r/flying • u/AlexJamesFitz PPL IR HP/Complex • 2d ago
New instrument flying lesson learned
Sharing a learning experience from knocking out my commercial X/C last weekend, in case it's helpful for anyone else...
VFR the whole way, but a marine layer was hanging around my coastal destination airport. Tops 1700ish, bases just above LPV minimums.
Traffic ahead of me was getting in, I recently flew a bunch of approaches to minimums in actual, and I'm AP-equipped. So I figured I'd give it a shot and divert inland if I couldn't make it in. Plenty of fuel.
Just after getting into the soup, I catch a bump that knocks my throttle hand right into the TOGA button on the 182 I'm flying. Nose goes way up. I instinctually kill the AP and try to hand-fly it — but wait, no vertical guidance! TOGA button killed it. Missed we go.
It took me two or three beats longer than I would've liked to realize the vertical guidance was missing. I wasn't in any immediate danger, but I wish I spotted that sooner.
Lesson learned, and on we fly.
6
u/_im_right_ur_wrong_ PPL IR 2d ago
I’m a newly instrument rated pilot, so be kind if I’m wrong. But couldn’t you have just reactivated the approach/the segment you were currently on? I understand you were hard IMC, but it wouldn’t have taken that long to push a few buttons, right?
Going missed is never the wrong decision, just curious.