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#41
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On May 17, 8:19*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
How do you train for things that are inherently very dangerous? By flying and training with instructors who actually fly.. |
#42
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On May 16, 3:19*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
If a pilot needs fear of death to fly correctly and safely, he has a serious psychological problem. And if the risk of death is part of the appeal of flying for him, he also has a serious problem. Both of these are highly correlated with poor piloting. WRONG. |
#43
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george writes:
By flying and training with instructors who actually fly.. If the instructor or student makes a mistake, then what? In a real aircraft, training for emergency situations may be more hazardous than not training for them, particularly if the emergency is rare in normal operation or is difficult to recover from. In simulators, the cost of training for recovery from a specific emergency must be balanced against the cost of training to avoid it, or training for some other situation. Another consideration for simulation is whether or not the simulator correctly simulates unusual situations--the most accurate simulators are driven by databases built from actual test flights, and if there is no data for a specific flight regime, the simulation cannot be relied upon. At the same time, however, the regime in question might be so dangerous in real life that using a real aircraft is out of the question. Do airline pilots train for spin recovery in their airliners? |
#44
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#45
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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: Only for a subset of things that do not require actual flight to teach, such as how to do real flight planning. Hardly anything requires actual flight to teach. If that nonsense were true the US Air Force wouldn't have a fleet of primary trainers. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#46
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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: MSFS does not taxit like any real airplane. That depends on the aircraft. Nope. A MSFS C-172 does not taxi like a real C-172, nor do any of the other MSFS airplanes I've tryed. Exactly which aircraft have you tried? Irrelevant; that the C-172 doesn't is sufficient to prove the point. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#47
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Mxsmanic wrote:
birdog writes: Pilots die as a result of major lapses in judgement. I'm not saying that's part of the appeal, but it tends to sharpen attention, and increase the heart rate. If a pilot needs fear of death to fly correctly and safely, he has a serious psychological problem. And if the risk of death is part of the appeal of flying for him, he also has a serious problem. Both of these are highly correlated with poor piloting. What part of "tends to sharpen attention, and increase the heart rate" do you not understand? Don't tell me these things never happen to a seasoned pilot. With proper training, these things become incidents, not disasters. And panic creates disasters. How do you train for things that are inherently very dangerous? Very carefully, obviously. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#48
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#49
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#50
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