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Commercial Glider test
I passed my Commercial Glider test on June 6, 2009 with the same examiner I had taken my private glider some years back. The test was really dejavu. He asked me many of the same questions and had me do all of the same maneuvers. Though, I was more satisfied with my performance this time. The flight test began with a simulated rope break at around 300 feet with the altimeter covered. This was just like the situation on the private test except this time I completed the turn in the correct direction and this flight test I was flying from the back seat. I got the spot landing out of the way on that same landing just as on the private test. The following tow, we dodged clouds to get to 2,500 feet. I boxed the wake around the turns and he gave me the option of just doing half a box but I just finished going all the way around the box. A couple stalls and steep turns later and we were ready to head back to the airport. I demonstrated a slip to land and a nice landing and rolled back to the glider shack to have my new certificate issued. I had my temporary airmen certificate (issued not a whole month prior) taken away from me to be replaced by a new temporary certificate to include my commercial privileges.
For my first flight as Private Pilot Airplane, I took my girlfriend on a flight to New York City. We departed Blairstown in the Cessna 1-52 and flew to Old Bridge via Solberg VOR. The navigation there was quite easy. I brought my GPS on a flight for the first time but I had little need for it. I knew where I was and where I was going. The GPS just helped me confirm that I was going the right way rather than having to wait to see if I made it to the destination or not.
Thursday April 9, 2009 and Sunday April 12 were two of the most incredible glider days of the year. The whole gang was out flying at Blairstown on both these days. I took the club 1-34R up on both days for 2 hours each. Thursday was the super thermal day and Sunday the super ridge day. On Thursday I climbed to over 9,500 feet MSL in thermals. I released at 3,000 feet but lost height down to 2,000 before I began the climb. This was my highest altitude in a glider to date. With climb rates over 600 fpm, I was gaining altitude faster than in an airplane. Sunday I came back for some low level ridge flying and made some runs between Milbrook and the Delaware Water Gap. I gained some fantastic experience on both of these excellent yet challenging days. This video is all footage from the first day and the final landing is on the second. I posted a smaller (11mb) video here. The two flights earned some OLC points for my club and are posted here:
Here's the Cessna 1-52 I did most of my solo flying in as well as my solo cross country flights. Yeah, good times they were, flying with broken radios, transponder, etc. Of course the best story is the all out electrical failure I experienced on my flight back from Bridgeport. I was doing my night cross country flight with an instructor I hadn't previously flown with. After landing bridgeport we started taxiing to the FBO but agreed that we'd rather just get back to Blairstown sooner by not shutting down. I requested clearance to taxi back to the runway and proceeded to the hold short. I called the tower requesting takeoff clearance and they replied that the transmission was unreadable. I tried again with no success. I started to fumble with many of the switches on the radio panel and kept trying to get a radio check all to no avail. I even tried to use the Com2 radio but still unreadable. The tower transmitted that they would not let us takeoff with a failed radio and that we may cross the hold short line to turn around and return to the ramp where the avionics shop might still be open to assist. During the taxi back I figured I would just give it one more shot and called for a radio check and this time the tower responded with a 5-5! Pleased with the good news I stopped right there on the taxiway and called for a clearance to taxi to the runway again. But to my dissapointment the tower responded that I was unreadable once more. I began taxiing again and got a sucessful call out again. At this point my instructor and I caught on that the radio worked while we taxiied and not while stopped. We had to run the engine at a higher than idle RPM to get the radio to transmit. So we taxiied back to the runway and keeping the throttle in with full brakes requested and got the takeoff clearance. We flew all the way back to blairstown without further incidenct and used the radio to get the runway lights turned on. I landed on runway 25 and just as I was making the turnoff the lights and radios went out completely! I looked over at the instructor thinking maybe he shut the master but quickly realized he could not have hit the master without reaching his arm past me. Then it dawned on me that we had had a complete electric system failure. I did not want to take responsibility for taxiing the plane in complete darkness so I told him that I would prefer he taxi. With nearly no light to guide him he managed to get it back to the tiedown and we shut her down knowing it would be for the last time in a while. We figured there was an alternator problem and that the battery went dead. Later on, the mechanic who worked on it told me that the wiring got melted from heat through the cracked exhasust! Friday September 21, 2007 I flew my first solo in a piper cub. After a bunch of takeoffs and landings with my instructor at Trinca airport, he finally got out and that is where the real flying began! It turns out that it is so much easier flying by myself in all respects. The plane is lighter, takesoff in no distance, the controls are easier to move, can see the instruments and out the front. It's fantastic. It's actually a lot easier to fly it this way than with the instuctor on board.
On April 22 2007, I flew and successfully landed the Schweizer 1-34 sailplane for the first time. Its a fabulous glider compared to the stuff I'm used to flying. It is very smooth, quiet, and easy to control. Everyone got me so worked up over it, making a really big deal about how hard it is to land it. It was tough, but I got through it ok. Later I flew a 1-26 for an hour of which the first 50 minutes were a struggle to stay up and the last 10, I rode a 6 up thermal from 1400 to 4000 feet. Finished the day off with 2 hours flying piper cub at andover.
So today, Saturday March 24, 2007 is a historic day in aviation. I've been waiting almost 20 years to do this and it is now finally begun! I made the first step towards private pilot in powered aircraft by taking my first lesson in a piper cub. No bullshit on this plane, you have a stick, some pedals, and a nice view out the sides and that's about it. You're most important instrument is a thin rod that sticks out of the nose that tells you your fuel but even that is not that important. The main thing is to look out at the horizon. By looking out at the horizon you can tell your speed, direction, and just about everything you may want to know, like which way is the market heading tomorrow. Just kidding, but it sure does tell you where you're heading.
