Missed Approach in Hard IFR at Piseco lessons learned

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • Flew up to Piseco NY and attempted an approach to minimums at the airport. I did not think the airport was at minimums when I planned the flight but it became evident on the approach that this would be to minimums. Many lessons learned here in the de-brief to make me a better pilot next time. Overall a good day of flying.

Komentáře • 273

  • @MrSuperawesome5000
    @MrSuperawesome5000 Před rokem +2

    There's two types of pilots, those that will tell you they've missed approaches and liars. Thanks for being so open!

  • @jochentreitel7397
    @jochentreitel7397 Před 5 lety +47

    Someone who is humble enough to understand what he did wrong and posted it, furthermore in an understandable way. This is what makes this video valuable. Thank you and always Happy Landings, Sir!

  • @cmdmd
    @cmdmd Před 4 lety +4

    I always tell my patients (when they indicate their doctor referred them to me) “if your doctor was humble enough to recognize he wanted another opinion or someone else to do your surgery, that wise”.
    Good sir, you did the right thing. Your big-picture awareness was on point. When you felt uncomfortable, you bugged out and lived to fly another day.
    There are enough pilots that rode a plane into a crater because they felt like they “could try it one more time”.

  • @terrancestodolka4829
    @terrancestodolka4829 Před rokem +2

    Love the faith of your co-pilot and passenger... Very calm and quiet, passager...

  • @royhi1809
    @royhi1809 Před 4 lety +1

    Arrogance and over-confidence is always a killer.
    Following the rules and learning from each and every flight makes for an excellent pilot.
    Well done and thank you for sharing your experiences.

  • @chuckleswd
    @chuckleswd Před 5 lety +4

    I very much appreciate the fact that you posted this less-than-perfect approach. That takes guts, and is far more useful to the rest of us IFR pilots than a video of a perfect approach. In my opinion, had you made the one small change of going down to the MDA as soon as allowed, you would have seen the runway easily and had a different video. Even had you not seen the runway, I suspect you wouldn't have even busted the MDA either, because you would have been already stabilized at 2680. So really, a correction of this one problem (one you already know) is the main thing. I also agree with you that you don't need your passenger to be looking and you certainly don't need an IFR safety pilot. When I've flown IFR with my wife in the right seat, asking her to help with approaches would convert her from a happy passenger (one willing to join me on all trips) to a very nervous one who no longer wants to fly.

  • @gregbotlin4446
    @gregbotlin4446 Před 5 lety +45

    It's always nice to have that EXTRA set of eye's. (Being sarcastic)

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +6

      greg Botlin I agree

  • @ThomasReutter
    @ThomasReutter Před 5 lety +4

    im just starting my private pilot training and truly appreciate you posting a video that is helpful and something to learn from. With me not knowing much at the stage I am in, I would have been scared shitless. You did a great job keeping your cool! thx!

  • @ryangledhill6421
    @ryangledhill6421 Před 5 lety +42

    Wow, what’s with all the snarky comments? Thank you for posting something other than a perfect approach. I’m on here to learn and videos like this teach me a lot more than a flight that went exactly as planned.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +3

      Ryan Gledhill thanks so much. Everyone has their opinions. I am not on trying to instruct only showing my evolution as a pilot

    • @007Variable
      @007Variable Před 5 lety +4

      "the ultimate measure of leaders is not where they stand in moments of comfort and convenience, but where they stand in times of challenge and adversity"

  • @derekpierson8698
    @derekpierson8698 Před 5 lety +5

    I’m so glad I came across your video, this was excellent real world experience. Thanks Doc!

  • @westparkdentalofoceantowns8365

    Another great video to learn from. Dr pilot did hundreds of approaches dead on. Flying is a performance and sometimes you can be off. Every time we fly and we are off in one aspect or another, it challenges us to keep sharpening our skills and get better. People who don’t understand are quite oblivious to their own mistakes and will have a harder time to self improve. So easy on the critical comments guys.

  • @stuartw969
    @stuartw969 Před 5 lety +4

    You did well. Your attitude of sharing to learn is admirable. Suggest you will learn your personal minimums but have confidence to fly to published minimums - you are clearly capable to do this. Thanks and good luck!

