I departed Livermore at 9AM heading to Calaveras as a student pilot. The air was extremely smooth, not a bump on my flight there; the air was a bit hazy though.
I landed at Calaveras and taxied to the guest parking area and tied down the airplane.
I walked into the FBO and was greeted by the airport manager (Kathy) who was very nice. My examiner was also there and said hello and that she would be right back. I was offered drinks and some pastries they had out.
After waiting for about 5 minutes the examiner (Terry) called me back to her office. She was very nice and offered me anything to drink (could I have a beer please). We began by going over my logbook and she requested my FTN number so she could log into the FAA website to review my IACRA form. I had the number with me but left it in the airplane so I had to leave and go get it. I was hoping Terry didn’t think I was not prepared right off the bat.
Terry asked me where I flew on my long x-country and asked me to measure the distance on my sectional which I thought this was kind of strange. She also asked where I flew on my night x-country. The oral portion of the review was not at all what I expected. I was waiting for a bunch of question but they really never came. She asked about the inspections required on the airplane, AD’s, engine inspections, and a few questions about wingtip vortices. We spent some time going over my cross-country log and asked a lot of questions about weight & balance, CG, check points, determining fuel and airspace. Terry also asked me to tell her what the * meant next the RP for Hollister airport. She asked me to tell her what the density altitude was for Calaveras and Napa airports and to determine takeoff and landing distances. All went well and we were done with the oral.
I was given the option of getting all the takeoffs and landings out of the way or we could start out on the cross-country to Napa and do the landings and takeoffs later. I opted for the cross-country to start and the landings and takeoffs later. I was asked to do a soft-field takeoff out of Calaveras. I kept the nose up and the mains lifted off the ground and I pushed forward on the yoke a bit and we came back down on the runway! I have NEVER done this before in all my soft-field takeoffs. Terry was not pleased by this at all. I thought great, we haven’t even got off the ground and I just failed my checkride.
We headed towards Napa and at my first checkpoint she diverted me to Columbia. She was nice enough to let me know before I actually got to the checkpoint that we were diverting to Columbia. I got my new heading and determined time and fuel. After turning to my new heading I didn’t think about anything else. Terry prompted me by saying, “Now what would you need to do?” Stupid me! I said well I would contact NorCal if I was receiving flight following and advise them of my destination. I would also need to change altitude because we were now on a south/easterly heading. She said, “What about are time to destination?” I said that I had already determined it would take 22 minutes. Terry said, “Then what time are we going to arrive there?” Oh…forgot to look at the time when we diverted. She asked me what the traffic pattern altitude was at Columbia so I pulled out the AFD and got it. She asked me what the traffic pattern was. The sectional mentioned RP for two runways but I only saw one runway at Columbia. I pulled out the AFD again and figured out traffic pattern. She then asked me if there were any special noise abatements. Damn it! She said maybe you should just mark the page and keep the AFD handy.
After flying for 5 minutes or so Terry asked me to do some clearing turns (very nice of her to tell me) and then setup for steep turns. The steep turns went “ok”; I lost my outside reference and turned back on heading a little too soon. We then did slow flight, stalls, and turns around a point. The winds were getting a bit strong at the surface so on my initial turns around a point I got pushed in a little too much so I tried again.
Terry told me to put the hood on and close my eyes. I was then told to make a gentle left turn and hold my altitude, and then again to the right. She then told me to put my head down and keep my eyes closed. She put the airplane in an unusual attitude and I recovered ok.
She then asked me to tune in the Linden VOR and fly to it. I tuned it in but I could not get the Morse code and the CDI was not showing a TO or FROM flag. Terry tried as well but, just my luck, the VOR stopped working. I had used it to fly to Calaveras this morning.
We flew back to Calaveras and she asked me to do a soft-field landing. The landing wasn’t as soft as it could have been but I kept the nose wheel off the ground and she was satisfied with it. I taxied back and did a short-field takeoff and then a short-field landing. All went good. I then did ANOTHER soft-field takeoff and this time it went good. The next trip around was a no flap forward slip to land, did ok there too.
We taxied back to the FBO and I wasn’t sure if I had passed or not. Terry didn’t say anything to me and I was afraid to ask! She helped me push the airplane to the fueling island and I refueled.
I went inside and she was in the process of printing out my temporary private pilot license. Until she actually handed it to me and said congratulations I still wasn’t sure I passed.
I got my updated winds aloft and flew back to LVK as a brand new private pilot using pilotage since the VOR was not working.