DC9 type + 1

Well, its a new day and I have a type rating!!! I still haven't really been able to digest that idea, but it feels so good. I've been awake since 2:00AM and couldn't go back to sleep. It's starting to get ridiculous why I keep on feeling refreshed with so little sleep. I feel awake, but then I get really exhausted later on in the day and my muscles are starting to ache like I've been awake for > 24 hours. Oh well...I'm sure that my sleeping habits will get back to normal. Make sure you read the post below.

It is done!!!

I am an official DC9 rated pilot (w/ the limitation of initial operating experience required). Just to clarify, I did all the training in an MD90 Simulator, which is of the same family and aircraft type as the DC9. It was a rough ride to start out with but the circle to land I executed went really well. I'm just happy that I'm done and ready to begin the infinite search for a career with thousands of hours of flying. I graduate this Friday, April 7th.

Here are more photos of the MD90 type aircraft. Click here!

I still can't sleep

So, I've resulted in reading, "What's the funiest things you have ever heard on the radio," on Airline Pilot Central. Good stories there. Check it out! http://forums.airlinepilotcentral.com/showthread.php?t=2263

i.e.

ATC to Northwest enroute from Florida to NYC: NW123 turn right 20 degrees for spacing into NYC.

5 minutes later - ATC to NW: NW123 did you turn right or left????

NW 123: ahhhhh which way did you tell us to turn?

This is getting ridiculous!

It's Monday April 3rd at 1:38AM and as I am writing this blog I have my final checkride is at t-minus 7.5 hours. I've already gotten 5 hours of sleep by going to sleep at 8:00PM, but now I can't sleep. I already woke up at 11:00PM and was able to go back to bed, but now it's just getting hopeless. I'm not having nightmares like last nights "QRH on fire!" I'm just not getting proper sleep or something. It really stinks. Tossing and turning...blogging, oh well, back to the bed!

is it the uniform?

Finally some recognition / respect is back and we are all once again in the lime light. Check it out...Pilots are ranked as the 3rd most sexiest job for 2006. I just thought that this was a fun fact. http://www.salary.com/advice/layouthtmls/advl_display_nocat_Ser388_Par594.html

This actually reminds me, after this coming Friday, this blog will have to change to something else being that I'm going to be done with the CAPT program. Should I just start another one or just continue it with a tag line, "Life after CAPT." We'll see which way I head, but in the mean time, any suggestions out there?

Tomorrow is the day of judgment

After today, it showed that I hadn't flown in quite a while. I mean the circle to land was great except getting blown a little too far right, but it was probably one of the best that I have done. I also was able to exit on the first taxiway. The emergency descent flow went really well, but I did have some issues on coming down. Coming out of a hold at flight level 290, I was set at 265 kts and I noticed the cabin altitude increasing rapidly. I initiated the Cabin Altitude procedure and when I put on my mask, I just started coughing and sneezing. It definitely wasn't a good sign, but I pulled the throttles too early and had a hard time getting to a descent speed of 320. On an engine abnormal on takeoff prior to V1, I yelled out, "Abort!" instead of "Reject!" which I have always done before up until the time where I get tested. Of all the times I said it outloud in the car on the way down, or chair flying, I still said the wrong thing.

As most of the instructors have noticed, I try to rush things or execute procedures too quickly. It's definitely just a time to reflect and really really consciously get myself to think, think, think, rather than speak or react instantaneously.

Here's a nice picture of the type of plane that I have been training to fly. I only wish that I could get a chance to fly the real thing, even if it is as a first officer or jump seater even. I've sit as a passenger on an MD88, but sitting in the cockpit is always a different story.

+1 / T-minus 1.5

So, with the time change already affect here on the East Coast, I've been awake since 1:00AM tossing and turning. My mind has been all over the place from failing to passing, to just contemplating all the possible scenarios that I might be given. It's racing at .84 mach! (okay that was retarded) but there are definitely too many things going through my mind. I finally just gave up on sleep and cooked some Campbell's Mushroom Soup and a grilled cheese sandwich. I've brewed my coffee and am ready to head out! It's 3:56AM here and its just amazing how long I've been awake. I think that it is the longest weekend of my life. It's the anticipation that kills.

Counting down...

Well, its Saturday and I'm eagerly awaiting my turn for the pre-rate ride tomorrow morning at 5:30AM. If you take into account the time change where we "spring" the clocks forward, its a wake up call at 2:30AM and leave the house by 3:30AM to get there before the 4:30AM start. It's going to be awesome. I'm just kicking back today a little and going over some final points about the MD-90 including limitations and chair flying. Should be a great day! I just thought that this picture was awesome. Only if...someday

Sim #13 + 5 days until...

Well...today's flight was deifnitely productive. I thought that I was able to perform adequately so that I feel comfortable for the up coming events, but I wouldn't of liked to have 5 days off between now when I'm feeling good till my pre-rate. I'm sure that it'll still go well, I'll just keep on chair flying and going over the maneuvers more and more. It's exciting to know that I graduate in less than 10 days, but its scary not knowing what lies ahead.

I just found a flight for China just shy of $500 bucks! That's exciting. Too bad I didn't know about the program that my friend Andy is going through earlier. It's called the Konall Culture Exchange (KCE). You can check out their services at http://www.gatewaychina.net/ Check it out! $14K for a great year in the program with food, shelter and schooling. Now, that's an educational experience. Mine was an excellent program but it did cost just a little bit more.

1:00AM

I had Sim #12 this afternoon and it definitely went well...at least for the first half. We took a class picture today and then finished up my lesson. Things just didn't start off on the right foot with a tail windshear on takeoff. It wasn't necessarily my fault but still, things just didn't work out. We tried it again and then once more before I made it out of there. In the air around 29000 feet, we had an explosive decompression scenario (my first) and I thought that I would be able to do well, but I got into a Dutch Roll with the initial blow out and was never able to recover. I did the following next times, but it just stunk. We did it over and over again and then my time was up.

I have a sim session at 5:00AM and as I'm writing this its alread 1:10AM. I did fall asleep at 1900 this afternoon and got a good 5 hours, but since then, I haven't been able to fall back asleep. It's frustrating but I'm just going to study and rehearse what my sim will be like for tomorrow. It is my last chance to iron out a few items before the pre-rate ride and the checkride. I will have a day or two off until those two events, but it going to get crazy and hectic. Wish me all the luck you can!

Here's out class pic from left to right:
Kevin Lubic, Kurtis Buffington, Manoj Osuri, Ryan Nay, Forrest Foust, Elijah Nicolas, Greg Farlow, and Laura Pigott. It will be a total of 15 months for some and 13 for the others who all started ab initio.

Sim #10

Being Flight Riddle 410 wasn't easy today with me trying to rush to checklists, not being able to hold wings level while trying to fly a raw data single engine ILS, and just being all over the place. It's pretty crazy what we are going through everyday but it is coming down to checkride day. I'll keep on saying that until the day, but its crazy stuff. You look at everything that pilots prepare for and then you actual do it, it's ridiculous. I'm loving every moment of it, and still when I stand the throttles up, even though it is a sim, I get ansi in anticiaption that something will go wrong. I guess that its a good thing but it does take the "fun" out of it, unless you consider that all the emergency procedures are fun. Don't get me wrong, the flights wouldn't be anything but boring if nothing happenend. Every flight is exciting. You come to learn the famous quote that everyone should know: "If you ever experience a boring flight, you're pilot is doing his/her job well." I didn't word it the exact way, but you get the gist.

Checkout the trelijah blog. I'm telling you, you can only see it in Daytona Beach.