Friday, November 27, 2009

flying

Flying
by Philip Greenspun
Site Home : Flying



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
introductions
Learning to fly

General Aviation Safety -- are those little planes as dangerous as they look?
Soaring -- flying silently
Helicopters -- flying without moving (helicopter training here in Boston)
Airline Career Advice

flying helicopters
Helicopter Part 141 Syllabus and Lesson Plans, what we use for helicopter training at East Coast Aero Club
miscellaneous lesson plans: simulated solo
Preparing a helicopter landing zone
Helicopter passenger safety card
PTS summary sheets: Private | Instrument | Commercial | CFI | CFII | ATP
for instructors: in-flight teaching; teaching hovering
renting helicopters
Helicopter Tours of Boston
R44 Transition Training
R44 Time-building
Boston Helicopter Charter (custom itineraries and destinations)
Boston Aerial Photography (folks who just want the picture)
information for renters at East Coast Aero Club: N211SH (R22)
buying helicopters
Robinson R22
Robinson R44
Robinson R66 (jet-powered)
trip guides
Flying to Alaska
Flying to Baja
Flying the Caribbean
Flying around Boston

airplane tutorials
Airplane Private Pilot Syllabus and Lesson Plans
Instrument flying
Multi-Engine Training (abbreviated lesson plans)

Piston Engine Management

Garmin G1000 Training (for renters at East Coast Aero Club)
Garmin G1000 Checkride (for renters at East Coast Aero Club)
boring practical stuff
Cleaning Airplane Windows
Buying a new plane (general strategy)
airplane reviews
Cessna Mustang review
Very Light Jets (Eclipse, Embraer, Cessna, Cirrus, Diamond, Honda, et al., compared)

Cirrus SR20 review
Diamond Star DA-40 review
Diamond Katana DA20-A1 review
Buying a 4-seat modern airplane, includes a section on the future of small airplane design

other hardware
Avidyne versus Garmin G1000
Review of the Garmin GNS 530/430 Nav/Com/GPS
Shopping for headsets, folding bikes, watches and other little items
philip the pilot
Personal Flying Milestones (summary of my flight experience)
Fantasy Fleet (aircraft that I would buy given sufficient money and time)
for charity auctions: airplane rides | helicopter rides
a new jet charter company based at Hanscom Field
aviation expert witness
improving the system
Runway Incursions
Ground Monitoring, using telecomm to add a ground-based copilot
miscellaneous
Aviation for Early Retirees
Flight Level 005 Prize for young aviators

Aviation question and answer forum

Videos


Why I Fly
I like to look at the Earth and Nature from different perspectives. Flying in a light plane 2000 or 3000 feet above the ground is a totally different experience from being in a commercial jet where the pilots shoot straight up into Class A airspace (18,000 feet and above) as quickly as possible. Once I learn enough to get safely from Point A to Point B, I plan to take a lot of aerial photos.
Flying is also fun and challenging. You have to think and act in three dimensions. You have the freedom to move to a lot of new spots on the globe. You learn to examine and appreciate scenery and natural phenomena that you'd never be able or wouldn't bother to see from the ground. Charles Lindbergh put it best: "Science, freedom, beauty, adventure."

Sadly Lindbergh was, in addition to being a great aviator, a supporter of the Nazis. In October 1938 he accepted the Service Cross of the German Eagle from Hermann Goering. On September 11, 1941, Lindbergh noted in a speech that "[The Jews'] greatest danger to this country lies in their large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio and our government."

Resources
Training
Webexams (log in as guest and practice taking the FAA written test)
Flight Planning
NOAA Aviation Weather (aviationweather.gov)
Twilight calculator
Unisys weather (no pop-up or pop-under ads!)
SkyVector.com; fast and high resolution sectional chart browser; also digital versions of terminal area and helicopter route charts
aeroplanner.com, the free plan includes access to puny online versions of sectional charts (very poor quality compared to SkyVector)
fltplan.com, good database of airport information in addition to flight planning tools
airnav.com, cleanly presented airport information as well as fuel prices; links to IFR approach plates
New England
Atlantic Flyer
Wings Pilot Shop at the Nashua airport (KASH), a dog-friendly destination

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Text and photos Copyright 1993-2008 Philip Greenspun. Top photo from Travels with Samantha Chapter XII.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

philg@mit.edu
Reader's Comments
Even if the end goal is soaring, you might want to try this some time. I think it's the ultimate flying experience you can get as a civilian. I didn't try it (still saving the money... who knows maybe in a couple years I can afford it) but Ken Thompson did (a couple years ago, with another company it seems): see his story.

-- Petru Paler, January 5, 2002

Happy to hear of your new interest, Phil. I have flown for the fun of it almost as long as I have taken pictures for the same reason. Combining the two can be a real treat, and I almost always take a camera with me when flying to some exotic place 50 miles away... Funny how using an airplane to get there makes it move up the exotic scale... :)
A note of caution -- even high timers like to take somebody along (pilot or non pilot) to yell if something goes wrong while taking pictures. As my flight instructor from 22 years ago told me -- the pilots primary duty is to "fly the airplane". Everything else is a lower priority.

