth and sign an indemnity waver.  Then, just like that, he hopped out, gave me a thumbs-up and said, “Pick me up on the hold-point after you land.” Then he was gone, running across the tarmac.  I locked his door, swung around so I could see if anyone was on final and gave my first solo radio call.

“Student, golf-echo-yankee-lima-oscar, lining up two-two left.”

I positioned myself on the centre line, checked my instruments and engine readings and pushed her to full power:  Keep it down the middle, adjust ailerons for the crosswind, rotate at 55kts, damn, missed, it, OK, rotate at 60kts.  Whoa, she climbs a lot faster without 165lbs of instructor inside!

500’ checks:  flaps up, fuel on both, engine gauges in green, keep flying the centre line, maintain 80kts on your climb, hand on the throttle, got some pretty strong gusts coming from the right, anticipate, fly the plane, don’t let it fly you.  800’, look for traffic, left onto 140 degrees, you’re in a climbing turn, don’t go past a 15-degree bank angle, level the wings, continue the climb to 1200’.

All these actions I had done over an over with an instructor sitting next to me, even, in the beginning, saying each step out loud.  Now my hands and feet worked themselves and my brain did the double-checking.

The pattern was busy and I had a very slow Cessna 152 ahead of me on downwind.  I pulled back the throttle, pitched up and at 80kts lowered some flaps.  Slow-and-Safe, just like they taught me.  The 152 gained a little distance but, damn it, he’s extending his downwind too far!  There's no choice but for me to do the same since I can't turn inside him and can’t overtake.  Everyone following behind has to do the same, like a traffic jam in the sky.

Eventually the 152 I’m following turns onto base but I'm still too close so I have to really slow down as I make my turn.  Base is where you get the aircraft configured for final, slow down, lower flaps and ease back on the power, all without losing altitude.  A neat trick that takes a lot of concentration.  Well, for me it takes a lot of concentration.

I make my turn onto final and think, “OK, here we go.”

Radio call:  "Student, golf-echo-yankee-lima-oscar, final with one ahead for full-stop.”

If that Cessna in front of me decides to do a full-stop and backtrack I’ll have to do a go-around; I go through that checklist in my head.  Damn it, I’m getting a little low coming over the electric pylons, I need 750’ minimum and I'm just under that, add a bit more power to gain a hundred feet or so, that’s better.  Nice.  Crab into the crosswind, keep her lined up, trim, don’t fight the aircraft and keep her at 65kts.  The 152 is doing a touch-and-go!  Excellent!  The runway is clear.

I cross over the motorway that runs perpendicular to our runway and dump full-flaps while pitching a bit nose-down to maintain 60kts airspeed, hardly touching the throttle.  Altitude is good, clearing the trees, clearing the hedge, clearing the runway threshold, over the numbers, wait…, pull back easy, fly level, cut the power, let her drop a bit, pull back, pull back, pull back, hold…, hold…left rudder, rear wheels touch, stall warning sounds, pull back a bit more, nose wheel touches, I MADE IT!  YES!

I taxi back down the runway and pick up my instructor.  He's all smiles and handshakes.  “Well done!  Feels great doesn’t it?”  I have to agree, it does.

As great as this was, my solo is just a step along the path or more accurately a key that opens the next door.  I have 10 more hours of solos to do including three that are just touch-and-goes and seven of solo navigation.  I also have 15-20 more hours of dual-instructor time remaining.  No chance to savour the moment, tomorrow, weather permitting I'm back up doing it again.  And again.  And again.  Fun has never been so difficult.

Everything Can Kill You

When I was 13 years old I took diving lessons from an ex-Navy SEAL.  He was, as one might imagine, one tough motherfucker. 

His favourite trick was to cover the inside of our masks with tin foil, dunk us in freezing water and drop nets on us.  Or, if he ran out of nets, turn our air off, or pull our respirators out of our mouths, or shoot us with a spear gun.  OK, I made up that last one but I’m sure the thought crossed his mind.

The terror of our water exercises was complement nicely by the horrors illustrated in the classroom lectures where we were told, in vivid detail, of the hundreds of ways to die while diving.  Some were grisly, some were prolonged and, more often than not, both.

When it came time for the open-water exam I was a petrified mass of pimply-faced goo.  I knew what to expect.  We were all to sit in a circle on the ocean floor, masks covered, waiting for our instructor to do horrible things to us.  But this time we weren’t ten-feet down in a clear swimming pool.  We were 30’ under the ocean, with zero visibility and a madman was about to turn off our air.

It would be nice to say that as scared as I was, I somehow found the resolve to endure the crucible.  Not even close.  I panicked and folded like a house of cards.  As soon as I got my masked ripped off and my air stopped I broke to the surface faster than an Englishman running to free beer.

A little while later, as I sat on the beach, feeling like a coward and waiting for the rest of my class to finish their dive, my mum, who had been lingering in the car park, came up to see what had happened. 

“I couldn’t do it.  I was too scared.”  I said, still shaking from the cold, the fear and the embarrassment.

“You need to try again.”

“I don’t want to.”

