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tartare
28th Sep 2017, 03:18
May I skite - combat brevity observed?
16 year old RAAF AFC Corporal Tartare junior just first solo'ed late yesty arvo in a DG1000.
Absolutely ecstatic, and more determined than ever to go to ADFA.
His old man was too blind and innumerate.
Dusty in here...

Dundiggin'
28th Sep 2017, 06:15
Congratulations young Cpl Tartare Jnr. My advice is never ever become over confident. An example of which I witnessed yesterday when a cocky bastard landed with his wheels up. Best of luck and may all your landings be capable of walking away from...heheh

Trim Stab
28th Sep 2017, 09:24
My first solo on a glider was a wheels up! Luckily onto grass and did no harm to the glider (or me).

CoodaShooda
28th Sep 2017, 10:51
May I skite

Abso - bloody - lutely!

I recall being more proud of CoodaKid3's first solo than of my own. And I'm still skiting about his achievements. :O

Well done Cpl Tartare Jnr and all the best for ADFA and beyond.

SATCOS WHIPPING BOY
28th Sep 2017, 11:27
Well done to Tartare junior. I know that dusty feeling all too well mate having watched my eldest solo in three types so far (Grob/Tucano/Hawk).

Weird how a total stranger can let him loose in a million pound jet and here I worry when he borrows my car :-)

Wish Tatare Jr all the best for the future. :ok:

Danny42C
28th Sep 2017, 16:07
(I don't know what's happening to the font - my gremlin is running amok !)

Congratulations to Tartare Junior - when are the cigars to be handed out, proud Tartare Senior ?

Long, long ago, when a very old man was a young man in a Stearman .....................

“My great day came on 19th September, 1941.

You never know in advance. I'm doing dual circuits and bumps, taxying back down the edge of the field after each landing. Half way back, Bob tells me to stop, and climbs out with his 'chute. "Off you go - remember what I've told you!" Another instructor is sitting on his chute, with a cigarette. (I suppose he'd just sent his pupil off), and Bob joins him.

This is no time to feel nervous. You have to move the aeroplane. I taxi warily round to take-off point (no runways), make sure nothing's coming in to land on top of me, turn into wind and push the throttle open.

I swing a little, travelling diagonally across the field, and into the air. So far, so good. There is supposed to be a special Providence which looks after first solos, the same one which takes care of drunks and toddlers when they fall down. A first solo never comes to harm, at least not in my experience.

Round I go, mechanically following routine, and come in for quite a decent landing (I've done many worse). I trundle round back to Bob. He waves me off again. This time I keep the take-off straight, again I put it down in one piece. This time Bob's on his feet - clearly he thinks he's pushed our luck far enough for one day. He climbs in: "Take me back to Carlstrom".

From that day on, I'll always be a pilot. I'm still a long way from my "wings", but I've been up "alone and unaided"; I'm down alive, and the aircraft can still fly!

Remember it as if it were yesterday,

Danny.

tartare
28th Sep 2017, 22:19
Gentlemen - thank you one and all.
I shall cut and paste your kind (and wise) messages and pass them on the the young fella.
He arrives home tonight.
Might have to start looking for some cigars Danny ;)

Basil
28th Sep 2017, 22:56
Looking back for the 'Full and free' and there's no-one there in the rear cockpit.
Bloody hell! I've almost killed myself several times as a child, on bikes, in industry and the MN before I ever got into an aeroplane; perhaps this is it!
It wasn't. :ok:

Huge congrats!

John Eacott
29th Sep 2017, 03:30
May I skite - combat brevity observed?
16 year old RAAF AFC Corporal Tartare junior just first solo'ed late yesty arvo in a DG1000.
Absolutely ecstatic, and more determined than ever to go to ADFA.
His old man was too blind and innumerate.
Dusty in here...

Well done to Junior: a day he'll never forget :ok:

Mine was 52 years ago last week, Mum wouldn't wake Dad when I phoned as he was on night shift. I still remember that as not being able to share with him as another pilot :hmm:

Danny42C
29th Sep 2017, 11:26
Thank you Senior Pilot (for editing my #6), I had absolutely no idea what to do !

Danny.

Fareastdriver
29th Sep 2017, 13:15
You lot had it easy. I was required to go solo within ten hours, I did it in 8.55hrs., in a taildragger with a howling 450 h.p. supercharged radial in front of you with kangaroo juice in the oleos; in the middle of November with sheets of ice on the runway.

