Cessna 152 Night Operations — PPL Oral Exam Questions
Night vision, lighting, fuel reserves, illusions, and emergencies after dark — DPE-style questions. Below are real DPE-style questions for the Cessna 152. Every answer cites a primary FAA source — no fabricated regulations, no shortcuts.
13 questionsPHAK Chapter 1714 CFR Part 9114 CFR Part 61
Aircraft profile
Cessna 152
Engine
Lycoming O-235-L2C, 110 HP, carbureted
Fuel system
Fuel selector LEFT/RIGHT/BOTH/OFF. Note: some 152s have less straightforward tank crossfeed behavior than 172.
Avionics
Steam gauges
VS0 / VS1
35 KIAS / 43 KIAS kt
VA
varies by weight kt
Max gross
1670 lbs lbs
DPE oral questions · night operations
13 questions a DPE may ask in this section
Question 1 · PA.XI
You want to take a friend up for a night flight tonight. How do you determine if you are current?
What a DPE expects to hear
3 takeoffs and 3 landings TO A FULL STOP within preceding 90 days
Period beginning one hour after sunset and ending one hour before sunrise
Same category, class, and type
Source14 CFR 61.57(b)
Question 2 · PA.XI
Sun sets at 6:00 PM. You take off at 6:20 PM. Can you log this as night flight time, and does it count toward passenger currency?
What a DPE expects to hear
Log night = end of evening civil twilight to beginning of morning civil twilight
Passenger currency = must occur at least ONE HOUR after sunset
6:20 PM is NOT currency — only 20 min after sunset
Source14 CFR 61.57(b); 14 CFR 1.1 (definition of night)
Question 3 · PA.XI
What equipment is required for night VFR that isn't required during the day?
What a DPE expects to hear
FLAPS — Fuses (spare set), Landing light (only if operated for hire), Anti-collision lights, Position lights (nav lights), Source of electrical power
Source14 CFR 91.205(c)
Question 4 · PA.XI
Approaching a non-towered airport at night. How do you turn on the runway lights and adjust intensity?
What a DPE expects to hear
Key mic on CTAF frequency
7 clicks in 5 seconds = high intensity, 5 clicks = medium, 3 clicks = low
SourceAIM 2-1-9
Question 5 · PA.XI
How do your eyes adapt to the dark, and what should you avoid to maintain effective night vision?
What a DPE expects to hear
Rods responsible for night vision — take about 30 minutes to fully adapt
Avoid bright white light (use red light for charts)
Smoking and dehydration degrade night vision
SourcePHAK Chapter 17; ACS Task I.H
Question 6 · PA.XI
Explain the proper way to scan for traffic at night. Is it the same as during the day?
What a DPE expects to hear
NO — use peripheral vision due to night blind spot in center of vision
Scan in segments, look 5-10 degrees off-center to allow rods to detect objects
SourcePHAK Chapter 17; ACS Task I.H
Question 7 · PA.XI
You've been staring at a single light on the horizon and it suddenly looks like it's moving. What is this called and how do you fix it?
What a DPE expects to hear
Autokinesis — occurs when you fixate on a single light source in the dark
Fix: shift your gaze and use proper scanning technique rather than staring at the light
SourcePHAK Chapter 17
Question 8 · PA.XI
You are approaching a runway over a large body of water or unlit forest. What illusion might you face?
What a DPE expects to hear
Black hole effect (featureless terrain illusion)
Makes you feel you are HIGHER than you actually are — leads to dangerously LOW approach
SourcePHAK Chapter 17; RMH Chapter 6
Question 9 · PA.XI
Flying through light haze at night and I'm starting to feel dizzy. Why might I ask you to turn off the strobe lights?
What a DPE expects to hear
High-intensity lights reflecting off clouds/haze/propeller can cause flicker vertigo or spatial disorientation
Turning them off reduces the light reflection
It IS legal to turn off anti-collision lights if pilot determines safety hazard — 14 CFR 91.209(b)
SourceAIM 2-1-10
Question 10 · PA.XI
What are the weather minimums for VFR tonight at 2,500 feet MSL in Class G airspace?
What a DPE expects to hear
3 SM visibility, 500 below / 1,000 above / 2,000 horizontal from clouds
This applies to Class G above 1,200 AGL — below 1,200 AGL at night the same minimums apply
Source14 CFR 91.155
Question 11 · PA.XI
How did you choose your checkpoints for tonight's cross-country and how do they differ from daytime?
What a DPE expects to hear
Night checkpoints should be well-lit and easily identifiable — cities, large airports with rotating beacons, prominent highway intersections
NOT small ponds or terrain features
SourcePHAK Chapter 16; ACS Task VI.A
Question 12 · PA.XI
We've planned a trip 150 miles away. How much fuel must you have on board at the moment of landing per FARs?
What a DPE expects to hear
Night VFR — enough fuel to reach destination PLUS fly for at least 45 minutes at normal cruising speed
Source14 CFR 91.151(a)(2)
Question 13 · PA.XI
Alternator fails and battery is only power source, 20 miles from destination. What is your plan?