  • @randyporter3491
    @randyporter3491 Před 5 lety +10

    Ahhh.. I always really enjoy these. Not for the video content, entertainment or educational value, but rather the opportunity to relish in the wisdom and musings of so many “master aviators” in the comments. Rarely will so many experts gather on one forum and share their expertise. Scribes take down every word, so future generations of pilots, may benefit from their input. Doesn’t matter if the video portrays pilots who have dedicated their entire life to aviation, with 75.000 tt hours, with type ratings in 200+ aircraft, we will all be warned to not be impressed. It’s through the criticism of others, that these keyboard captains establish their importance and demand our respect. Well, I for one am humbled by their greatness and if they scoff at the accomplishments, or dissect the mistakes of others, because THEY are convinced that they are more accomplished, then that’s good enough for me and I bow to each of them. 🇺🇸🛩 Now, with that said, thanks Doc for sharing this trip, the challenges encountered and the lessons learned. There’s still a few of us that are not yet perfect.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Randy Porter once in a while there is a perfect comment that distills it all. Wish I had that gift of the pen! Thanks so much for watching and getting it!

    • @randyporter3491
      @randyporter3491 Před 5 lety +2

      Dr. Pilot Thanks Doc, for the nice words. It’s just a shame these guys were not around in 1937. Any one of them could have brought the Hindenburg in without incident, in full IMC and a gusting crosswind. But, we have them now. Safe skies and keep em coming !

    • @randyporter3491
      @randyporter3491 Před 5 lety

      jetboss737 Well said !

    • @jetdoctn
      @jetdoctn Před 5 lety

      While there is quite a bit of your narrative I agree with Randy and I've made my mistakes just like everybody has lets look at what happened here. The lowest alt on the screen indicator(I'm assuming its close to being accurate) was 2021ft. Thats 659ft below the MDA(minimum descent altitude). At the minimum descent altitude of 2680ft your 977ft agl(above ground level). The gravity of the situation is when the descent was finally arrested the aircraft was only 318ft agl. You can cover that distance in mere seconds add to that the mountains terrain and a bit of negativity becomes well warranted. Dr. Pilot that was close and a definite whew.

    • @randyporter3491
      @randyporter3491 Před 5 lety +2

      jetdoctn - You make valid points and the numbers you cite certainly support that. As a pilot myself, I enjoy the various perspectives voiced by viewers on these videos. My cynical rant was a generalized one, after reading endless criticisms on virtually every video posted. The keyboard captains who weigh in, likely have a grand total of 6-8 hours logged in “Flight Simulator”. For example, I watched a newer video of a young girl who videoed her solo. Even that drew assorted criticisms from the expert viewers. My comments were directed more at those cyber Chuck Yeagers, who never have a positive thing to say.

  • @greghall9141
    @greghall9141 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for showing this. A learning moment for all.

  • @marcs990
    @marcs990 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for the informative video, don’t listen to the haters, this is exactly what is needed in the aviation world, honest, true and real events that everyone can learn from and possibly stop a future accident. Although your handling of the situation maybe wasn’t by the book but I wouldn’t call you reckless either. Happy flying from across the pond 🇬🇧

  • @MerlinspopTBH
    @MerlinspopTBH Před 4 lety +1

    As a mere VFR pilot, I greatly appreciated this video. Thanks for posting.

  • @specforged5651
    @specforged5651 Před 5 lety +2

    Haha. Your passenger nodding off was cracking me up. Thanks for the video!

  • @JSROOKS
    @JSROOKS Před 4 lety +2

    Also, whether with someone is with me or by myself, when I'm getting close, I make a point to repeat, out loud, my altitude, next altitude (such as minimum), and whether I'm on course or not. This has kept me from slipping through my DH, and helps me to set a missed-approach decision point, so that when it comes, I'm ready with the plan. Keep verbalizing. Thanks again!

  • @rjobrien7805
    @rjobrien7805 Před 5 lety +2

    Great job putting this video together. Thanks so much for sharing some valuable IFR lessons.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Rory O'Brien thanks for watching

  • @luismarin7888
    @luismarin7888 Před 5 lety

    As a Doctor and a Pilot I respect you more now. Thank you for sharing.

  • @flyingbatfish
    @flyingbatfish Před 5 lety +2

    Always fun to shoot to minimums. You know how close ground is, but don't appreciate the gravity of the situation until you break out. Nice job and wonderful video editing.

