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#19
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Ian wrote:
I find the radio useful for expanding awareness of those things which are not readily visible. It also has a tendancy to concentrate attention on the gliders you can here. Accidents have happened - to powered aircraft as well - when pilots assumed that what they could hear was what they could see, I very nearly included a reference to that in a recent response to you. I'm glad you mentioned the fallacy of believing that those you hear are those you see, or that there is no one whom you do not hear. Yours is not an argument for discontinuing radio monitoring, however. Your position seems to be that removing as many inputs as possible will insure a focus on flying the final approach safely. Again, I believe that expanding your awareness and prioritizing your responses in real time is far safer than pre-determining what you wish to know and what you can afford at any cost to ignore. Admittedly, as I get older I also wish to reduce the cacophony of stimuli, but I also believe there is a limit beyond which we must not cocoon ourselves. Better to keep pushing our limits outward, even as we might wish to do otherwise. Fortunately, or otherwise, I have some small experience in very complex piloting situations, including urgent life-or-death dialogs on three different radios--each on a different frequency band--in a rather challenging combat environment. I don't expect others to have a similar need ever to operate near their true limits. But it does color my views of the topic of awareness, processing, and prioritizing cockpit information. Enjoy the new season, and always be safe. Jack |
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