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37000 Feet | Browse and search NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System |
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| Attributes | |
| ACN | 1583807 |
| Time | |
| Date | 201810 |
| Local Time Of Day | 1801-2400 |
| Place | |
| Locale Reference | ZZZ.TRACON |
| State Reference | US |
| Environment | |
| Flight Conditions | Mixed |
| Light | Night |
| Aircraft 1 | |
| Make Model Name | Skyhawk 172/Cutlass 172 |
| Operating Under FAR Part | Part 91 |
| Flight Phase | Cruise |
| Route In Use | Direct |
| Flight Plan | VFR |
| Person 1 | |
| Function | Approach Pilot Flying Single Pilot |
| Qualification | Flight Crew Private |
| Experience | Flight Crew Last 90 Days 45 Flight Crew Total 175 Flight Crew Type 90 |
| Events | |
| Anomaly | Deviation - Procedural FAR Inflight Event / Encounter VFR In IMC Inflight Event / Encounter Weather / Turbulence |
Narrative:
I was flying from ZZZ to ZZZ1. When I was in the TRACON area; I flew through a cloud at 4;500 feet. I kept my wings level and flew my course line keeping an eye on my GPS and six pack. I ended up going through another cloud at 4;000 feet and another at 3;500 feet. After informing TRACON every time I went through a cloud; TRACON asked if I would like to pick up an IFR flight plan. Not being instrumented rated; I informed him I was not personally instrument rated; but he kept offering for me to pick up a plan. I had only experienced clouds during the day during training. Experiencing night clouds were totally different and very freaky because of my lights in the cloud - without the lights though; it was only black (making the situation even scarier). I asked after going through a third cloud to divert to ZZZ2. The controller started reading off vectors and mentioned a cloud of precipitation off the west side of ZZZ2. Turns out I was going through clouds that had randomly popped up with the rain. These clouds were not reported on the ATIS/AWOS. Also; I was pointed towards a dark empty part of the terrain making it almost impossible to tell I was in a cloud until I was in one. I decided to continue on at 3;000 feet because in order to divert I would have to fly through more clouds (the pop up rain) to get to ZZZ2. I continued on and the flight was otherwise uneventful. It was super nerve wracking going through clouds at night. I had never experienced it before. I think it is important private pilots experience IFR conditions at night to remain calm like I had in these situations. I did everything to keep the plane level and descend down; but it was still scary since it was all new to me.
Original NASA ASRS Text
Title: VFR Cessna private pilot reported encountering IMC conditions and requesting assistance from ATC.
Narrative: I was flying from ZZZ to ZZZ1. When I was in the TRACON area; I flew through a cloud at 4;500 feet. I kept my wings level and flew my course line keeping an eye on my GPS and six pack. I ended up going through another cloud at 4;000 feet and another at 3;500 feet. After informing TRACON every time I went through a cloud; TRACON asked if I would like to pick up an IFR flight plan. Not being instrumented rated; I informed him I was not personally Instrument Rated; but he kept offering for me to pick up a plan. I had only experienced clouds during the day during training. Experiencing night clouds were totally different and very freaky because of my lights in the cloud - without the lights though; it was only black (making the situation even scarier). I asked after going through a third cloud to divert to ZZZ2. The controller started reading off vectors and mentioned a cloud of precipitation off the west side of ZZZ2. Turns out I was going through clouds that had randomly popped up with the rain. These clouds were not reported on the ATIS/AWOS. Also; I was pointed towards a dark empty part of the terrain making it almost impossible to tell I was in a cloud until I was in one. I decided to continue on at 3;000 feet because in order to divert I would have to fly through more clouds (the pop up rain) to get to ZZZ2. I continued on and the flight was otherwise uneventful. It was super nerve wracking going through clouds at night. I had never experienced it before. I think it is important Private Pilots experience IFR conditions at night to remain calm like I had in these situations. I did everything to keep the plane level and descend down; but it was still scary since it was all new to me.
Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.