  • @kiltedpiper98
    @kiltedpiper98 Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for sharing the approach and all that goes into it. Nice job on the camera, maps and chart overlays.

  • @edwood7741
    @edwood7741 Před 6 lety +2

    Beautiful area around Piseco. We enjoy stopping into the Oxbow Inn when nearby. Thanks.

  • @accraftauthoraviationficti3496

    Great video. Good to see approach to minimums and go around.

  • @knoxflier5171
    @knoxflier5171 Před 3 lety

    Good job IMO. As a newly minted instrument pilot myself, you stayed calm and did what you were supposed to - flew the airplane. appreciate you posting your flights for us all to learn something

  • @midknight_flight2902
    @midknight_flight2902 Před 4 lety +1

    I was really trying to get the verbiage down for certain IFR calls. Thanks for the videos!

  • @pslny
    @pslny Před 5 lety +5

    VDP, good case for calculating one. Thanks for the video. Paul

  • @Mainswitch55
    @Mainswitch55 Před 4 lety +1

    This is definitely a thumbs up! Fly safe!!

  • @alabamaprep7145
    @alabamaprep7145 Před rokem +1

    Plenty of support from the right seat!!

  • @michaeljohn8905
    @michaeljohn8905 Před 4 lety +2

    Good learning tool if you can stay awake. 😂I’ve done about 8 of these down to minimum IFR and for a newbie like myself I was so happy to have a CFI with me or another PPL.
    Unless I was a delta pilots I would not be doing single pilot IFR Till I had it wired . Even then my choice is 2 pilots. It can get sporty quickly.

  • @mirrorrecords8608
    @mirrorrecords8608 Před 5 lety +2

    Flown into K09 many times......sometime with marginal VFR so I empathize with your experience.. Irondequoit Inn is close by and a great place to wait out weather!

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      mirrorrecords thanks for the tip

  • @samualray
    @samualray Před 5 lety +6

    Thanks for posting, some of the negative comments are missing that we can all learn from post like yours!

    • @michaeljohn8905
      @michaeljohn8905 Před 4 lety

      Steve yea I agree 100% humility is definitely the mindset to be in when flying in the left seat.
      I think knowing what your doing and that old pilot knows everything attitude has no place in the cockpit.
      Confidence is good if you know when to dial it back.

  • @stan8235
    @stan8235 Před 5 lety +3

    Dr. Pilot: Thank you for the video. I am just starting my IFR training in "the mountains" in Asheville, NC (with respect to our Rocky Mtn friends). Appreciate your contribution. As a somewhat older dad than you, I would respectfully submit that you missed an opportunity to involve your son in a memory that the two of you would have. There is nothing like staring out a blank windshield knowing that there is danger around to increase awareness and later appreciate the moment. Maybe a solicitation of his help in looking for the ground with a caution that you also needed to concentrate would have been in order. My son and I sometimes have awkward silences when we get together, and he is 43. But when we talk of shared memories, it comes back alive.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Stan it’s funny I was so focused I did not realize he was sleeping until afterward when I saw the video

    • @stan8235
      @stan8235 Před 5 lety

      @@DrPilot Yeah, I know how that is too! Great videos.

  • @johnsea06
    @johnsea06 Před 6 lety +4

    Another great video Dr. Pilot! And the production value keeps getting better too. Great graphics in this last video! I also appreciate the commentary, notes and self assessments. I’ve lurked for a few months and just never got around to saying thanks for taking the time to produce and post the videos. It is no small part for the GA pilots posting videos to CZcams that I’m back in the air after 28 years. Talk about a rusty pilot, I may have set a new record for the longest time to pass a BFR. Lol. I bought a T182T a few months back and I’m currently going through my IFR training. Although my Skylane is based at KPMP, I live in Boca with my wife & 2 daughters and we’ve spent much time boating in the Exumas. I have yet to determine whether they will spend more time looking out the windows or at their iPads. So more than a few of your videos have also hit close to home. 😎🙏

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 6 lety +1

      Would love to live in FLA and fly to the bahamas for fun all the time

    • @johnsea06
      @johnsea06 Před 6 lety

      That’s eventually my plan once I shake the rust off. With the girls school schedule we no longer have 2 days just to get to the outer islands. The Skylane will make weekend trips possible to such locations. I wish I could also get to the many fine destinations you have within range from KISP. 😎

