Sunday, May 17, 2020

A Tight Turn


This weekend turned out to be great weather for training.  Saturday I went up to South Carolina to land at Hilton Head.  I did not shut down and actually never left the active movement area so no chance of spreading or getting germs.


On the way back I was planning to stop at Keystone for some cheap gas.  They have airplane gas for $2.58/gallon which is a really good deal.  As I was coming across the Florida border I noticed showers forming over the airport from what became Tropical Storm Arthur.  Not wanting to fuel in the rain, I diverted and tucked the plane back in the hangar. 


Looking at the weather this morning, it was a perfect opportunity to train and get gas.  I filed to 42J (Keystone) via BUHAR.  BUHAR is an imaginary point in space which we can find with our GPS equipment.  Why BUHAR, well the weather was cloudy so I would need to do an approach to find the field and BUHAR was a legal starting point.


Heading out I had some broken clouds and initially was in and out.  This became solid in and then I was above them cloud surfing at 3000.  I was cleared direct BUHAR and things were looking good.  I planned to let the autopilot do this one.  The approach was loaded and active and with the GPS steering, the plane would get to BUHAR, make the right turn, fly to TOLBY, make another right and once I was heading straight in, I just needed to hit the approach key and the plane would capture both the lateral and vertical guidance and take me down to the runway.


The one complication is that the approach  takes you 2.5 North East of Gainesville and they had departing traffic.  The controller offered a vector around or I could get a vector straight in but tight.  I chose tight.  This added a bit of pressure but I had briefed the plate and was ready.



I disengaged the autopilot and hand flew the initial portion.  I was turned to 300 degrees and descended to 2000.  Since I was now in tight I needed to boogie on down.  I configured for 700 feet per minute and as I was reaching 2000 got my turn to 20 degrees to join final.  On the way down I had reset the GPS and activated Vectors to final. 



Rolling out aligned, I re-engaged the autopilot in approach mode.  It was tracking and I watched the glide slope come alive.  At intercept the gear came down and the plane started descending.  300 feet later I popped out of the clouds with the runway in sight.


By the time I fueled, the clouds had started to break up and I was able to see home from 20 miles out and accept the visual approach.  After putting the plane away, I saw one of the airport residents.  He wanders around but is sort of quiet.  He did pose for me though.

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