Quote:
Originally Posted by DeepPurple
Flying in IFR conditions when your a VFR aircraft is the scariest thing on earth. In 1976 I flew with a co-worker in a Cessna 172 into Tallahassee Florida and all was well and we landed took a break and then departed southeast toward St. Petersburg.
I was flying with a fellow who had been an Army Helicopter pilot and was IFR rated in the military for helicopter, but he was transitioning to fixed wing civil license and he needed to make a trip with 3 legs with each leg 200 miles apart. We had departed Savannah earlier for Tallahassee and now were flying our final leg back to St. Pete.
As we climbed out to about 2000' he went right into the clouds, we were talking to Tallahassee Aproach and I kept hearing aircraft over the frequency calling for landing from the south looking for IFR clearance. We were VFR and climbing in the clouds towards the south, I was feeling very queasy at this point. All I could do was look out at the strobes on the end of each wing tip and see the light bounce off the clouds. He thought we could break through in a few hundred feet. As it turned out, we went to 13,000 feet before we got on top and we also had no oxygen.
I can tell you when we got around Crystal River I was so happy when we started descending and flying in and around the clouds until we were in clear weather below the clouds. It's a trip I never forget.
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I'm sure this is universal for all pilot training, but when I was doing my lessons, we spent the first several weeks/months with an hour in the classroom mostly learning how to spot/predict weather before we did a 1/2 hour or so going over checklists and another 1/2 hour at most actually flying the plane.
You just know so damn little when doing VFR flying that EVERYTHING has to be planned out and if you can't plan it, just don't fly it.
Then again, I very much doubt Kobe Bryant's pilot lacked any sort of credentials. I'm sure the dude was certified in every conceivable fashion.