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On Tue, 07 Dec 2004 18:31:31 GMT, zatatime wrote:
On 7 Dec 2004 09:55:51 -0800, "Michael" wrote: I know at least one who loves to fly, but realizes he doesn't have what it takes to be a pilot (IMO correctly). What is tihs Top Gun? I've known someone blind in one eye who was a good pilot, and various people who are scared of their own shadow who are good pilots. After this many years I can truly say I've met a lot of people who would never, or could never become pilots. I've seen pilots lose their judgmental capability, but they thought they were doing fine. One guy ran out of gas three times and had off airport landings in just a couple of months. Totaled the airplane on the third one. I've seen students who just could not multitask enough to safely fly an airplane *except* when every thing went right. Throw in an emergency and they'd either panic or just give up. I saw one student get too low on final, give it too much gas, over corrected for that and turned the 150 into a lawn dart. Put shoulders in the wings at the struts. Now that's not much of an indicator by itself. Every one makes mistakes. He went on to get his PPL and did well. However, one day less than a year later, he did pretty much the same thing with a 172. He quite flying. I also know brash people who aren't affraid of anything and may be an accident waiting to happen, but they know how to control an airplane. And people like that should not be let near an airplane. There are even parapalegics who are pilot's! Certainly and the few I do know have great judgmental ability. Knowing how to control an airplane does not make a pilot. Being able to handle the airplane and yourself in adverse conditions, while making decisions under pressure does. Given so many different ways to excercise your priviledges, I just don't understand what it means to "not have what it takes to be a pilot." If you stick around long enough you will. :-)) He may not fly from California to Maine, but I'm sure given enough time he could learn to aviate effectively and perform emergency procedures profficiently as a local pilot. Learning the procedures is the easy part. When the *proper* responses become automatic you are well on the way. Now more than ever with a Sport license, maybe this is his ticket to get in the air. I think the Sport Pilot is a good idea, but there is a reason they limit the seating capacity to two and the airspeed as well as weight. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com z |
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