![]() View RC Launch Video ![]() View my takeoff video (Small version) February 24th, 2007 I flew on the Blairstown local ridge solo for the first time. From my 3,000 foot release over the ridge, I was able to contact with some thermals and maintain my height for a little bit, but as time progressed I was sinking lower and lower. Since I sunk below 2,200 feet AGL Blairstown, it was a heart pounding struggle to gain enough height to comfortably make it back to the airport. I was flying back and forth on the ridge waiting to hit the right lift that would take me home. When I climbed to 2,100 feet in a thermal and drifting over the top, I realized I should better take this home, lest such an opportunity not arise again. I put the nose down and held on by my teeth as I zoomed through the leeward sink. Despite the altitude loss, I entered the Blairstown traffic pattern like a gentleman with altitude to spare. A quick easy landing and I was back on the ground in one piece; no broken legs, no death wishes, and only more ridge flying to look forward to. Two weeks later I flew 3.5 hours on the local ridge with far more confidence and eagerness to experiment. I flew all the way from to the gap and back almost to catfish pond. A great flight topping the last! ![]() November 3rd 2006 seemed like a typical "good soaring" day. Winds were out of the WNW at around 8 mph, cumulus clouds were forming well before noon, and visibility was unlimited. I got Sweet Red (a Schweizer 1-26E) ready and out on the flight line. I took a tow to 2500 feet AGL, but released at 2000 in what I thought was lift. It was very week and not enough to climb in. I lost all my height trying to find another thermal and ended up landing back at the airport. I went for a second tow immediately and made the same stupid mistake, getting off in the sucker thermal. The third time I stuck it out to 3000 feet and almost immediately found a thermal off the ridge. Slowly but surely I climbed through 5000 feet. I jumped over the ridge (for the second time ever on my own) and went just north of the R/C field. I contacted some good lift there and came back across the ridge higher than I'd set out. For the next two hours I followed a stupendous thermal street back and forth (North-South) for as much as 11 miles. I went as far as 3 miles north of the ridge to as far south as past route 80. I logged a silver climb with a total climb of around 3900 feet. I learned many great lessons from that 2 hours 45 minute flight. This was my first flight that qualified for the OLC ![]() I got approved to fly the two seat Blanik
My R/C Endeavors![]() My scratch built powered R/C ![]() My first scratch built R/C was a glider ![]() One week after getting my private pilot license, I overcame my fear of flying a different glider (particularly a one seater because no one can sit in there with me and help me transition) and flew the ACA 1-26 "Sweet Red" for the first time. Above is a photo immediately after my first non-fatal accident in the ship. Thanks Chip for the photo.After I got a cockpit check by three club members and was set to go, I took a tow to 3,000 feet because I wanted to make sure I was familiar and comfortable with the controls before landing. I avoided the dreaded pitch ocilations on takeoff that everyone was warning me about and just took off normally and stayed in line with the towplane. As the towplane started climbing, that's when I started seeing trouble. The glider kept trying to stay well to the right of the towplane (I was later told that it was because I was in the prop wash below normal tow). Flooring the rudder wouldn't even bring it back to center so I put a little left aileron and nothing, a little more, nothing, and a little more and woosh! The 1-26 banked way over and started rapidly taking me out to the left side of the towplane.
Sunday, April 30th 2006I passed my flight test and got Private Pilot license
Remarks of a Newly Licensed Glider PilotA year since my first glider ride and just six months after my first solo flight, I was coming to Blairstown to make an attempt for my Private Pilot License. I wanted it very much and felt ready, but yet I knew that I would just end up screwing up something important. Unlike in other things, if I were to fail this test, I would not only be letting myself down but also my instructor and my brother who had been waiting patiently for a year to be able to fly together. April 30, 200606:20 Wake up 06:22 Look up and print Duat (forecast) and replan cross country flight plan to account for current forecast 06:50 Shower, dress and personal preparation 07:10 Drink juice and break fast 07:30 Get in car and drive to airport 08:50 Arrive at airport, seek instructor 09:00 Find instructor, but not have him answer my question 09:10 Briefing with towpilot 09:15 Start preflighting 2-33 to do a practice flight before test 09:20 Learn that examiner showed up ahead of time too. Forget about practice flight 09:35 Go through paperwork and start oral exam 10:05 Preflight glider again, check tow rope 10:15 Takeoff 10:17 Land (simulated rope break at 280 feet requiring turn around and land). Spot landing completed 10:25 Takeoff for second flight 10:27 Towplane wave off at 1,000 feet requiring immediate landing again. Demonstrate slip 10:35 Takeoff for third flight 10:38 Boxing the wake 10:40 Release at 3,000 feet. Do clearing turn. Straight ahead stall without and with spoiler 10:45 Slow flight and turning stalls in each direction 10:50 Steep 360 degree turns in each direction 10:55 Landing, paperwork, issuance of temporary Private Pilot Certificate 11:15 Receive debriefing/scolding from flight instructor for screwing up
Bob Cook (left) and Michael Sazhin (right) set New Jersey State Open Class Multiplace
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Fly Me!

Altimeter and Instruments Set
Seating and Harness Secured (tighten that harness like your going to hit a brick wall)
Positive Control Check and Trim Full Forward
Spoiler Test and Locked
Right Hand on Stick
Me Prepared for Takeoff in Schweizer 2-33




