View Single Post
  #151  
Old June 30th 05, 02:08 PM
Bert Willing
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Your point doesn't hold. If during the winch launch failure exercise the
instructor has to take the controls and/or overrule the student's input, the
student won't go solo and he will have this game played over and over again.

If an instructor doesn't feel comfortable to train winch failure on a proper
winch launch at *any* height, he shouldn't be instructing winch launches.

--
Bert Willing

ASW20 "TW"


"Ian Johnston" a écrit dans le message de news:
dzZo7CxomoOm-pn2-Pk4JoJw3pd71@localhost...
On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 12:41:44 UTC, Stefan
wrote:

Ian Johnston wrote:

the student/ to recover safely..." There are some places and heights
where the decision about where to go after the Big Bang hs to be made
very quickly, and right first time. And if the student gets it wrong


Then the instructor gives him exactly two tenths of a second to do the
right thing. Otherwise the instructor takes over and the student can try
again at the next launch.


And that is my point: a practice winch launch failure isn't like a
real one, because ultimately you know that you won't be allowed to do
anything really stupid.

Ian