I arrived at Grand Canyon National a few minutes ago! I took 52 flights, totaling 7,374.6 nautical miles, earning about $53,000 over 15 real-life days of flying. I had no GPS, and I almost never used X-Plane's moving map, so navigation was all ded reckoning, VORs and (in Europe and the frozen north) NDBs. My Carenado Archer has no autopilot, but I did break down and use X-Plane's AP hotkeys for longer flights. When using the autopilot, I used 4x and even 6x time compression if I was at high altitude. "High" meaning over 10,000 feet for an Archer.
Scariest flight: getting lost off the east coast of Greenland. I flew much further south much quicker than I realized. My indicated airspeed was, of course, significantly lower than my ground speed, especially as I was flying at 12,000 feet or so. But I forgot this, and I got lost. I had only ded reckoning and the coastline to go on, and I got distracted and lost sight of the coastline. Gulp.
Longest flight: Greenland to Canada.
Prettiest flight: the very last flight, from Page Municipal to Grand Canyon National.
Most lucrative flight: from Hornafjordur, Iceland to Keflavik, Iceland. This job paid the magnificent sum of $2,586.60.
Laggiest flight: Landing at Heathrow. Honorable mention: landing at Newark.
Starting tomorrow, I'll start flying some FSE missions on PE in the Grand Canyon area. (First I need to find some airport scenery for KGCN; my runway has so many trees on it I couldn't see it from 300 feet up.) I'll be looking for a small FBO to link to the existing PE FBOs, too.
Thanks for reading along with this little travelogue. I may still update my little Archer's adventures here. And some day I'll be making the trip from Oz to ZLA with my Bonanza, but not for a while -- I need a break!
Oh, and here's a look at my flight path (courtesy of skyvector).
