Aviation Consulting and Flight Instructing
Commercial Multi-Engine Land Checkride

Commercial Multi-Engine Land Checkride

Passed my FAA Commercial Airplane Multi-Engine Land (AMEL) Checkride today with Marc Nathanson at East Coast Aero Club. I flew Piper Seminole N852ND out of KBED.

Ted looking happy after passing his checkride

Activities

We did the following activities based on the ACS:

FlightAware Flight Track
  • Aborted takeoff – Marc wanted to see me tell the tower afterwards, including the runway number
  • Short field take off, 25 deg flaps, simulated engine failure above 500 ft. Almost let the heading get out of tolerance.
  • Clearing turns (VERY important for Marc), steep turns (looking out the window), slow flight
  • Power off stall in turn, power on stall, accelerated stall (slowing to 90 kts first)
  • Vmc demo
  • Engine failure while I was turning, using mixture. Restart procedure he did under my supervision. Marc wants to introduce people to a 2-person crew flight deck.
  • Emergency descent (technically this isn’t required by ACS for adding AMEL to ASEL)
  • Autopilot procedures including descent
  • Single engine ILS 29 KBED, full stop
  • Go around, normal touch and go (he helped with the reconfigure), short field landing over simulated 50′ obstacle. All landings at KBED

Feedback

Marc had the following post-flight feedback for me:

  • Establish a rally point during your briefing that is away from the aircraft, taxiways, and other aircraft. Recommended the light post on the KBED West Ramp
  • Follow the checklist! He did not like that my instructor recommended waiting to turn on the alternators after engine start in order to ensure they could pick up the load.
  • Don’t use runway numbers on taxi call to ground. Could lead to an expectation bias. (Not sure if I agree with this if more than one runway is in operation and you want to tell ground which one you want to go to).
  • Do the break check at idle speed.
  • Review entered flight plan in Garmin 430 after loading an approach to ensure waypoints are correct
  • Know the single engine rate of climb speed for every take off. He did not like my approach to figuring a conservative value based on 2000ft, 30F and just remembering that.
  • Keep taxi speed < 15 kts
  • Recommended not holding gear handles during extension/retraction. Instead hold throttles.