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Old February 15th 07, 01:00 AM posted to rec.aviation.student,rec.aviation.ifr
Ray Andraka
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Posts: 267
Default Realistic Instrument Training using MSFS 2004

Mxsmanic wrote:

I have to disagree with you here. If you rely on autopilot all the
time, the day will come when the autopilot goes on strike in the soup.
Good luck keeping the shiny side up, staying ahead of the airplane, and
keeping your situational awareness if you aren't proficient at
hand-flying on instruments. There's no way to maintain that proficiency
without doing it. There are many pilots who've perished when George
went on strike in the soup and the pilot wasn't proficient with
hand-flying in the soup.

I use the auto-pilot to reduce my workload when I am attending to other
tasks, and for that it is a gread load reducer. In a cross country
flight, there is a lot of time spent when you are not particularly busy,
and that is a good time to pull the plug on George and get some good old
hand flying time in.

Mxmanic, do you have an instrument rating? Your posts regarding user
fees make it sound to me like you don't even have a PPL.