Definition
An unplanned encounter with weather conditions that require flight by reference to instruments, occurring when a pilot operating under visual flight rules unexpectedly loses outside visual reference due to clouds, fog, precipitation, or reduced visibility.
Plain English
When a pilot who was flying by looking outside suddenly can't see well enough to keep doing that, and has to switch to flying by the instruments instead. It wasn't planned — the weather closed in unexpectedly.
Context Anchor
Seen in instrument training, weather decision-making, and emergency planning for pilots who may unexpectedly lose outside visual reference.
Derivation
Inadvertent comes from Latin roots meaning 'not turning the mind to' — in other words, unintended or accidental. That captures the heart of IIMC: the pilot didn't choose to enter the weather; they ended up in it.
Why Pilots Care
Failure to recognize and recover from IIMC often leads to spatial disorientation and loss of aircraft control.
Grounding Statement
A pilot is flying by outside references, then the view ahead disappears in cloud or haze, and the instruments become the only trustworthy way to keep the aircraft level and controlled.
Intuition Check
IIMC does not mean simply “bad weather.” It means the pilot has unexpectedly lost enough outside visual reference that instrument flying is now required.
Example Sentence 1
After encountering IIMC over the ridge, the pilot leveled the wings, climbed to a safe altitude, and called ATC for assistance.
Example Sentence 2
Recovery training teaches pilots to transition immediately to instruments when IIMC is encountered.