    • @brentjohnson6654
      @brentjohnson6654 Před 5 lety +1

      John Sea I too am a rusty pilot hoping to get medically qualified in the next year or so. I haven’t been active since 1989 when kids started to arrive. Now am retired and medically challenged and want to get back in the air.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      John Sea I am so happy that the channel had that effect on you. To me that is priceless !! Congrats , good luck and keep watching

  • @MalibuRider
    @MalibuRider Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks für sharing this missapproach! Good to see people reacting when things went wrong! Next time we all know better :)
    Good landings and greetings from germany

    • @TheFalconJetDriver
      @TheFalconJetDriver Před 4 lety

      pilot.paul.schultze Hi Paul, In reality nothing went wrong at all ! It was just the opposite, he was not in a position to land so he did the one and only correct thing and that was execute a missed approach. I do agree with your overall assessment “he did the right thing”
      I have only been flying for 47 years for a living. On every approach I have ever flown I planed to go missed, if I saw the runway and I was in a position to land all was good.. even in visual meteorological conditions. I have always had a game plan to go missed if required.
      😁🛫

  • @Handotr
    @Handotr Před 5 lety +2

    Hi. I fly out of KPOU. I really appreciated this video. I learned a lot without living through the pucker factor LOL. Thanks again.

  • @hohonator
    @hohonator Před 4 lety +6

    What is up with that dude sleeping in the right seat?! Open your eyes and enjoy the flight man!

  • @kylejenkin6567
    @kylejenkin6567 Před 5 lety +1

    Excellent video, well done in challenging conditions.

  • @frazerpeterson2222
    @frazerpeterson2222 Před 5 lety +1

    Great videos, please keep them coming!

  • @davejohnson8960
    @davejohnson8960 Před 4 lety

    Tablet. ForeFlight. Synthetic Vision.
    IFR into a mountainous area with trees, single engine. Gutsy.
    VERY WELL made video!!!!

  • @daveblevins3322
    @daveblevins3322 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent choice 👍🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @midlifeflyer
    @midlifeflyer Před 6 lety +4

    Lots of great lessons in this one, from the unreliability of an AWOS 40 miles away to predict ceilings (2400 OVC) through the handling of the missed, to the apparent surprise hearing "can you maintain your own obstruction clearance?" While on a published missed. 👍🏻

  • @SVSecondChance
    @SVSecondChance Před 2 lety

    You want fun try a engine failure at Chattanooga in full IFR on takeoff. They pumped 30 gallons of water into our thanks. Someone left the hatch open on the fuel truck in a rain storm. It was raining for 3 days. We where like 700 feet and the prop just stopped. Chattanooga is in the mountains. It was fun

  • @Wpilot673
    @Wpilot673 Před 4 lety +1

    nice video . good on you for excellent decision making

  • @DrPilot
    @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +6

    Cool thanks for watching and make sure to hit the like button and subscribe

  • @russelllowry1061
    @russelllowry1061 Před 5 lety +8

    We all have personal minimums, mine are that I never fly if the ceiling is forecast to be below 600 ft at time of arrival. Add mountainous terrain, and it goes to 1000. Most accidents happen because we think we have to be somewhere, always have a plan B if you must be there.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +2

      Russell Lowry I do too and my personal minimum is ifr minimum if no wind or turbulence and convection risk

  • @TheMottasa
    @TheMottasa Před 5 lety +1

    My initial takeaway from this video is that your co-pilot should be alert, so that he can assist. If an emergency should occur he could read the checklist to you if nothing else. It’s not unusual to be off on ANY approach RNAV or not. The other day I was 1/4 off of a VOR approach, when I could have swore I was dead on. Bottom line is that if you do not see the runway BEFORE minimums; go missed.

  • @deanunterreiner6588
    @deanunterreiner6588 Před 2 lety

    I appreciate the video; it's helpful since other pilots so they can follow along for their own practice. I didn't see the runway lights? I use them on every approach if available... AC lights then RWY lights is my procedure.

