Yeah, that's an experience. When I went to Guernsey a few weeks ago, I had planned to cross the English Channel at 3000ft, due to the base of the Class A airway being FL35. I preferably would have wanted to get up to FL80 or higher but with the multiple danger areas active over the channel, it would have been a mission.I knew before departure that the aircraft I was taking had some starting problems, usually put down to some sort of ignition issue, but I got to Guernsey no problem.
I landed safely, went into the terminal, had my coffee, bought some crap then returned to the aircraft. It wouldn't start. Eventually I figured I had one last start attempt before the battery drained so I called the CFI for some advice. I got it started but it ran a bit weird for a few minutes before picking up. I was planning on crossing 50 miles of water with an engine that appeared to have a mind of it's own.
I did the crossing anyway, not before putting the life raft in the front seat, I engaged the AP and spent all of my time keeping an eye out for ships on the shipping lanes, thinking "If my engine failed now, I could land abeam that ship and hopefully they'd pull me aboard".
I was landing on 05 at Lee-On-Solent, the threshold is right on the coast so the entire approach is over the Solent. It was officially night by now and of course, every man and his dog was returning from day trips. I had to do a few orbits over the IOW before making an approach. I was at 2000ft with a stonking headwind. Solent Radar had given me traffic info on multiple aircraft so my head was spinning all over the place trying to clock the nav lights or the strobes. I came in high, you know, just in case the engine packed in. It did splutter a few times during the approach but I think that was just a bit of carb ice clearing.
Anyhoo, when I made the landing, far from a greaser, I was so god damn relieved. I would do it a million times over but I must admit I was constantly thinking "what if?" the entire time!
It wasn't fun at the time but looking back.... it builds character!
There are quite a few pilots on OcUK now. Maybe we should organise an OcUK fly in?