Hi Stuart!

Stuart Buchanan wrote:
> --- Ralf Gerlich  wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> in the well-established tradition of reporting one's milestones on the
>> way to a license I would like to give a short account on my first
>> cross-country solo, which I flew today.
>>
>> As a reminder: I am currently undergoing training for what is called in
>> Germany a sports pilots license (SPL) for aerodynamically controlled
>> microlights. I had started this training pretty exactly a year ago and
>> my practical exam is coming near (last week of April). What has taken me
>> so long? Lack of time! (Martin has been nagging me the past months to
>> finally get done with it! ;-)
> 
> Congratulations Ralf!
> 
> It sounds like it was a wonderful flight and a very special milestone away
> from the circuit. I can't imagine what it must be like to fly into such a
> large airport in a microlight. Presumably you have to be paranoid about
> wake vortexes?

As I said, it's merely a large airport for a microlight. Friedrichshafen
was estabilished early in the 20th century, originally as a place for
the training of Zeppelin-crews, became an airfield for the German
Airforce in WWII and in the post-WWII-era had been used in parallel for
a small range of civil scheduled flights and by the French Air Force
personell, which was stationed in southwestern Germany in the
post-WWII-occupation phase.

Due to the army past, the airfield already had quite a long runway.
After the French troops had left, the airport was restructured as a
civilian regional airport, which is now used by a few scheduled airline
flights (mostly medium sized turboprops of a local airline and two daily
Ryanair B737 flights).

So yes, in comparison with your local grass strip, Friedrichshafen is a
large airport. However, most of the airline flights happen in a short
timeframe early in the morning and in the evening. Therefore even though
there is a fair amount of airline traffic, you seldomly come across an
airliner landing or taking off directly ahead of you.

However, if that event occurs, it might happen that a just-landed Dash-8
has to wait in front of a taxiway intersection just to let you pass. ;-)

At least I haven't noticed any wake vortex paranoia yet ;-)

It's also an advantage to learn flying on such an airport - even though
most of the training takes place on nearby uncontrolled airfields: No
nervousness when coming to a controlled airfield.

> Good luck with your practical exam.

Thank you.

Cheers,
Ralf

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