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Instrument Checkride this Wed.. dont feel prepared..

  • Thread starter Thread starter QuasarZ
  • Start date Start date
  • Watchers Watchers 14

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QuasarZ

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2005
Posts
328
I have my checkride coming up this wednesday. Now that I am reviewing more than ever.. I just dont feel pepared enough for the oral. My flying I am not worrying about beacaue that is fine. DOes anyone have pointers on what to do or the last minute things to study? THe main topics in the oral?
Thanks in advance!
 
i am using that... If i know that by heart will I be good? or does the DE get questions from somewhere else too?
 
Know 91.167, .171, .173, .175, .183, .185 by heart. Know when you're required to have an instrument rating. Know your charts (what ever kind you use NOS/Jepps) cold...Pitot/static and Vacuum systems and their errors...magnetic compass errors/how to use it. Service volumes of VORs. What is: MEA, MRA, MAA, MOCA, OROCA, etc. Where do Victor airways start/end? Jet Routes? O2 requirements and illusions. Weather: Be able to read the charts, winds aloft, METAR, TAF, etc. What causes ice to form? How can you avoid that? What do you do if you end up in icing conditions?

My instrument oral wasn't all that bad...I had to plan a cross country flight in front of the examiner (he called me 10 minutes before and asked me "do you want to do your checkride now?" so ... no time to prep). Then he asked me about weather...why I chose the routes, altitudes, airways, etc. Asked me about ICE...a lot (it was November). Talked about pitot/static, vacuum, VOR services, NDBs and how they worked, RMI, HSI, OBS, asked me if I wanted to go fly since it was relatively low IFR...said yes...an ILS, a Back Course, a hold and a LOC later and I was done.

Good luck! Hope this helps. If you weren't ready your CFI wouldn't sign you off...just do what you do with him/her with you.

-mini
 
Will the examiner care if I plan using Duats? It pretty much does it all for you... but i would still have to explain why I chose those routes.
 
My instrument oral was so bad, I figured he was going to fail me before we even got in the airplane.

Funny story about the results.....

We took off at sunset....right into the sun, but by the time we got to an airport with proceedures, it was pitch black and I couldn't get my panel and instrument lights bright enough for me to see them well enough.

So...I pulled out and handed him my flashlight out of my bag and asked him to point it around the cockpit wherever I needed it....and to leave my instruments alone (damned DE's)...lol.

The whole time he's trying to distract me with conversation and questions about my avionics, he's also commenting about what a beautiful night it was with the full moon reflecting off the bright white snow....

WTH???????? It's pitch black....we're in real IMC!

Anyway....I nailed my checkride. My flying was flawless.

As we got back to home base, I did one steep turn for him and one recovery from unusual attitude and I was told I was done and to pull the hood off.....along with my sunglasses that I still had on.

A few years later, luck had it that he was my DE for my multi. The oral part lasted maybe 10 minutes and the flying portion 45 tops.

I guess the moral of my story is: brush up on the oral, but make damn sure if you're weak on it, you're strong on flying to compensate.

Oh...and if you're in trouble and behind the ball in your flight...don't be afraid to use him/her as center and ask for help.

Good luck
 
When the DE asks for the required instruments and equipment to fly IFR.. can you just say that you need the stuff for vfr day/night plus.. or do you have to list the vfr stuff out?
What does the Tomato A Flames thing go?
I havent studied that vfr stuff in a long time
 
QuasarZ said:
i am using that... If i know that by heart will I be good? or does the DE get questions from somewhere else too?

The ASA Oral Exam Guides are good, they are not published by the FAA nor on behalf of the FAA, so I use them as very good supplements.

I use the PTS as the primary source of information for the Oral. For the Instrument Checkride, review "I. Area of Operation: Preflight Preparation" and "II. Area of Operation: Preflight Procedures", and all Tasks included therein.

Have your instructor, another instrument student, or another student with added knowledge quiz you directly from the PTS in those areas. Use the ASA Oral guide to supplement your knowledge in those areas, yet use the PTS as the primary source of topics to be included on your oral.
 
If your CFI thinks your ready, you are. no worries and goodluck!

FD
 
What does the Tomato A Flames thing go?
I havent studied that vfr stuff in a long time
Anti collision lights
Tachometer
Oil temp
Manifold pressure
Altimeter
Temperature engine (liquid cooled)
O ("O" damn i cant remember this one)
Flap position indicator
Landing gear lights (green=down)
Airspeed indicator
Magnetic compass
Elt
Seatbelts

Well this was off the top of my head I'm sure I have them written down somewhere. Please can someone help get the final "O"

Thanks
 
Know the GPS and the autopilot if they are in your plane. Sometimes, you will be showing the DE something they don't know. Have confidence, and don't be thrown off by the "are you sure?" You are most likely right. They want you to be confident, they want you to pass. Give them what they want.
 
BushwickBill said:
Please can someone help get the final "O"

Oil Pressure Gauge.

Try this technique. Sit in the plane (also works with a cockpit poster), and start from left to right, top to bottom, and point to (and touch) each instrument and gauge and ask yourself "is this required"?

Everybody I have ever worked with has learned and used this method successfully. It allows you to interact and look immediately at an instrument/gauge and determine immediately if it is required.

Example: Look at the Airspeed Indicator. Is it required? Yes. Look at the VSI. Is it required? No! Look at the Outside Air Temp gauge. Is it required? Yes.

This saves time as you are not running though an acronym in your head trying to figure out if it is required equipment.
 
I can honestly say I felt the IA checkride was easier than my private. Just study ASA, know the charts and approaches cold and really make sure your weather knowledge is solid. The flying part is easy...just follow needles and remember to:
Turn
Time
Tune
Throttle
Talk
every time you do anything.
 
well.. that is my thing.. my weather knowledge isnt my best area.. I am trying to learn it all but it is hard!
 
no worries...

in the clouds = IMC
close to the clouds = VMC

;)
 
really get into icing, any charts you might use to determine weather a flight is safe or not (ie weather depiction chart, surface analysis chart, radar summary chart) altimeter settings to millibar settings. Icing is really the big concern here, know all the different types of ice, how to avoid it, what to do if encountered...the usual. how far around tstaorms you should fly, turbulence procedures....memorize the weather portion of the ASA book, they take those questions from the PTS which is what the examiner uses. Get those down and youll be golden.
 
Ask other CFIs to do ground with you; know the regs & charts inside and out.

Good luck,
TA
 

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