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Mxsmanic wrote:
John Gaquin writes: Surprisingly, I don't think the record bears that out, or at least not nearly so much as you might think. As I posted earlier, it is the decision making that tends to bite people concerning a failure in a twin. In a single, the biggest, most crucial decision is made for you as soon as the engine fails. But with a single, your only option is to find a place to land, quickly. If you have two engines with one running, you should have an indefinite period of flight left during which you can look for a more suitable landing spot (the assumption still being that you will land ASAP once the engine has failed). You have less time to impact if you don't identify the failed engine, secure it, get to the right airspeed, etc... Stop trying to extrapolate what you can "get away in in Microsnot Flight Stimulator" to real aircraft. Until you get your fat ass out from behind the computer and try to fly any aircraft, you have no authority to speak with any authority. |
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