  • @BangBangChicken
    @BangBangChicken Před 5 lety +5

    Thanks for sharing this! Please happily ignore these judgemental comments from some sad folks :-)

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Mink Thanks so much

  • @dicko7059
    @dicko7059 Před 3 lety

    Very humbling post, thanks for that..... we have ALL BEEN THERE in some form or another , in particular we all learn from each others’ misfortunes ! That was great to watch
    I have 26,000 hours, 9,500 sectors.....captain Airbuses A320/321 and Boeing 737s, 7 different airlines around the world, but my best years were my 5 years apprenticeship GA around Australia’s coast cities and “ the bush” especially Darwin Northern Territory , Barons 55/58, C310, C402s..... not only flying but a massive life experience, thanks for sharing your post .
    I taught myself in GA, and used it throughout my airline career as well.....if you know the wind direction, then during the self brief, as you look up with the crab laid off, where would you expect to see the runway through the windscreen... ie off to the right and at what sort of angle ... sort of.
    Mike 👍
    Melbourne 🇦🇺🦘

  • @gnagyusa
    @gnagyusa Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for posting this video!

  • @vassilikovalev7812
    @vassilikovalev7812 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video! Thanks a lot! BTW, your First Officer got balls of steel! :)))))

  • @tm502010
    @tm502010 Před rokem +2

    It helps to have stuff out there like this! Thanks! Only statement is that the passenger-copilot could and should have been much more engaged, and not literally asleep at the yoke. Extra hands, extra eyes: they always help!

  • @Blodsukkerskolen
    @Blodsukkerskolen Před 2 lety

    Great learning!! Tnx for sharing

  • @David.176
    @David.176 Před 4 lety +1

    Doc, Congrats on going around, great decision. Remember don’t pitch down to gain airspeed during a go-around. Power up, pitch up, and clean up.
    Also, it seemed you were a step behind the airplane, especially during the go-around, make sure you plan the missed like it’s gonna happen every time, remember the published missed guarantees your obstacle clearance.

  • @garyhand4701
    @garyhand4701 Před 5 lety +2

    wow, great approach. My home airport never saw it that bad

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      Hope to go back on a good day

  • @josephking6515
    @josephking6515 Před 5 lety +3

    To all those ragging on the guy in seat 0B, he is a PASSENGER and not a First Officer. This is a SINGLE pilot operation.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      Thanks my son will appreciate that

  • @chrisc161
    @chrisc161 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video thank you for sharing.

  • @martj1189
    @martj1189 Před 5 lety +8

    Can never tell what your real altitude was with the camera, But because you were still descending and what looked to be 200 ft above minimums as you were crossing the field, i would say to get down to minimums and stay there as fast as possible, preferably 1 mile before REIL so you can align and correct. with this being a non-precision approach. Great video though!

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +3

      Joshua Martin agree 100% as too fast and high because of the LP and no glide slope

    • @swpdds
      @swpdds Před 5 lety +4

      Yes; get down with out delay to mda then drag it in to the missed approach point.

  • @zn105
    @zn105 Před 4 lety

    Nice video. I m interested to watch some more. I like at the end how you used a clip from someone else to show the terrain from an approach on a clear day. I especially liked that it was from a video in my Tri Pacer! I have a newer one in 360 into Piseco from my Cherokee 180 if you haven’t seen that yet. Very good tool to find a video from someone else to see the terrain before going to a new airport.

  • @rfi-cryptolab4251
    @rfi-cryptolab4251 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for the video.
    Nice a/c

  • @13CDallas
    @13CDallas Před 5 lety +3

    BLUF: you need a lot of work on Pre-mission planning, before you get close to hitting the start switch on the airplane again. DEBRIEF: Wake your son up. You can see you are flying inside and out in IMC conditions , good way to get disoriented and then your son would be able to enjoy his nap as a dirt nap forever. He should be outside looking for the visuals required to make the landing, and you stay on the instruments through the missed. In IMC its nice to load shed some of the work and double check yours; poor decision to let him enjoy his nap. Did not here you monitor the ASOS freq or ask approach about the wx, ....they will help you with that so you are not surprised. What was your plan after landing; was this your home field, or were you willing to spend the night if wx did not come above mins if you did make it on the ground. After the missed you were making it up on the fly as to what your follow on plans were; if you didn't have an alternate at T/O which you should have had in marginal VFR conditions, start making one as soon as you realize wx is not cooperating. Overall this was an UNSAT flight, a lot of lessons learned here that you should go over with a more experienced pilot. wish you the best. NSDQ!

