We had some excitement as I was practicing a short field landing. The wind was running 14 knots gusting to 20. Now, you pilots know that can be interesting in a Cessna, especially when low and slow as in a short field landing. We caught a gust or some wind shear that rolled the plane about 30 degrees to the right just as I was crossing the runway threshold. I landed fine, after almost wetting my pants. Honestly, if we had not been practicing short field technique, I would have landed with 20 degrees of flaps and at about 70-75 knots under the wind conditions.
Rob told me to set up my check-ride appointment with the examiner. I'll call him tomorrow and I'm gonna practice a bit more on Thursday morning, after which, Rob will endorse my log book to take the practical test. I picked up a guide for the oral exam and am reading that and my manual for the 172P. If all goes well, I'll be a pilot next week.
You'll need google earth to view the lesson 30 file.
Statistics (a bit more detailed this time):
Total Time: 44.7 Hours
Flight Training: 25.7 Hours
Simulated Instrument: 3.0 Hours
Solo/PIC: 18.4 Hours
Cross Country: 12.0 Hours
Night: 3.1 Hours
Landings: 132
1 comment:
Good luck, good luck, and good luck!
High winds are fun for the hover effect - I did that with Gina about a month ago. As are short field landings with a serious headwind. Nothing like stopping a 150 in 150 feet. Fun times.
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