by kevin814 » Thu Feb 19, 2015 9:32 pm
I think my comfort level would be heavily influenced by my plane/engines history. How many hours on the engine, do you have recurring issues, how reliable has it been so far?
Personally, I do fly places that make me nervous. I still fly over metro Cincinnati (I had an engine failure over Cincinnati and had to dump it in a landfill), I fly over Kentucky where there is nothing but tree covered ridges and ravines, and I fly over lake Erie which makes me most nervous of all, because if the engine quits for any reason I will probably die. I picture a water landing going badly in a fixed gear plane with a bubble canopy.
Most of my flying is lower risk stuff over flat Ohio farmland, and in that area I can relax knowing I would probably survive a forced landing. The more dangerous locations offer their own rewards, which is why I choose to do it, but on a less frequent basis. The more hours I put on my plane, the more comfortable I am flying it.
When you are older, do you think you will be glad you undertook this adventure and flew over the mountains, or will you be glad you "played it safe"? I think the biggest factor is your personality. If the anxiety of flying over the mountains would ruin the whole trip, then it probably isn't worth the risk, since there isn't much to be gained. I would fly over the mountains, but I would be very nervous the whole time, over analyzing every little sound I "think" I hear from the engine, and obsessively looking at the engine readings.
I fly behind a relatively unreliable Jabiru, but it is light years ahead of my flaky Rotax 582 2 stroke, that almost caused me to give up flying for good. I'm so glad I got back on that horse, so to speak.
Kevin K.
Cincinnati
Sonex 130 Taildragger, Jab 3300 w/Rotec TBI, 6" tailwheel,