Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Worth every penny

We wanted to have lunch at Arlington, the weather had other ideas. Being an optimist I decided to at least fly the pattern to take a look. The Ceilings were 5 to 6 thousand, higher than the class B lid. Winds in the valley & along the way were reporting single digits. Several places west of here had wind in the teens, with SeaTac 15G22. I had 6 Knts local, coming right at me. Arlington was even better. As I lifted off the stall indicator briefly flickered, it was my first indication of conditions aloft, immediately I was busy keeping wings level and maintaining airspeed. It was a handful to keep a stable, wings level, climb out. Re-trimming, I flattened it a bit to gain a tad more speed. After we turned on crosswind we looked at the valley south, and it was closing in with a thick haze. The Wind had been steadily increasing as I gained altitude , as well as swirling and tumbling from the nearby obstacles on the ground. Banking with adequate airspeed I hauled back on the yoke to align the speeding craft with the Hwy below and downwind. I persisted in making the proper calls, although I doubt anyone else was fool enough to be flying the pattern today. OK, it is on down wind, a bit low, one wing is lower than the other and the wings are rocking and the fuselage is yawing about. Oops , pull back the throttle, this bird has enough motor to already be exceeding maneuvering speed. Gently I pull back on the yoke to slow it down. Surveying the scene ahead I can see the clouds have lowered around Tiger mountain, our route north. BFI &RNT don't look too much better. Still 100 feet shy of pattern altitude but now at a reasonable speed I call my turn to base. Pulling back some more on the power we soon turn on a long low final. I am constantly manipulating the controls to keep us pointed toward the tarmac. Strong roiling winds are tossing us about as I power back up to maintain 80 Knts. The wind here is definitely NOT in line with the runway as the local AWOS reported. We are at a severe crab to approach the runway,safely above the power lines, the winds are strong but not as variable right here. The plane is stable as we hit the VASI's, reduce power, slow and gently sink to the runway below. Again the tricky winds push the nose back and forth and simultaneously try to raise the low wing on the windward side. Pumping the rudders and adding a touch of power at the right moment the Cherokee gently settles in for a glass smooth, no flap landing in the midst of chaos. A mere .3 on the clock, but a ride worth every penny.

1 comment:

  1. Great Blog! I'm surprised you had enough wind to push a Cherokee around that much. Also read your description of flight out toward Tahoma..beautifully written, I was with you and could picture the entire flight.

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