She took a step back, folded her arms and said, “You know, other people have done it and so can you.”

“Uh…” I said.

‘But…” I continued.

“If it wasn’t too hard for them, it’s not too hard for you.”

That made all the difference. Instead of trying to comfort me when I failed a difficult task, my mum made me feel ashamed that I couldn’t even do what loads of other people had done.  Obviously this was in the days before the self-esteem craze and it was exactly the motivation that I needed.

One week later, sitting on the seabed 30’ down I felt my mask get pulled from my face and pinched my nose so I could keep breathing through my respirator.  When my air was cut off I signalled to the guy sitting next to me and we buddy-breathed.  When my tank was unhooked I hitched it back up. No panic.  I did what I was trained to do.

Thirty-five years later, trying to learn to fly, I am continually reminded of that diving course, my failure, panic and what it took to overcome my fear. 

When I started taking lessons, a pilot told me, “You can’t bluff your way through flight school.”  Each and every time I go up I realize how true that is.  In normal life we look for shortcuts to make our jobs, commutes and even our relationships easier.  Little corners we cut because in most cases just good enough is good enough.  Unless we are attempting to cross a rotted rope bridge spanning a 1000’ gorge, we don’t usually operate in an environment where a single mistake will kill us.  In flying we get that all the time. 

Can you remember the last time you looked at the oil temperature and pressure gauges in your car (if it even has them)?  In a light aircraft you look at the “engine Ts&Ps” every 15 minutes if you want to stay in the air.  What was the atmospheric pressure, dew point and wind velocity at your altitude when you popped down to the store for a pint of milk?  How much does your car, four passengers, their luggage and a full tank of fuel weigh?  You best know all that if you are trying to take off from a high-altitude airstrip when it is hot, muggy and your 19 stone aunt insists on bringing her collection of antique bricks.

Next to tightrope walking, polar exploration and playing chicken with nuclear submarines, I can think of few human endeavours apart from flying where the consequences of small mistakes can lead to such catastrophic outcomes.

When you advance the throttle to full and start rolling along the runway you always think, “what if…” When the wheels leave the earth and you are suddenly, joyfully, in the air you look around and wonder, “where would I put her down if…” When you’re making a hard turn, pulling a couple of Gs, watching your airspeed and bank angle along with the horizon, the stall and spin recovery checklists play out in your head.

For me, because I’m still Bambi, none of this is automatic.  I have to think before I act and on more than a few occasions my flight instructor had to step in to keep us safe and/or alive.  From where I am sitting now, I can’t even imagine a time when I wouldn’t have the safety net of a trained pilot next to me.  Eventually though, if I keep this up, either the training wheels will have to come off or I will have to walk away.

Inside this middle-aged body is the echo of that 13-year-old boy.  Trying something dangerous, exciting, frightening.  Scared more of failure than harm.

“Other people have done it, so can you.”

Damn right.  Thanks mum.

Going Backward

Windy day.  Just under the threshold where it is safe to take off.  500’ off the runway the buffeting starts.  We’re banged around like a ping-pong ball in a clothes dryer.  I struggle with the controls, trying to anticipate and correct the relentless pounding but with little success.  My instructor is calm, looking out for traffic, making a note on his knee-board. 

“Watch your altitude,” he says, “don’t bust the airspace.”

2500’ above our aerodrome is Class A airspace.  Small aircraft are strictly forbidden.  Pop above the limit for even a few seconds and you bring a whole bunch of nasty down on yourself. 

The winds were causing us to bounce up and down in 100’ increments.  I was trying to keep her level at 2200’ but not having much luck at it.  I was nervous.  Intellectually I knew that as long as I kept calm and kept flying we were in no real danger.  The winds were within the operating parameters of our little Cessna but facts are of little use when the turbulence is causing your body to slam hard against the harnesses.

I made the call to Southend Radar to tell them who we were and what we were up to.  I requested Traffic Service so they could keep an eye on us and tell us about other aircraft.  Our general handling area over Hanningfield reservoir was a crowded place to play and having extra eyes at Southend is more than a little comforting.

Passing Brentwood the ceiling goes up to 3500’ and I started to climb.  At about 2700’ the wind speed increased but it smoothed out.  At 3000’ it was eerily calm.  I could tell by the drift of the aircraft that the winds were strong but they were consistent.  Down to business.

Today was a continuation of stall training.  There is a good bit of flight instruction devoted to stall awareness, avoidance and recovery.  We practice power-on stalls, power-off stalls, stalls on base leg, stalls with flaps down, stalls with flaps up and combinations of the above.

It would probably be good to pause for a moment and explain to anyone reading this (hello?) who is not a pilot that stalling an aircraft is not like stalling your car.  When you stall your car the engine quits and you coast to a stop.  If you stall an airplane the lift on your wings vanishes and your nose drops like a drunk falling off a barstool.

If you have the altitude, recovering from a stall is fairly straightforward.  If you don’t, say on approach to land, you can end up failing to miss the ground very, very, hard.  Even with altitude and experience pilots still fail to recover from stalls and fly their aircraft into the ground (or water).

