by Chris_F » Thu Nov 04, 2004 3:27 pm
Two nights ago I flew the default Lear Jet from my home airport in Manchester, NH to Juneau, Alaska. Yesterday evening I decided to fly from Juneau to the Kamchatka Penninsula (that funny thing that sticks out of Russia and points towards Japan). I didn't bother to file a flight plan, I just took off and assumed I had enough gas to make it there.
Sunset comes early this time of year over the Bearing Straight. I passed the last of the little islands and noticed I was a little low on gas. Nah, I got enough.
About 50 miles shy of landfall everything became earily silent. The sun was low on the horizon and Kamchatcka was just becoming visible. Great. Time to ditch. As I decended from FL330 to FL110 landfall started to look like a distinct possibility. I tried to punch through what I thought was a lone cloud but visibility went to zero and never lifted. Nope, the weather isn't as good down here as I thought.
Thankfully I had a nice bright multi-function display showing my attitude, altitude, airspeed and heading. Stay the course, stay the course. Ten seconds later the batteries died. Uh oh. I'm not too familiar with the lear so it took me a while to find the analogue gages (and I don't know how to read that airspeed indicator). By the time I found the backup artificial horizon I was in a 90 degree bank (!). So THAT's why they tell you to keep your eye on the artificial horizon and not trust the seat of your pants in IFR (especially in a sim)
At 5000 feet I started to see the wave tops. I laid the plane on to the surface of the water as gently as I could and she slowed to a smooth stop like she was made for water landings. Luckily I didn't dig a wing tip in to the water and flip.
I had a breif moment after the plane stop before it sank to ponder my predicament. The world was silent, it was getting dark, It's late fal, I was in the middle of the Bearing Straight, and I was about to go for a swim. Oh, and I was wearing my pajamas.
Sometimes it's good that it's just a simulation.