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Hands and Feet
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- Posts: 524
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2015 1:34 pm
Just shows you can't peddle a -8
Strangely enough stick and rudder skills and instrument scans are the subject of the week here. Example -- new cat 1 multi IFR learned on a Garmin 1000 and auto pilot -- WFT -- are you fucking kidding me
Strangely enough stick and rudder skills and instrument scans are the subject of the week here. Example -- new cat 1 multi IFR learned on a Garmin 1000 and auto pilot -- WFT -- are you fucking kidding me
Fortunately DH makes a tough airplane that can withstand the abuse that pilots give them.
Soon there will be no pilots as automation takes over.
Soon there will be no pilots as automation takes over.
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Funny, hands and feet and scan are the theme of my week too. Maybe I'll rant on it later.
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- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 10:31 am
A few years back, I had a TC Inspector - this guy was one of the
co-authors of the IPM (you know - God) - lecture me that my kind
of hands-on precision flying that I practised and taught was
old-fashioned and irrelevant.
Pilots are "systems managers" now, he told me.
I know I'm a [b]BAD PERSON[/b] but I can't help but wonder about
his cranial-rectal inversion.
co-authors of the IPM (you know - God) - lecture me that my kind
of hands-on precision flying that I practised and taught was
old-fashioned and irrelevant.
Pilots are "systems managers" now, he told me.
I know I'm a [b]BAD PERSON[/b] but I can't help but wonder about
his cranial-rectal inversion.
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- Posts: 524
- Joined: Sun Aug 23, 2015 1:34 pm
Must of been the same guy who told us you could not fly a GPS approach without a moving map display -- oh really !!!
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- Joined: Fri Jun 03, 2016 1:58 pm
Perspective...
Then there was the wailing, gnashing of teeth, and wearing of sack cloth when it was deemed that there would no longer be any testing of a candidate's skill on aural null procedures or radio range orientations.
Anybody remember the desired width of the null or the definition of "average bisector"?
(Charles: you're disqualified from answering...)
Then there was the wailing, gnashing of teeth, and wearing of sack cloth when it was deemed that there would no longer be any testing of a candidate's skill on aural null procedures or radio range orientations.
Anybody remember the desired width of the null or the definition of "average bisector"?
(Charles: you're disqualified from answering...)
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- Posts: 3450
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 10:31 am
I've met many guys like that before.
See, he figures if [b]he[/b] can't fly an approach without a moving
map (and since he privately considers himself the hottest pilot
that ever strapped on a checklist) [b]no other pilot can[/b], safely.
If any pilot attempts anything [b]he[/b] can't do, that pilot is by
definition [b]unsafe[/b].
We have discussed this before. Every pilot considers himself above
average, which is a statistical impossibility.
See, he figures if [b]he[/b] can't fly an approach without a moving
map (and since he privately considers himself the hottest pilot
that ever strapped on a checklist) [b]no other pilot can[/b], safely.
If any pilot attempts anything [b]he[/b] can't do, that pilot is by
definition [b]unsafe[/b].
We have discussed this before. Every pilot considers himself above
average, which is a statistical impossibility.
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