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#261
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... B A R R Y writes: How about VOR ID's, RCO's, distant TWEBs and FSS stations? For automated signals (not voice), distance is important. For voice, I'm not sure that distance matters that much, since if they are far enough away to be hard to hear, they are probably not an immediate hazard, and controllers have facilities that provide adequate coverage for the area that they control. I believe the Clue stores are open this weekend. You would benefit from a visit and a purchase. Do you fly? As a pilot, only in simulation. As a passenger, only when absolutely necessary. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#262
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Mxsmanic,
I take it they don't have radios? You take wrongly. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#263
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Mxsmanic,
As a passenger, only when absolutely necessary. Why? It's one of the safest modes of transportation. Do you drive? -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#264
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Thomas Borchert schrieb:
As a passenger, only when absolutely necessary. Why? It's one of the safest modes of transportation. Are you kidding? With all those garbled communications over AM? Stefan |
#265
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Let me think. If my radio died and all I had was a handheld I would
really want to be heard... even with this tiny antenna. Then use AM on your handheld. That would be pointless if FM was a standard, wouldn't it ? I was wondering about gliders not long ago. I take it they don't have radios? I flew in two clubs. In one radios were the norm and downwind calls were expected. In the other one, most (if not all) training gliders had no radios at all. Bartek |
#266
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Mxsmanic schrieb:
I was wondering about gliders not long ago. I take it they don't have radios? Wouldn't it be safer to have a radio powered by a battery or something, just in case? Radios can be made very light so weight would not be an issue. Not only would it be safer, but much more convenient, too. That's why pretty much all gliders actually *do* have radios. Along with GPS navigation, speed optimizing and glide range computers and a couple more of such gadgets. You should *really* get some basic knowledge before commenting. Stefan |
#267
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#268
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B A R R Y writes:
Sorry, but you have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. The ability to pull in a signal is important enough that radios incorporate a squelch defeat feature to open the squelch all the way. That is common for all sorts of radios. If you ever decide to learn to fly an actual airplane, which is much more fun than any simulation, you'd see what I mean. I prefer simulation, for a number of reasons. Real flying is fantastic, exponentially better than simulations (real is better than virtual in everything I've ever done), so I genuinely hope that you will! The parts of flying that I like can be mostly simulated with 100% accuracy, at much lower cost and much higher convenience than a real aircraft. For example, I like to fly IFR, and I scarcely need a real aircraft for that; even a full-motion simulator isn't required, although it would be nice. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#269
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Thomas Borchert writes:
Why? It's one of the safest modes of transportation. It's also the most frustrating. Hours to get to the airport, hours to get past the paranoia of incompetent security staff, another hour to get aboard, another hour waiting to leave the gate, a short period in the air with tons of traffic all around, above, and below you, and then another couple of hours at the other end. All of this is avoided in simulation. You start the engines and go. When you are done, you stop. Do you drive? Not if I can avoid it. I exhausted the novelty of driving years ago, and most real-world driving today involves frustrations of its own. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#270
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Stefan writes:
Are you kidding? With all those garbled communications over AM? That's only the tip of the iceberg. The skies are mighty crowded today, and that's my biggest source of worry. The practical logistics of travelling on commercial flights as a passenger make it a very unpleasant ordeal nowadays. Flying as a pilot is not very practical, as it costs thousands of dollars to get a license and thousands of dollars to fly, and that's only if you are satisfied with little tin-can private aircraft. If you want to fly multiengine jets, you need to pony up seven figures as a bare minimum. If you want to fly military aircraft, you're out of luck unless you started at age 20 and spent years in the service, and even then it's hard to get into that position. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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