A really cool thing you can do, after you solo and begin the cross-country phase of your training, would be to take pictures of every airport you land at. Conditions permitting (gusty crosswinds probably won't permit) a snap through the windscreen on final approach, and once on the ground, a picture of the tower/terminal/hangars/line shack/whatever would make great keepsakes for you. Have the person who signs your logbook also take a snap of you by the airplane, possibly with some local feature in the background. I have pictures in my archives of once famous aiports I've landed at that aren't there anymore.

Definitely have handy a decent point&shoot loaded with a fresh roll of NPH to give to somebody who can take reasonable pix during and after your first solo. (Which will probably come when you don't expect it.)

Other tips: One or even two UV filters (never without -- Plexiglass passes all UV, and there is a lot once you get above the haze layer!), don't touch the camera to the windows (vibration), fill flash or the cabin will be way dark (it's always bright upstairs), and a wide to normal zoom (24-50 or somesuch).

A word about shooting through the propeller arc -- a prop at 2400 rpm will cover 360 degrees in 1/40 second, thus faster exposures will show one of the blades as an arc: 1/125=120 deg, 1/250=60 deg, 1/500=30 deg -- wait! You're an engineer too. You can do the math!

Also, consider the weight of the camera -- a 2lb projectile can be dangerous during turbulence (not to mention a medium format camera with a big 50mm lens!) Come up with a secure place to stash the camera, or a means of tying it down when not in use. Loose, it's a serious liability and in bumpy air, you won't have time to grab for it as it floats toward your head at high speed! I speak from experience and have the lump on my head to prove it! (Nikon F2-MD, Tokina 2.8/28-80. Ouch.)

And if you ever get the idea to open the window of a Cessna, just make sure the camera strap is secure and around your neck or shoulder...

I imagine though, that most of the precious time you are flying, your instructor will want you to concentrate on the PRIMARY task: Flying the airplane. And rightly so.

A final word. Airshows.

Happy Landings and looking forward to your photo.net Flying Presentation.
Image: Propeller.jpg

-- Joe Shupienis, January 7, 2002


Seattle Space Needle

After you finish your instrument rating, you may find your VFR skills have deteriorated because the instrument flying gets you accustomed to being led through the system to the end of the runway. (This happens to a lot of folks, often during the first few forays into an uncontrolled field.) If you have enough hours, you might consider adding the commercial rating. It's functionally useless -- you're severely limited on things you can do "for hire" -- but it does present an opportunity for working towards tighter tolerances and becoming smoother in your control.

Another fairly "useless," but amazingly fun thing is the seaplane (technically: Airplane Single-Engine Sea) add-on rating. You can do this in a long weekend, weather permitting, and it will do wonders for your soft-field technique. It will be the only time you'll get 20-30 landings an hour and not seriously bend anything ;-)

I would be curious on comments on the King test preparation. I thought their subject videos (e.g., Stalls and Spins) and the practical test prep were very well done. The Instrument practical prep was done with J.C. Boylles, a DPE and master CFI, and walked you through the entire test from planning to maneuvers.

Jim Carson http://cleanliving.com/flying/

-- Jim Carson, May 2, 2002

Add a comment
Related Links
FAA Registry Database- self-explanatory... (contributed by Gen Kanai)

Aircraft for Sale on GlobalPlaneSearch.com- Aircraft ad search-engine, enabling you to search from over 30,000 aircraft for sale, lease or charter, on many quality sites from around the world. (contributed by Clint Walton)

Van's Air Force - World Wide Wing- THE must-see site if you are interested in Van's Aircraft, Inc.'s line of RV kitplanes. Daily news, contact info for builders around you, tons of photographs. (contributed by Doug Reeves)

Ozark Airfield Artworks- Ozark Airfield Artworks is an aviation oriented art dealer. We have hundreds of prints of all different types of planes. (contributed by Derek Nees)

Worldwide Helicopter Links- Your webportal to the civilian helicopter industry. Hundreds of useful helicopter links on one page. (contributed by Roger Brul)

Runway Finder- A mash-up of Google maps, aviation charts, and the METARs. A great place for a quick check of the surrounding fields' weather to see if you can stay VFR. (contributed by Colin Summers)

Dan Checkoway's Weather Pages- Textual weather, but very nicely formatted and centered around your home airport. It does routes and TAFs, too. (contributed by Colin Summers)

FAA Safety Program Web site- Your place to register to receive notification of FAA aviation safety education seminars being held in your area, take online training courses and much more. (contributed by Joseph Foresto)

Avnac - Aviation's video rental store- Rent aviation DVDs online; training for Sport pilots up to ATP, glass panels, GPS, IFR proficiency, A&P Mechanics, homebuilt aircraft, aircraft purchasing and licensing, Biennial Flight Review, entertainment discs and much more. (contributed by David J)

Aircraft Operating Cost and Performance Data - What2fly.com- Aircraft Operating Cost and Performance information and much more. You can do side by side comparisons of aircraft. Searchable, sortable and addictive. (contributed by Will Rogers)

Add a link

No comments:

Post a Comment