  • @stealhty1
    @stealhty1 Před 5 lety +1

    I think you did a great job on this approach despide what happen,in my opinion you could do a circle to land

    • @jbugdad
      @jbugdad Před 5 lety

      It seemed to me that you disengaged the autopilot too soon. Leaving it engaged would have kept you on your final approach course and allow you to better focus on the altitude. Lower workload, right?

  • @garygazman3827
    @garygazman3827 Před 6 lety +5

    Another take away lesson. 123 Rule (1 hour before/after , 2000 ft ceiling, 3 mile vis)...Had you filed an alternate , you would to not had to maintain MVA before ATC issued a clearance..And you wouldn’t have had the extra workload ...I always file an alternate no matter what....

    • @willyt7241
      @willyt7241 Před 5 lety +1

      Having filed an alternate does not reduce the ATC workload in issuing the clearance. They are not aware of your alternate. So they need to formulate your clearance in put it in the NAS. It sontimes takes a few minutes depending on workload and traffic. Filing an alternate only ensures the pilot has a plan to proceed to another airport with better WX.

    • @colinrasmussen9470
      @colinrasmussen9470 Před 4 lety

      willyt ... planning is paramount.

  • @patersonplankrd
    @patersonplankrd Před 5 lety +1

    Looked at a couple of vacation homes near Piseco...Regarding cell service., Correct. It is limited

  • @mikem820
    @mikem820 Před 2 lety

    So lucky your copilot was able to assist you so much

  • @youdoyouplayer8529
    @youdoyouplayer8529 Před 3 lety

    I too try and sleep through the most dangerous parts of a flight

  • @homecats1
    @homecats1 Před 5 lety +2

    Lots of tough comments. Glad everything worked out for y'all.

  • @johnmontana18
    @johnmontana18 Před 5 lety +1

    The early squirming by your son makes me think he was playing possum here cause he couldn't handle the lack of visibility. IMHO. Thanks for the video.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      No he was out no nervousness here

  • @sw8741
    @sw8741 Před 3 lety

    Thanks to you skills your passenger didn't die in his sleep that day.

  • @MasterCarguy44-pk2dq
    @MasterCarguy44-pk2dq Před 5 lety +3

    Good thing you were not over nasty terrain. You pulled flaps to much too soon. Dropping those few hundred feet could have cost you your life. Power, nose up gradually and flaps one notch at a time, into climb cruise.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      MasterCarguy44 agree 100%

  • @mrbob92679
    @mrbob92679 Před 4 lety +1

    I know you should always fly the plane first but should you have not called a Miss approach sooner so the controllers know your out ther? Definitely a good lesson learned and we appreciate you sharing the lesson with us.

  • @CAVUJULIE
    @CAVUJULIE Před 5 lety +1

    Everyone has covered the points, some less graciously than others. BTW it's pronounced pa-see-co. Educational video, thanks.

  • @samualray
    @samualray Před 5 lety +2

    Keep posting!

  • @billflying2977
    @billflying2977 Před 5 lety +1

    Great job!

  • @stevethul1
    @stevethul1 Před 3 lety

    When I first heard Approach tell him he has a "Phone Number", my attention went right to the screen. lol

  • @hgfvuwn44
    @hgfvuwn44 Před 2 lety

    always on a go around set first take off power and then assure that airspeed is increasing then positive rate then we cat set flaps to takeoff if they are on landing mode. the minute 14:22you retract flaps and lost roughly 650 feets.

  • @marcpinneo
    @marcpinneo Před 5 lety +4

    I would have loved to see your instruments .

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Marc Pinneo I don’t show my instruments to everyone ! Just kidding I am working on a camera angle for that

  • @twopheew9995
    @twopheew9995 Před 4 lety

    Great job by the copilot!

  • @RedDawnAviation
    @RedDawnAviation Před 4 lety

    Your pax is a ton of help, at least he can sleep through it!

  • @evanskariuki3779
    @evanskariuki3779 Před rokem

    Were the needles off center for you to be that far off? Thank you for the lesson here.

