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Top Five IFR Mistakes

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • General Aviation (GA) IFR pilots frequently struggle with effectively briefing complex published procedures and managing increasingly sophisticated avionics systems, leading to potential errors.
  • Critical mistakes in IFR flight include poor communication with Air Traffic Control (ATC), such as not listening to calls, and making altitude busts due to inattention or inadequate recording of clearances.
  • A significant safety concern highlighted is the dangerous, illegal practice of "ducking under" minimum descent altitudes, emphasizing the necessity of strict adherence to regulations and proper go-around procedures when the runway environment is not in sight.
See a mistake? Contact us.

Whether we want to admit it or not, human flight by reference to instruments alone is an unnatural act. To determine up from down or left from right without a natural horizon, we need hours of training, and even more hours of regular practice. We also need a decently equipped airplane, stuffed with radios, colorful moving maps, some gyroscopes or their electronic equivalent, and more than a few charts, telling us where to go and how to get there.

Yes, flying IFR is complicated when we’re single-pilot in busy airspace, but it’s complicated even when we’re the only airplane on the frequency. So it’s no wonder pilots make mistakes when flying in the IFR system. The goal we all should be trying to achieve is to fly a perfect flight—always ahead of the airplane, never missing an ATC call, and ensuring the airplane is where it’s supposed to be at all times. With that in mind, let’s explore some areas where GA pilots typically need help—myself included.

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