On this particular day we were going to practice power-on and base-leg stalls.  My instructor had me turn into the wind and approach the stall by increasing my angle of attack (pulling back).

Nothing happened.

My airspeed dropped to under the flaps-up stall speed (47kts), my angle of attack was easily 16 degrees, the control column was in my chest and yet, no stall warning, no nose drop, we sat in the air in exactly the same way that rocks don’t.

I looked out the window to my left; under the landing gear strut I could see that we were moving very, very slowly backwards.  Cool!  The headwind was probably 50kts and pitched up like we were there was no way the aircraft would be able to move forward.  We were a big sail being held in place by a single propeller and a wall of wind.

We tried again.

And again.

Same results.  As compelling as it was to sit in a fixed-wing aircraft and hover, overheating was a definite possibility so we decided to try base-leg stalls instead.

In a landing pattern, for reasons that are lost to history, the segment before the final approach is called the “base”.  On base the pilot configures the aircraft in anticipation of the landing approach, power comes back, speed drops and some flaps are lowered.  The idea is to get everything set and ready before turning onto final.  It’s that turn where pilots can run into trouble.

Turn too sharply and let your speed drop too much and you’ll find yourself in a world of shit.  Not only will you stall, you’ll stall at a high bank angle, close to the ground, with a wafer thin window for recovery.  In fact, check that, according to the book most times you have no chance for recovery so it’s easy to see why base-leg stalls kill a lot of pilots.

Although it can seem counterintuitive at first, the higher you are the better your chance of survival when shit gets real.  Altitude = life is how someone put it.  Losing your engine at 4000’, while pants soiling scary, is likely to have a totally different outcome than if it happens just after take off.

We had more luck with the power-on base-leg stalls.  I was able to put the Cessna into a gentle climbing turn and slowly pull back until she stalled.  The effect is much more dramatic than with a straight stall: your upper wing seems to whip around and you are pitched sidewise and down at the same time. 

Your first instinct is to turn the control column to level the wings but this is a mistake as the ailerons are practically useless at such a slow speed.  Pitch down slightly to break the stall, apply power, use opposite rudder to level the wings.  Easy peasy.

A Cessna 172 doesn’t want to stall or spin and it practically recovers itself (so I am told).  I was watching a YouTube video of this manoeuvre and once the stall developed the pilot took his hands completely off the control column, applied opposite rudder and the plane recovered smoothly.  I haven’t tired this myself because the thought of releasing my grip on the controls seems tantamount to suicide but maybe one day I’ll have the confidence to give it a go. 

Hard Landing

I should have done my first solo by now.  I’ve put in the hours, passed the exams, done dozens of touch and goes and yet I still can’t crack it (poor choice of words).

Starting with my first flight my instructor let me land the plane more-or-less by myself.  I’ve progressed through the normal stages of learning to land:  “HOLLY SHIT PULL UP!”  Bump, bump, SLAM.  Bump, balloon, SLAM.  Bump, balloon, GO AROUND! 

I’m getting better at recognizing if I’m too high or low on the approach, keeping my airspeed not one single knot under 61 and lining up on the centre line even in a cross-wind.  I can do a go-around in my sleep (but hopefully will never have the need to) and I rarely cause my instructor to sweat blood and cross himself anymore.

It’s the last few feet that are the problem.

According to the book, on final approach you are to select an aiming spot on the runway, just past the numbers, and keep it in the same position of your windscreen pretty much up until you touch down.  You are to keep a bit of power on, around 1500 RPMs, until you have rolled out and are flying level about a yard or so over the runway; then you pull the throttle back to neutral, ease the nose up and touch lightly on your rear wheels.  Keeping the control column pulled back the plane will stall and the nose gear will touch down gently.  All of this I utterly fail to do.

I can be rock-solid in my approach but the second I clear the runway threshold it all goes to hell.  I’m pulling up too soon, veering off the centre line, hitting too hard on the rear wheels and not keeping enough back pressure on the stick; thus causing the nose gear to slam down hard.  I know what I am doing wrong but I can’t seem to get my brain and body to work in a coordinated fashion to fix it.

Last week after four decent landing, one horrible one and two go-arounds my instructor said, “Well, you are less dangerous.”  Great.

Apart from my utter lack of skill, part of the problem in learning to land is that the actual landing bit is over so fast that it is difficult to understand and correct your mistakes.  In an hour of doing touch and goes we will spend less than one minute actually landing the plane.  The rest of the time is spent in the climb-out and circuit.

Flight simulators, except for the big full-motion ones, are rubbish at teaching you how to land.  They might help flying a good circuit and lining up, but for the most difficult part, those last few feet, the only way to practice is sitting behind the controls of a real aircraft and hoping that the landing gear is up to the punishment.

Needless to say this is hopelessly discouraging and each hour I put in without getting it puts me an hour behind where I think I should be.  True, everyone learns at a different pace but I’ve been practising landings for so long now that my inability to get them right is weighing on my mind.  On several other occasions, in different exercises, I struggled but eventually I was able to come through.  Landings are an entirely different matter.  I'm giving it my best but it just doesn't seem good enough.