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From VMC to IMC: A CFI’s Perspective

This structured lesson will instill IFR departure confidence.

A lesson the author uses with his instrument learners consistently results in the 'light bulb moment' and is worth sharing with anyone considering getting an instrument rating. [Credit: Adobe Stock]
A lesson the author uses with his instrument learners consistently results in the 'light bulb moment' and is worth sharing with anyone considering getting an instrument rating. [Credit: Adobe Stock]
Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The article addresses the critical challenge of pilot saturation and disorientation during the VMC-to-IMC transition shortly after takeoff, which can lead to dangerous flight deviations.
  • It proposes a structured flight lesson where instructors recreate this scenario, simulating sudden IMC entry and introducing subtle aircraft deviations, forcing pilots to rely solely on instruments.
  • The lesson emphasizes disciplined instrument scanning, accurate pitch-plus-power management, and verbalizing actions to overcome spatial disorientation and build trust in the instruments over physical sensations.
  • Effective debriefing, utilizing flight data, and tailoring the lesson's complexity are crucial for reinforcing learning and helping pilots master challenging IFR departures.
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If you fly IFR out of busy airspace that has a departure procedure, you know the drill. “After departure, turn left heading one-eight-zero, expect radar vectors…” or something similar. You rotate, clean up, twist, talk—and just as the frequency change lands you on a wall of Class B chatter, the windscreen goes gray. The airplane twitches in light chop, your outside world disappears, and the turn you started in VMC is now fully IFR.

That first minute after takeoff is where capable instrument pilots sometimes get saturated. The tasks that are simple in isolation are suddenly more difficult. The climb, turn to the assigned heading, gear up, flaps up, and check in. Stack them together with a sudden loss of visual references and a busy frequency, and errors compound—pitch variations, wandering headings, and airspeed that sags toward the stall.

Ian Amit

Ian Amit is a CFI/CFII (commercial and tailwheel) specializing in Mooneys and instructing in the New York area.

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