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I tried an experiment at work today along the lines of this discussion. We
used our ASA sim configured with a Baron as the aircraft. This sim is approved by the FAA for flight and proficiency training - we're not talking MSFS here, this sim is meant for IFR proficiency training. I had two employees with zero flying experience (neither sim nor actual) attempt the ILS-6 at KBDL with the weather at minimums (200 and 1/2). Both of them were successful on their very first attempt when using the flight director for guidance and although there were some huge excursions along the way, both got the aircraft to the runway threshold - both failed very early in the approach when they attempted to do it without the help of the flight director. Do I think either of them could do it for real just because they did it in the office on the sim - nope, not a chance. What does this tell me? - just because you can do it in the sim doesn't mean you can do it when it counts. The sim has its place for sure, but it will never replace actual experience. I did my first skydive quite awhile ago before tandems were popular. I remember we went over everything on the ground at the airplane before going up. The jump master explained everything and we went through it step-by-step; now the door opens, now you shift yourself partially out the door, now you hang from the strut, etc. We did that several times so everyone felt comfortable. We all knew we were ready - it seemed pretty simple really. Then we took off and climbed to altitude. Let me tell you, when that door flies open and the wind is rushing by and you have to shift yourself out the door with your foot being blown back and the ground down there 3500 feet below, it was all quite a shock and a rush compared to that "simulation" we did on the ground. BDS |
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