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The Night-VFR Checklist: Part II

When the only thing keeping you above an unwelcome encounter with unseen terrain below is a single powerplant, you’d better know what you’re doing. As our important follow-up to Part I, here are some additional rules to live by for single-engine night flight.

Systems Failure. Other systems failures, especially those involving the electrical system, can affect your flight instruments, engine gauges, landing gear and flaps.

Weather. You won’t be able to see most adverse weather at night before you fly into it.

WARNING: Don’t even contemplate flying visually in MVFR at night. MVFR can and often does quickly deteriorate to IMC at night. You won’t be able to detect the lowered conditions visually until you’ve encountered them.

Routes. ‘Direct‘ might not always be the best choice at night.

Communication. What your eyes can’t see, your ears may hear.

Flight Kit. Much has been written about night-flying equipment, but never do without the basics:

Preflight Inspection. Develop your own ‘night preflight checklist.’ Include checks of:

It sounds like a lot of work, but you have two options. Fly safe, or take unnecessary risks. In a nutshell: equip yourself, equip the airplane, know your systems, watch your fuel, respect the weather, plan your trip and fly your plan. Do so and you’ve removed most of the added risk of flying VFR at night — then, enjoy yourself!

BOTTOM LINE: All flying — all life — involves risk, and we need to accept some risk … but more so, we need to avoid unnecessary risk-taking. Carefully considered and conducted, visual night flight in single engine airplanes can be an acceptable, and an enjoyable, pursuit.

 

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