Your good friend has requested you to fly as safety pilot in his retractable gear Piper Arrow while he practices flight by reference to instruments. What do regulations require for you to be able to do this?
Your answer should include knowledge of safety pilot requirements, currency requirements to carry passengers, and the requirements for a complex endorsement.
I must meet safety pilot requirements, currency requirements to carry passengers, and the requirements for a complex endorsement, including:
What personal items will you take with you to ensure that you are legal for this flight, carrying me as your passenger?
› A flight review (or equivalency) within the previous 24 months.
› 3 takeoffs and landings within the previous 90 days (to a full stop if at night).
Tell me about the FAA Pilot Proficiency Program (WINGS).
A good pilot is always in training, even after passing the practical exam. The FAA Pilot Proficiency Program:
Let’s talk about the plane: How do you know that it is “airworthy”?
An airplane’s airworthiness involves 3 different levels of verification:
Prove to me the airplane is airworthy for our flight today.
Include required inspections, documents, and instruments/equipment, as well as your statement that the preflight inspection shows the aircraft to be satisfactory.
Here are my pertinent aircraft documents and papers:
Regarding the aircraft maintenance records for this airplane:
Also, the aircraft has the required instruments and equipment (i.e., day VFR versus night VFR); a thorough preflight inspection has been completed, the aircraft is properly serviced and it is in airworthy condition — safe for this flight.
You planned a cross-country. Show me your true course, and what items you considered when choosing this course.
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For extra credit and to demonstrate good ADM, experienced instructors suggest you discuss alternative courses that were considered but discarded, and why.
My chosen course considered:
Immediately after takeoff, you’re at 100 feet AGL when your kneeboard falls onto the floor. You reach down to get it and suddenly become aware of a buffeting feeling. What should you be concerned about?
Demonstrate here that you recognize and understand stalls and spins, and know how to recover from them.
My first concern is to immediately get the nose down — reduce the angle of attack.
Beginning with takeoff, and along your true course until landing, talk me through the different airspace we will fly through, and what implications each has on our flight.
Use the sectional chart and begin with the airspace surrounding your departure airport, then proceed along your route, describing each airspace area as you come to it and how it may impact your flight. Continue describing the airspace and special use airspace as you encounter it along your route, and mention how that airspace may impact your decisions and requirements to be there — or not be there!
› If I’m not above 700 feet AGL, then I’ll be in Class G airspace where I’m required to remain clear of the clouds and at least 1 SM visibility.
• Further along the course, I’m now in an area where the base of Class E airspace is at 1,200 AGL.
Why did you choose this altitude?
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Consider the following, as appropriate for your planned flight:
Looking at your Nav Log, how did you calculate fuel requirements?
Here, demonstrate your ability to use performance charts and graphs located in the POH/AFM. Calculate precisely, but add a safety margin at the end; also, remember to apply any and all pertinent notes included in the performance charts. Show and discuss your precise calculations (do not round-off, do not add “fudge factors”).
Here are my precise calculations for:
In addition to the above, I added fuel as necessary to meet my personal safety minimums (for example, a new pilot should carry enough fuel to fly to a suitable alternate airport or +30 minutes cruise fuel after that — a total 1 hour reserve).
You are required to prepare a navigation log. Why is having a nav log important?
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Demonstrate your own routine use of a nav log.
I use a nav log because:
› Verifying ground speeds and fuel consumption.
› Verifying ETAs to checkpoints and final destination.
› Helping me in thinking and planning ahead.
› Helping to prevent me from getting lost.
› Reminding me of routine cockpit tasks (change fuel tanks, listen to ATIS, cancel flight plan, etc.).
› Assisting in diversion to an alternate, if it should become necessary.
When planning a cross-country that will require a fuel stop, what factors do you feel are important in selecting an airport for a stop?
Demonstrate here your understanding of aeronautical decision making.