  • @flyingguy3920
    @flyingguy3920 Před 5 lety +3

    Though you broke out at mins and had overflown the field by a bit in addition to being fast... why not just circle to land? I get that you didn’t have the circular to land minimums but You did technically have the field in sight on ur RNAV approach. Maybe I missed something in the video so correct me if I’m wrong.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Flying Guy interesting question here. With field in site In class g airspace vfr is 1 mi clear of clouds. So technically I think I could have cancelled ifr and entered the pattern for right downwind. If I remained on ifr plan then ifr circling Mins apply If anyone else has other ideas please chime in

    • @flyingguy3920
      @flyingguy3920 Před 5 lety

      Dr. Pilot agreed, I personally think you were all set to land!

    • @James5976
      @James5976 Před 4 lety

      Thank you for asking. I had the same question.
      Another question I had: if you were confident you were over the lake, could you desend to minimums, hope to break out of the clouds before the airport?
      Don't jump all over me - just a flightsim pilot wannabe

    • @colinrasmussen9470
      @colinrasmussen9470 Před 4 lety

      Dane Watson ... hope is not a good IFR strategy.

    • @dicko7059
      @dicko7059 Před 3 lety

      Dear Dr.
      You did the right thing, go-around...... never ever do a circling skirting under ceiling even if right in circling minimas, fraught with danger, eyes off the instrument, staying inside the category circling area, always very “ suss “ trying to work that out with hills, passing low scud cloud, turning with back to the field going downwind, radio calls, lights, checklists.... just go-around and do the straight in NPA approach again, many accidents due to circling approaches, my airlines have banned them

  • @pesto12601
    @pesto12601 Před 5 lety +5

    Those aren't mountains.. those are hills... LOL.. mountains are what we have out west!

    • @BumHaven
      @BumHaven Před 5 lety +3

      If you fly into the ground does it really matter what you call it?

    • @pesto12601
      @pesto12601 Před 5 lety +1

      @@BumHaven no - but my comment is meant more as a spoof to those in the East who call the hills around them mountains... :-)

    • @dicko7059
      @dicko7059 Před 3 lety

      @@pesto12601 I never understand this sort of “ banter” ! hills mountains, even “flat as a tack” airport as we call them in 🇦🇺🦘 have killed people, I just respect where everyone wherever the type of flying they do.
      “ good onyx doctor” 👏👏👌 thanks for the opportunity for all of us to learn something
      Mike
      Melbourne 🇦🇺🦘

    • @pesto12601
      @pesto12601 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dicko7059 Well.. then I guess "humor", "fun" and "sarcasm" might be over your head too? I suppose I should have used a ;-) emoji at the end to help get that across..... sigh. ;-)

  • @jacobhawkins7116
    @jacobhawkins7116 Před 5 lety +1

    Not sure where he thinks the runway is, but it’s not in this video

  • @tstanley01
    @tstanley01 Před 5 lety +1

    You forgot your second motor for doing hard IFR like that.

  • @48Ballen
    @48Ballen Před 5 lety +4

    great co-pilot....sound asleep..geeeeeez

  • @larrydrum
    @larrydrum Před 5 lety +1

    Great learning experience for all your viewers. I recently discovered your channel and am enjoying it.
    You mentioned that you were a Urologist and it seems you are from Long Island. My late brother (William A Brock) was a Pediatric Urologist at LIJ. I was wondering if you knew him. Thanks, Larry

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      Bill was a great guy. He taught me pediatric urology. Was a great surgeon Definitely missed a great deal.

  • @garybarker9139
    @garybarker9139 Před 5 lety +2

    What is the white unit at the top of the glare shield?

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety

      Gary Barker Sirius xm weather

  • @joeheitz1833
    @joeheitz1833 Před 5 lety +3

    Great (informative) vid/flight.
    Suggestion: If possible it would be better with a heading bug (if it could be displayed along with your airspeed and altitude) as it would help the viewers with situational understanding. (at least speaking for myself)

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Joe Heitz that is a good idea I will try to add it

  • @loveplanes
    @loveplanes Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for sharing!!! good class. Quick question. What is that white box you have on the dash? some specs pls? Thanks!

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      Carlos Quijano that is Sirius xm aviation box gets weather and Louis and send to iPad. Thanks for watching.

