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On May 16, 8:47*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
a writes: When my most important customer is having some difficulties, I do NOT simulate a flight to Rochester NY. I file an IFR flight plan, and go there. That is, at least to my pragmatic way of thinking, a significant difference. If you regard flight as only transportation, then I agree. But if all you want is transportation, simulation is irrelevant. In fact, you can drive a car and avoid aviation entirely. My guess is a significant number of us use are ability to fly to enhance our quality of life by going to interesting places, others do that by enjoying the aesthetics of soaring. I don't think that someone who simply wants to get somewhere would decide to become a pilot and fly there himself. That's an incredibly awkward, expensive way to travel. People who become pilots usually have some intrinsic interest in flying. On rare occasions, a person might become a pilot because he has some extremely specific need for transportation that only an airplane can provide (as when he must travel to rural areas of Alaska, for example). For me, travel is a downside to real-world aviation. I hate travel. I don't want to go anywhere. In fact, having to actually go somewhere is an excellent reason to avoid flying for real in my book. A huge advantage of simulation for me is that I can fly without the need to step outside my room. Perhaps to some the pleasures are equivalent. To some of us, they are not. For some of us, there's not an important overlap in learning opportunity, *To be lectured by one who has experienced only one side as to its relevance is, well, you can fill in whatever word or phrase you choose. I note that people who are hostile towards me here always resent being told anything by anyone else. They are very conscious of a semi-imaginary hierarchy, like a treehouse club. They lord it over people whom they consider inferior, and they grovel before people whom they consider superior (if any). And they worry a lot about what other people think of them in general. MX wrote I note that people who are hostile towards me here always resent being told anything by anyone else. They are very conscious of a semi-imaginary hierarchy, like a treehouse club. They lord it over people whom they consider inferior, and they grovel before people whom they consider superior (if any). And they worry a lot about what other people think of them in general. Rather defensive, aren't you? I take pleasure in flying, and in driving. You, having no PIC (actual) have little real world aviation experience to draw on. "I read" or "I simulated" does not carry much credibility, and to those ignorant but eager to learn of the realities of general aviation would be prudent to consider the source of advice and/or teachings. Your pontifications are sometimes right, other times wrong. The reactions those statements draw help the inexperienced reader evaluate them. I've gotten useful ideas from this newsgroup, but not from you. Some suggestions I've posted have become part of other aviator's checklists, and that's a nice form of payback. I suspect it's a reward you don't often get, but I could be wrong. |
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