ACW418
29th Sep 2017, 16:56
I've had that dusty problem too. In my case I sent (at different times) my two daughters on their first solos. One on her 16th birthday! In my case it was pure relief as much as pride. I can't imagine what I would have told their Mum if anything untoward had happened.

ACW

ps Well done to Tartare jnr.

Basil
29th Sep 2017, 18:17
I can't imagine what I would have told their Mum if anything untoward had happened.
I took S2 for an aeros ride in a Jungmann.
I then subsequently had a dream in which I inverted it and, having somehow undone his straps, he fell out. In this dream, I regret to admit, my first thought was 'How am I going to explain this to Mrs Bas?' :O

Danny42C
29th Sep 2017, 21:31
Basil (#13),

Recalls a joke from long way back. "You are instructing Prince Charles in a Tiger Moth, and pattering through a Slow Roll. Inverted, his straps come loose, and he falls out. What should be your immediate action ?

Answer: "Retrim the aircraft !"

tartare
29th Sep 2017, 23:50
Lads - he's sat here reading your comments.
I've explained your various backgrounds (to the degree that I'm aware) Danny, John, Cooda et al.
Means a lot to him - very grateful.
Ain't the Internet a wonderful thing.

MPN11
30th Sep 2017, 08:59
Belated congratulations from me to tartare Jnr, and best wishes for your desired future.

My first solo recollections:
Glider - doesn't it climb quickly without an instructor behind me!
Fixed wing - doesn't it climb quickly without an instructor beside me!

taxydual
30th Sep 2017, 09:13
You never forget your first solo.

Mine went fine, apart from one error. Hence my user name.

Whoops.

Exnomad
7th Oct 2017, 15:06
When taxing out for first solo, horrified by rattling noise from rear cockpit. Stopped on taxyway, stood up in seat, and slid back canopy (Chipmunk).
Instructor had fastened rear harness, but very slack, That was cause.

Basil
11th Oct 2017, 20:09
When taxing out for first solo, horrified by rattling noise from rear cockpit. Stopped on taxyway, stood up in seat, and slid back canopy (Chipmunk).
Instructor had fastened rear harness, but very slack, That was cause.
"Just testing, old boy." as an elderly* captain in a ME airline for which I flew used to say when a small deviation was pointed out by the FO ;)

* at least 15y younger than I am now - buggah!

I thought the 'rattling noise from rear cockpit' automatically stopped when the instructor got out :E
Just joking . . . .

ImageGear
12th Oct 2017, 07:00
Once done, never forgotten.

I remember the QFI saying: "That was alright, I'm getting out, just do the same again" before walking away across the grass to the tower. :eek:

That incredibly lonely, but inspiring few seconds when the realisation dawns and you realise you must get down to business.

I still regret not being able to be present for any of junior's "flying firsts" and now he's moved on to other things and the opportunities have gone.

Imagegear

Rasputin412
12th Oct 2017, 07:47
My Instructor leant over and said "There are 2 things in this life you will remember. Your first woman and your first solo!" and with that he climbed out, shut the door and off I went. Oxford 1992. Still remember it clearly!

just another jocky
12th Oct 2017, 08:36
Karl Schultz sent me solo and now, over 33 years later I'm returning the favour to the next generation.

Never forget it, feels like it was yesterday. Thought I was going to die as I waited for him to strap up the ejection seat and I restarted the engine. Had a choice...climb out and forget flying as a career or go and kill myself and when I overshot the first attempt I saw my prophecy coming true. Luckily for me, the second finals wasn't so bad.

KiloB
12th Oct 2017, 09:17
As I reached the ‘Hold’ for my first solo the guy on finals declared an emergency, due a shortage of green lights.
My instructor wandered down and got me to shut-down, but to remain there. After 15 min or so the situation was resolved (shortage of lights, rather than shortage of wheels).
I then expected to be given one more dual circuit before going off, to get me back in the ‘groove’ but no. “Off you go”.
Like MPN, my strongest memory is of how well the beast went without the weight of the Instructor! Great day!

KB

12th Oct 2017, 09:25
Fortunately, my course went first solo in the JP3 at Elvington which had a displaced threshold - one of our number managed to touchdown a good bit before that threshold, thankfully still on good quality runway.

Basil
22nd Oct 2017, 12:49
Recollect the stude ahead of me at S Cerney opened up his little Gipsy, didn't apply L rudder and shot across to the right where he cunningly rejoined the T/O queue, doubtless hoping that his manoeuvre had not been observed by the Duty Instructor. :}