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#151
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On Apr 1, 10:09 am, Mxsmanic wrote:
george writes: Since you have never flown the 'real' thing on what do you base that claim.? The real thing has a full suite of avionics. No. I have a DH82 rating. Care to tell me that its not a -real- aeroplane Ultralights and microlights are aircraft and require as much skill to fly as any other aircraft The same can be said of simulators. Funny how that dividing line can be set just about anywhere, isn't it? You are playing a game and pretending to fly. |
#152
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Mxsmanic wrote:
If you risk hitting a fence, you're too low to land safely in the event of an emergency (paragraph (a)), and unless the fence is 500 feet high, you're too low, period (paragraph (c) and/or (b)). Ditto for the power lines. However you look at it, you violated the FARs. Maxwell is correct when he states that he did not violate section 91.119 of the FARs. You're overlooking something important. |
#153
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Maxwell writes: My flight didn't violate any of them moron. Keep guessing and maybe you can figure out why. Maybe I should just ask the FAA how they feel about buzzing fences and power lines, and which FARs it violates. What's your real name? You have no clue. |
#154
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Do you think we should stop doing what we are doing because some people cannot participate in our hobby. No, but you should stop pretending that it's an accessible hobby. It's a rich man's hobby. That's one reason why the average age of private pilots is around 47--it takes them most of their lives to save up the time and money to get a license, unless they are very rich to begin with. Bull****. I know a number of pilots. There are quite a few with a lot of expendable income, but many others who are just scraping by. You really need to purge yourself of this anger and resentment to those who choose to fly and make sacrifices to fly. Buying a new car is also for rich people. I hear they cost $40,000 or more. So how is it that people who make $30k per year can afford them? Maybe instead of bitching and whining about how expensive stuff is, you should get a job and contribute to society - then you might have some money to spend. Not much in this world is free. Stop moaning about the rich folks and their toys. You are incorrect in your assumptions about those who fly or own airplanes. |
#155
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Judah writes: I don't hear anyone saying that about piloting either. To say that would be as extreme as saying that one must be wealthy in order to fly. Neither is accurate. Many people here have said "you can fly if you really want to," the implication being that if you are not willing to make heroic sacrifices to fly, you don't deserve to be a pilot. If you aren't willing to take out a second mortgage to pay for your lessons, you haven't got the Right Stuff. If you aren't willing to undergo half a million dollars' worth of tests to prove that you deserve a medical, you're not worthy to slip the surly bonds of Earth. If you aren't willing to spend every available waking hour studying or taking lessons, you're just not serious about flying. All of this demonstrates a pretty extreme viewpoint to me. I don't see why any hobby should be accessible only to the most extreme fanatics. Why is it unacceptable to be moderately interested in aviation, and yet still have a life outside of flying? You just refuse to understand. My last medical cost me something like $150. Lessons cost only about $120 per hour. One need not make heroic sacrifices. Getting a certificate is not that easy. The flying part is pretty easy in the end, but the real test is in the commitment and patience in following through. This is not because it is a trial by fire or some silly ritual that you believe is inherent in flight training. It is because of the nature of flying lessons and scheduling and instructors. The hard part is not the money - the hard part is sticking with through the frustrations of cancellations due to weather, instructors, plane maintenance and learning plateaus. Not every waking hour needs to be devoted. I went to ground school for 36 hours to get signed off for the written test. Hardly that much time. I think I finished up in about 70 to 80 hours - mostly due to a change in location and time off from flying because my employer moved me across the country. Your silly notion about flying exclusivity is getting in your way of understanding the way us GA pilots think and act. I've never known a pilot to shun someone because of lack of experience or a rating. Most of us welcome newcomers and interested people and take friends, family and strangers on flights. The attitudes towards you have nothing to do with a flying vs non flying delineation - and more to do with your stubbornness to accept that you don;t know everything and that you are misunderstanding quite a few things and that your experience with MS flight sim is not even close to flying a real plane. |
#156
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Judah writes: Actually, there are avenues available that allow even people who have failed a medical to pilot an aircraft. Ultralights, for example. An ultralight is not an aircraft in my book. A simulator is closer to the real thing. Huh? It flies. It has wings and an engine. Closer to the real thing than the real thing? |
#157
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Tim writes:
You just refuse to understand. My last medical cost me something like $150. Lessons cost only about $120 per hour. One need not make heroic sacrifices. Amounts like $150 and $120 can be heroic if you don't earn much money. Getting a certificate is not that easy. The flying part is pretty easy in the end, but the real test is in the commitment and patience in following through. This is not because it is a trial by fire or some silly ritual that you believe is inherent in flight training. It is because of the nature of flying lessons and scheduling and instructors. Actually, it does sound a lot like a hazing ritual. I've never known a pilot to shun someone because of lack of experience or a rating. It's happening right here in this newsgroup. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#158
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Jim Logajan writes:
You're overlooking something important. What am I overlooking? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#159
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Maxwell writes:
Flying has nothing to do with avionics, they are simply tools used by pilots and are never required to achieve flight. Flying has nothing to do with being in the air; it's just a matter of procedures and controls. Your sim doesn't have avionics, it just has a graphic representation of them. What does a G1000 have? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#160
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She's lucky you're not an otolaryngologist.
Why do you care what a 6th-grader says? David wrote: Once again, I'm not a real pilot. Yesterday my daughter was confronted at school by some (6th grade) classmates, they said her father was not a real pilot. |
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