In selecting an airport for a fuel stop, important factors to consider include:
Considering your calculated takeoff distance for our flight, how would that change if the outside air temperature were 20° warmer or 20° cooler?
Your specific answer to this question will depend on the individual circumstances of your practical exam; but whatever your situation is, the answer should demonstrate your ability to accurately use the performance table and your understanding of the effects of atmospheric conditions on the airplane’s performance. You should include the table or chart in your aircraft’s POH, specifically:
Discuss the differences in performance and effects of density altitude on performance, not only for takeoff but through each of the phases of flight.
Are the runways you plan to use today suitable for us?
Demonstrate your ability to use the performance tables in your aircraft’s POH and your understanding for the need to include a safety margin. Show your calculations.
Yes, using the takeoff and landing performance charts, I calculated the required distance to takeoff and to land. This shows what the aircraft is capable of; however, as a new pilot, I am not always able to achieve takeoffs or landings that precisely — so, I added 50% [or whatever your safety margin is] more to my calculations as my personal minimum when determining runway suitability.
During our flight today, with whom will you communicate?
Demonstrate your knowledge of available resources and your willingness to use them.
How did you obtain weather information for our flight?
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Tell me about 2 different weather charts that you used in preparing for our flight and how you used them.
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It’s easy to get confused when discussing these charts. To make answering this question easier, bring print-outs to the exam of the charts you used and show them as you answer.
Tell me about 2 different weather forecasts that you used in preparing for our flight and how you used them.
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Include, as appropriate for your flight planning purposes, details of weather forecasts such as:
How will you obtain updated weather information while enroute?
Demonstrate your understanding of all resources available and how to choose the best resource to use in a given situation. For example:
While enroute, we listen to the ATIS of a Class D airport near our course to update the altimeter setting and find that the ATIS is reporting visibility as 2 SM. What does that mean for us?
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Demonstrate your understating of VFR weather minimums in Class E and Class G airspace, and the special VFR clearance. Show your aeronautical decision making ability by evaluating your options and choosing the best option based on the specifics of your flight.
We have 2 priorities: (1) to remain legal, and (2) as a new pilot, the prudent choice is an immediate diversion to an alternate airport to land.
You have chosen to divert to an airport that you were not intending to visit. How will you obtain the needed information about your alternate airport?
Demonstrate your understanding of all resources available and how to choose the best resource for a given situation. For extra credit, mention that you would turn on the autopilot to help relieve workload while researching information.
The most pressing information needed is airport airspace, runway length, airport elevation, and an airport communication frequency. I would:
What deice or anti-ice equipment is your airplane equipped with?
Demonstrate that you know the specific equipment installed on your airplane, as well as when to use it.
Tell me about the fuel system on your airplane.
Include the components of your airplane’s fuel system, the normal operation of the system, and how you interact with it. Be specific, using the information contained in the POH for your airplane. The following answer, based on an example airplane, illustrates the type of details you might cover.
What method of navigation will you use today and what are the advantages and limitations of that method?
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Demonstrate your understanding of navigation methods and resources available and how to choose the best resource to use in a given situation. For extra credit and to demonstrate ADM, point out that the best way to navigate is by using a combination of methods.
Dead Reckoning — Advantages are that it is simple. When everything else fails, it will bring us home. The limitations are that it requires accurate winds and performance calculations, and careful time-keeping.
Pilotage — Advantages: It builds confidence; you see it on the chart and see it on the ground. Limitations: It requires prominent checkpoints and enough visibility to see them.
VOR — Advantages: It’s more reliable than dead reckoning or pilotage; an accurate form of navigation over an area where no prominent checkpoints exist. Limitations: Line-of-sight navigation, somewhat dependent on altitude, less accurate when far away from the station.
GPS — Advantages: It is not limited to line-of-sight; ground speed and other calculations are provided. Distance is not slant distance. Limitations: There are occasional outages, and the database must be current for reliable data. Ground speeds are instantaneous but not point-to-point, as is needed for calculating accurate ETAs and fuel remaining.