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    Logging XC for Commercial Applicants

    This is a repost from our WhatsApp group but it is worth archiving here

    It has come to my attention that there was a rather spirited conversation in the office the other day on an old topic: the interpretation of the long commercial cross country flight and whether it can be done VFR or IFR.

    It is true that FAR 61.129 does not specify VFR or IFR for the long cross country. It doesn’t even specify day or night. However, and this is a big HOWEVER, the ACS is what the DPE will use to measure the applicants skill, knowledge, and risk management. The ACS specifies often that the skills being evaluated for a commercial pilot are for VFR flight. Our local DPEs have specifically mentioned that doing any of the commercial cross country flights as instrument flights would defeat the purpose of the commercial pilot requirements and that they would not consider a flight logged under IFR valid as prerequisite for any cross country in 61.129. I agree. 

    With respect to the cross country training, the logic is that commercial applicants are further developing their skills at the commercial pilot level - not instrument pilot level. Among many other areas, this includes greater accuracy and precision with pilotage (requires VFR) and dead reckoning (VFR when using visual landmarks) as they apply to cross country piloting. The syllabus also incorporates this into the cross country training for commercial pilots. Thus, we will continue to have our applicants complete this requirement daytime VFR. The interpretation of the regulations only begins with the FAR. We are not the legal experts but, believe me, there is a lot of time invested here seeking interpretation and guidance on the regulations. Always feel free to ask for help with interpretation.
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    Risk Management

    After our instructor meeting and conversations with some of you recently, I wanted to follow up on the topic of risk management. I know that some of you would love it if we just had a matrix to follow that gave you a go / no-go for any given flight. Unfortunately, that won’t happen. It isn’t that easy. Risk management is much too important of a topic to make it that simple. Those two words appear together nearly 150 times in the Private Pilot ACS, as an example. The target is moving on every single flight and there is no black and white. Each scenario is different.

    My main thing that I have been focusing on, and want all of us to focus on, is the lesson for the student and where they are in their instruction. We must model and teach sound risk management techniques that will benefit the student - always. Their tolerance of risk should be gradually stretched without the mentality of ‘showing them what it’s like to fly in XYZ conditions.’ We also must be careful not to push them too far beyond their abilities knowing that you’ll save them. Ideally, by the time the student is soloed, they should be making the go / no-go decision on their own. If you have talked with me more than five minutes on this topic you know I am a big fan of Flight Risk Assessment Tools.

    I’m also a huge fan of having the student make the go / no-go call then respecting that once they have a good grasp on the process. Yes, most of the time, you can probably handle the given flight scenario with a higher safety margin than the student but, again, if the student doesn’t get to flex that intellectual muscle and make the decision, they may not get to practice the sound decision making called for so often in the ACS. If the student is soloed and has solo limits, then you blast through those limits for a dual flight, what does that teach? If the student isn’t even soloed yet and the modeling is that you do really funky conditions with the CFI but the student gets stuck with more benign weather, what does that model?

    There are numerous opportunities to bring no-fly days into the classroom or simulator. Keep the target moving and don’t fixate on hard numbers. Instead, fixate on the goals of your lesson with the student and think about everything you model throughout your instruction. Point the students to the FAA’s Risk Management Handbook. I’d also recommend reviewing Chapter 10 in the Aviation Instructor’s Handbook. That’s got some good info in there!
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    Happy can fly!!

    Guess who just unlocked the skies? It's Brett "Happy" Gilmore, officially now a Private Pilot! Despite weather battles, work hustle, family duties (baby No. 3 is due any day), and juggling his role in the Nevada Air National Guard, Brett soared through it all. If that's not enough, he practically owns the town's sugar-free Red Bull supply (and 805)! When he's not on dad duty, defending the skies, or fueling up with caffeine, Brett's been bugging us at the GBA office. Kidding, more like educating us on useless information ;) Huge shoutout to his wingman in the cockpit, Instructor Extraordinaire, Alex Spencer! Here's to Brett's victory lap in the friendly skies, and onto the next adventure: Instrument Rating! Way to go, Brett!
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    Shane is a Private Pilot!!

    We've got some serious aviation magic to share! Meet the legend, Shane Havens – the pilot who's not afraid to clock in some serious road time from Winnemucca, is crafting his own winged masterpiece, and has been giving his all to flight training these past months. The moment we've all been waiting for is here – Shane just nailed it and officially earned his wings as a Private Pilot! Despite the unpredictable weather trying to play spoiler this month, Shane found the perfect window to soar through his checkride with style. Sure, Shane's heart may forever beat for the trusty C172, but he's gearing up to own the skies with his very own, personally built RV-10! What can’t this guy do?? He is a force of nature, and now he's added the title of Private Pilot to his already impressive collection of achievements. Awesome job Shane for this incredible milestone, and a massive shoutout to his co-pilot through it all, Instructor Extraordinaire, Kevin Marshall! Shane, spread those wings wide and soar high – we'll be watching for you cruising right passed us at 170kts in your RV!
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    Travis Soloed!!

    ​After a couple of days of being snowed in and having to survive the traffic of getting into Reno, Travis Johnson, adventurer and river running master has now added another impressive skill onto the docket: solo pilot! That’s right, Travis soloed at Silver Springs on runway 6 in N328ME! After shivering on the ramp and dodging the incoming ceilings, Travis made the trek to Silver Springs and flaunted his landings to his instructor, Ryan Mill, who then decided to set Travis loose. To no one’s surprise, Travis buttered all of his landings, and after having so much fun, had to eventually pick up Ryan to fly back home. If Travis isn’t crushing ground school or flying to his heart’s content, you can find him doing anything in the water. He loves to go kayaking, river rafting, and sailing the ocean blue… really any opportunity to flaunt his boating license ;) Huge congratulations to Travis and his right-hand man, Ryan Mill who’s been guiding him along this journey from the beginning. Now go fly, Travis!
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    Preston can fly in the clouds!

    Hold onto your seats—Preston Parrish just conquered the clouds! Today, Preston dazzled the examiner and earned his Instrument rating, proving he's got the skills to navigate through the fuzzy stuff. And get this—he did it all while juggling a busy school schedule and commuting from Truckee. Despite delays in examiner availability, Preston is not just resting on his cloud-shaped laurels. Nope, he's eyeing that commercial certificate and working toward it already. Now, here's a quirky tidbit about our cloud conqueror: Preston might be ruling the skies, but he's not exactly Captain Nemo. The ocean? Not his cup of tea. No sailing, swimming, or beach days for this aviator. We're starting to wonder if clouds are more his style. Big cheers and applause to Preston for turning those aviation dreams into reality! A tip of the pilot's cap to CFII Shane Smith and a heartfelt nod to the recently departed Greg Rudman, who all played a part in this comedy of aviation achievements. Stay tuned, folks! The next episode in Preston's story of soaring success—the commercial certificate—is coming soon!
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