Flagada002 wrote:Well I mean it is my job here on Long Island! Just start with a sectional (or skyvector/ EFB). Draw a line between the two airports. Look for the MELs (Maximum Elevation Figures, those blue numbers in the middle of the quadrants formed by lines of longitude and lattitudes). to determine the minimum safe altitude along your route. Then Look for the airspace's along the route. Then once you get in the cockpit. it helps if you have two radios with standby frequencies. So you can set up as many frequencies as humanly possible!
After start up, pick your weather, then replace that frequency with the next airport you plan on getting the weather from.
Before calling for taxi, study your airport diagram. The controller will likely give you the most logical taxi instruction.
And remember. if you find yourself not doing anything in the cockpit. You are very likely lagging behind your airplane

! Good luck to you and I'll be looking for you in the virtual skies!
EDIT: Forgot to mention. I did buy the PC12 from Carenado. That bird is really nice. equipped with dual garmin 530s. And the default 172 from x plane 10 has a 430 on board. That's how I made sure to dodge the airspace's/locate airports! Consider finding a dual garmin airplane it cannot be mentioned enough how it will make your life easier. Also steer CLEAR of carenado's SR22.....
Great advise Flagada! I'm going to copy/paste your pre-flight steps and save them in my file with PilotEdge stuff so I can reference them in the future.
Well, believe it or not, I just passed my V2. Again, with the "skin of my teeth". Don't know what made me go ahead and do it because I was planning on waiting a couple of weeks. I think seeing your post that you passed V1 and V2 just filled me with inspiration and a false sense of confidence and bravado.
The worse thing that I did was loose my bearings at KONT. I thought I was going into a left hand pattern for Rwy 26L, then friendly approach contacted me and told me I had passed the runway and to cross over and enter the left hand pattern....UGH! For some reason, I was thinking the runways were pointing the other way and that I was in the left pattern (yeah, I know. I should have looked at my HSI). Hey, things can only get better
Right now I have been using A2A's Skyhawk 172 with the F1 Garmin GNS 750. That GNS is really an amazing piece of equipment. It almost makes things too easy. I could have placed the approach in it and it would have kept me from getting confused.
Slow as the C172 is, I was so busy in that cockpit that I didn't think of doing that. I looked like a one-armed paper hanger trying to input all the frequencies and manage the heading and altitude, while talking to ATC.
I have Carenado's PC-12. I'll have to try it out in PilotEdge sometime. For now, it is too fast for my slow-motion brain function.
I'm just trying to fly the slowest aircraft that I have. That's the Skyhawk C172. I thought of using my A2A Piper J3 for all of the VFR tests. That way I could fly at about 60kts and have plenty of time. I'm not sure that it has any radios in it.
Flagada, are you really a professional pilot in the real world?
I'm not a stranger to Long Island. I was born in Manhattan. The world made me an Alabama redneck, but my roots are in New York City.
Again, thank you for your advise and the inspiration to go for (...and somehow pass) V2. Well, on to V3, but I am going to wait a little while before I do that. It looks pretty complicated.
Bob