Friday evening I got my schedule. 11 o clock on Monday morning. Hmm... not an ideal time but it could work. The LRC with free tutors opens at 9, so I could in theory get it done in time. Monday morning I was in the LRC first thing. I was the only one there. OK this isn't panning out the way I was hoping. I found our FAA written test examiner who is in charge of the LRC and the tutors that are scheduled, in the FAA test room. She looked at the schedule and said the tutor who was supposed to be in there now had his schedule changed and was on a flight. Ok... not good. Lets call my instructor. He was on his way and said he'd be there in 5 minutes. 20 minutes later he wasn't there still. By now an hour had gone by and I had to put my ticket in. I also headed for the head instructors office to see what he suggested. My instructions were to see if I could have the flight rescheduled to later in the day or worse case scenario have it rescheduled. I found the examiner and explained. He was sympathetic and said he was booked all day... So to make a long story short the flight was canceled due to a "scheduling error" and I was resubmitted the next day for 3pm.
Next morning I went back to the LRC to finish up my Nav Logs. I had the headings in or what we call a skeleton log ready to input the weather and winds. The tutor walked me through how to calculate the top of climb and the rest of the log I knew how to finish. I was ready to rock. I put the ticket in for the plane, and met with the new examiner. We walked over to our weather computers and saw a nasty storm front coming our way. I was his last student for the day and no one else had the plane, so it looked pretty good that we would fly until the examiner said he wasn't night current meaning he could not instruct at night due to his lack of currency. Oh for the love of.... We kept watching the weather and ultimately decided to cancel the flight due to weather.
I got the call that I would fly Wednesday at 4pm. Back to the LRC and another student I knew was in there and said he would help me out. I showed him my logs and pulled out clean sheets to fill out. He said I didn't have to redo them, just adjust what I had. He said instructors never look too closely at them and we more than likely I wouldn't use them anyways. So the nav logs were quickly "tweaked" and I was done.
Come flight time I was ready. The new examiner who I did not know came to me, and asked for my I.D., medical card, Standards manual, Plane Operators Handbook, Charts, approach plates, and flashlight. I basically had my entire flight bag emptied out on the desk. Everything was current and I even had 2 extra flashlights and two sets of extra batteries. You cant tell me all the flashlights will fail especially when I have extra batteries. I passed the first step.
As we walked out to the plane for the walk around of the plane, I found out this examiner used to live near my home in Las Vegas, as well as having lived in South Michigan on the border of Indiana near where I have many friends in South Bend. He knew all the hangouts I had been to with my friends, as well as Klinger lake where one of my best friends family has a lake house near White Pigeon.
With my instructor we had flown the flight path of what I would be doing today... Sanford to Melbourne to Titusville... go missed at Titusville and fly the holding pattern at the MALET fix. Well... my examiner through a curve ball at me... apparently the way the stage check scenario is written we are to fly to our first destination VFR but due to "bad weather" fly to our alternate and hold there. We were then going to pick up an IFR plan while in the air to fly to Titusville then to Sanford. BUT... he didn't want to do that either. Instead we were going to fly VFR to Melbourne, then change to our alternate airport Merrit Island while in flight, then head back to Sanford but do a hold first, then do two approaches. Uh boy.... I got a bit nervous since I wasn't familiar with Merrit Island, but that's okay... a runway is a runway right?
As we flew out towards Melbourne, we did steep turns where I only lost about 50 feet... and when he had me close my eyes for unusual attitudes, he had us in a nose down attitude... I pulled out the power smoothly and adjusted the plane. He told me next time to pull the power out to idle but smoothly as not to lose the engine. I'm going to be honest here. After these victories I felt my flight was terrible afterward. It was certainly not my best day flying. I couldn't hold my altitude, my approaches were slow, but my landings were so so. My hold started out terribly, but got better with every turn.
Back on the ground during the debrief he asked me how I thought I did. I told him I did not meet my personal standards, that I knew I could do better. However I felt that even though my radio calls suck, I did better than usual repeating my instructions. This is when I got a big surprise. He said nothing was perfect but that this lesson he didn't expect anything to be perfect. He said I'm right where I should be, and my landings were a bit better than he expected. I just needed to pay more attention to my speed on the approaches. Ok... so that's good right? So... why the hell did I have to wait so long to take this exam?!? I'm not sure if I should be upset for the extra money Ive spent on extra flights, or if I should be happy I passed. I guess the way I'm going to look at it is I'm a bit more prepared for stage 47.
I'm hoping to go to 2 events a day to speed things up a little bit. However with the few instructors we have and the amount of students we have from the recently started Chinese students I may not get the chance for that. We'll see. In the mean time... I'm going to relish this moment of victory no matter how ugly it was. I win is a win right?