  • @kezzachadda8175
    @kezzachadda8175 Před 5 lety +2

    Agree company vibes....what's the point of him being there if he's got,headphones on and DOING NOWT ?????

  • @garylavieri2402
    @garylavieri2402 Před 6 lety +2

    Oh ok. Was just concerned you had an issue with your GPS

  • @thomastucker5686
    @thomastucker5686 Před 4 lety

    Would you attempt this without GPS? I love the fact you fly near our neighborhood so to speak. I saw a video where you went to 5B2, used to be my home airport. I believe Pecico isn't far from where I am in the southern adirondacks. I then found it interesting you initially picked Schenectady as alternate, I used to live a few miles from that airport. Given the many airports including Floyd Bennett in glens falls, how did you decide your alternate?

  • @anamericanview
    @anamericanview Před 5 lety

    I watched this video with interest and congratulate Dr. Pilot for posting this as it clearly shows poor piloting and decision making. The errors I picked up were: Erratic variations in airspeed and and altitude and looking at where Dr Pilot became visual there was clearly not proficient horizontal control during the approach. ; the approach was never stabilized; Flaps were apparently extended at 128 knots, well above the flap extension speed for a 182; the guy in the right seat could have been used to at least watch for the runway leaving the PIC to focus full attention on flying the approach; not getting a complete weather briefing, followups and Pireps ( if available)added to a compilation of errors that fortunately did not end up with yet another doctor making a big hole.
    There is a lot of learning here.

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +2

      ramory webb first off thanks for watching. Any constructive criticism is appreciated but your comments are in condescending tone and that is not what this channel is about. FYI a full weather briefing was obtained including all pireps etc. There were winds aloft that made my ground speed vary although the approach could have been more well controlled it was not uncontrolled as you state. In addition if you look at the ground track the approach was on correct track while I was in Imc only when I broke out did I move to the left to better visualize where I was. I already stated that this was a mistake and I should have just initiated a go around at that time. Maybe you should check your own facts though because the flap speed for a 182s 10 flaps is 140 kts and 120 kts for 20 degrees. I am sure you did not become an expert pilot overnight so this channel hopefully will help to show the progression in training. As for my son who is not a pilot it is not his fault he was tired and asleep. I never asked him to be my copilot nor did I need him to be. If I thought I could not fly single pilot ifr then O’Neil’s have not attempted the approach. I am not a cowboy by any stretch. Thanks for your comments.

  • @PA30Pilot
    @PA30Pilot Před 5 lety +4

    This video must have taken you awhile to edit. It’s a good way to self-critique, and it was interesting to watch. Continuous improvement.

  • @garygazman3827
    @garygazman3827 Před 6 lety +4

    Thats also a WAAS Approach. Why were you so far off? Didn’t your GPS flash Suspend when you passed the MAP?

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 6 lety

      Gary Gazman was not really far off was just one dot

  • @DrPilot
    @DrPilot  Před 6 lety +1

    Had filed to ksch alternate but realized that rather go to Pittsfield

  • @justricardo
    @justricardo Před rokem

    i would not post a video that makes it look like i descended below MDA without having the runway environment in sight.

  • @JSROOKS
    @JSROOKS Před 4 lety

    Thanks! That was good to see. It seemed to me that you could have descended to DH/Min far earlier than you did. Were you just a little behind the plane, or was there a reason you were holding off? The speed seems a bit high also? I don't have the plate in front of me, so I certainly don't know everything about the approach. The visibility looks good, so I assume that the next approach was fine. Cheers.

    • @williamarmbrecht472
      @williamarmbrecht472 Před 4 lety

      First, wake up the right seat guy. I assume it was your son who had a late night before. Teach him to at least change radio freq. You had your hands full and pushed the edge. Why? We don't need to lose anymore Drs. And yes I am a pilot.

  • @DocsOnAPlane
    @DocsOnAPlane Před 5 lety +2

    Great video to learn from. What specialty are you? Anesthesiologist here, flying a socata TB10

    • @DrPilot
      @DrPilot  Před 5 lety +1

      I am a Urologist. Nice plane TBM

    • @tacrispy
      @tacrispy Před 5 lety +1

      Dr. Pilot I wish it was a TBM. It’s the TB10, Tobago. Single engine 180hp