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#61
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Marty Shapiro writes:
There was one study which gave the non-instrument rated pilot 180 seconds to live if they didn't get back to VMC conditions. Why won't all his "sensations" help him? The Vertical Motion Simulator (VMS) moves in 6 axis. In addition to the 3 rotational axis (roll, pitch, yaw) it also moves 40 feet forward/back, 8 feet left/right, and 60 feet vertically. It also has precise OTW (Out The Window) displays and has been used to simulate everything from blimps to helicopters to jet fighters to space shuttles. Yes. But a real aircraft moves the length of a football field forward every second, and it can drop 100 feet per second. So all full-motion simulators depend a lot on the weaknesses of human perception. No. The sensation of acceleration is very reliable. Without the necessary visual cues, the body can easily misinterpret the sensed acceleration. These two statements conflict with each other. If the body did not sense acceleration, there would be no conflict between what you are seeing on the instrument panel and what the body is feeling. If the body sensed accelerations correctly, there would be no conflict, either. Repeat this same experiment, but this time open your eyes before your friend stops the chair. This time you will not think you are now turning in the opposite direction. Even though the fluid in your inner ear is still moving in the original direction, the visual cues provided by your eyes combined with the differential in speed with the fluid in your inner ear causes the correct interpetation that this is a negative acceleration, ie you're slowing down or stopped. Simulators use the same methods to convince pilots that they are really moving. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#62
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There was one study which gave the
non-instrument rated pilot 180 seconds to live if they didn't get back to VMC conditions. IIRC that study used pilots who had not been trained at all under the hood - not even the three hours presently required. It may have even led to the present requirement. It showed that just a little bit of training was able to reverse the outcomes of a significant number of such simulated flights. Jose -- "Never trust anything that can think for itself, if you can't see where it keeps its brain." (chapter 10 of book 3 - Harry Potter). for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#63
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Peter Duniho writes:
If that happens, you trust what you see out the window. I don't. Statistically speaking, it's likely that about half of the people participating in this newsgroup do not have instrument ratings. I believe it. However, it's also likely that about half of the people DO have instrument ratings. Your "impression" (such as it is, based on your own highly flawed "understanding" of aviation and piloting) is unlikely to be anywhere close to correct. You just speculated that half the people here are not instrument rated, therefore I'm pretty close to correct. And what "mindset" is that? The mindset that is willing to believe optical illusions and misleading sensations over instruments. Why bother with instruments at all, if one is magically endowed with the ability to perceive reality perfectly with eyes and semicircular canals? I am instrument rated. You seem to think that my mindset is inappropriate for instrument flight. Yes, but as long as I'm not your passenger, and not anywhere near you in the sky (or beneath you on the ground), it's not my problem. I'm not sure what that's supposed to mean. If they have no clue about the use of their instruments, then they are going to be helpless if the weather deteriorates. If they are convinced that instruments are less reliable than their perceptions, then they'll be in even deeper trouble. A pilot not trained for instrument flight is unlikely to do well is instrument conditions, just as you are unlikely to do well flying an actual airplane. So what? Well, apparently the non-IFR pilots don't hesitate to talk about IFR, but they don't like it when non-pilots talk about piloting. Hmm. Some minimal training is required, yes. But so what? The training is intended for when the pilot encounters INSTRUMENT conditions. When in VISUAL conditions, there is no need to use any instruments in the airplane at all. You see it as a need; I see it as a convenience. No, they are not. In visual conditions, the likelihood of the external view becoming compromised in a way that affects the safety of the flight is practically nil. And what is the probability that the instruments will fail? Yes, they are. There's no magic switch in a full-motion simulator that disables your sensation of acceleration. Simulators trick your sensations, and your imagination fills in the rest. I'm starting to think that not only have you never sat at the controls of an actual aircraft, you have not even ever set foot inside a real full-motion simulator. You have absolutely no understanding of how full-motion simulators work. I do indeed know how they work, and the tricks they play to make pilots think they are actually moving. As I have already pointed out, full-motion simulators take advantage of the acceleration of gravity, combined with misleading visual information, to fool the body into thinking they are under a state of constant acceleration. It's much more complicated than that. If visual cues were sufficient, you'd get the same sensation of acceleration at your PC. Sometimes you do, especially with multiple screens. That's why many people get motion sickness playing Doom. They aren't moving, but the effect of the visual input they see is strong enough to convince their brains that they are. The visual cues are only part of the picture in the full-motion simulator. They work in conjunction with real acceleration (momentary movement of the simulator, combined with a change in attitude resulting in redirection of the perceived acceleration of gravity) to produce that impression of continuous acceleration, and it works only because of the body's accurate and sensitive sensation of acceleration. If the body were so accurate, it would notice the simulator returning to a neutral position, and it would notice the rotation of the simulator when the net acceleration vector shifts. But that doesn't happen. No, it's not. If you'd ever seen a full-motion simulator in operation, you'd never even think of saying such a silly thing. I have seen them in operation. Heck, you don't have to be a pilot to ride in one ... just take a ride like Star Tours at Disneyland, which uses full-motion simulators. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#64
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Stefan writes:
The point is to realize when you can trust what you see outside an when you cannot. This is not only a VMC vs IMC question. If instruments and the view out the window disagree, in all probability the instruments are right, and you're misinterpreting what you see out the window. You can even fall prey to that in simulations. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#65
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On 09/23/06 01:17, Mxsmanic wrote:
Mark Hansen writes: So if you look out the window and see that your diving into the ground, but the instruments show that you're flying straight and level, you would just fly into the ground? Sometimes what looks like the ground isn't. The ground on your right could just be the slope of a mountain, and you might indeed be flying straight and level. If you can't tell the difference between the flat ground and the side of a mountain, you should definitely stay with MSFS. -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Airplane Cal Aggie Flying Farmers Sacramento, CA |
#66
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... [...] Given that sentence, how could you possibly infer from my post that I am saying the other sensations are required? Because you said "Balance [and other sensations] ... contribute ... more accurate and instantaneous information than vision alone can provide." Where in that sentence to you see the word "required" or "necessary"? Either other sensations are necessary, or they aren't. A trivially true statement. Just as any statement of the form "either X or not X" is trivially true. Why don't you read what is written before making silly conclusions? I did; the inconsistency in what you wrote is what puzzled me. There is no inconsistency in what I wrote. If you see one, you have misread what I wrote. No, the best autopilot cannot fly the aircraft better than the best human pilot. Then why do commercial airlines prefer that their pilots stay on autopilot? And why does flight with RVSM _require_ autopilot? Commercial flying is a VERY restricted form of flight, well-suited to autopilots. The use of autopilots for commercial flying has very little to do with the general question of whether an autopilot is the equal to a pilot or not. Once again (I think this is about the 50th time?), you are making false extrapolations from your tiny bit of actual knowledge. Me and the FAA. Apparently they don't realize that pilots fly much better than autopilots, so when tolerances are tight, they foolishly require autopilots. Really? Show me the FAA regulation that requires the use of an autopilot for short field landings. Show me the FAA regulation that requires the use of an autopilot for off-airport landings. Show me the FAA regulation that requires the use of an autopilot for narrow runways. Guess what. You can't. There is no truth whatsoever to the statement that "when tolerances are tight, they [the FAA] require autopilots". The FAA requirements that do provide for the use of autopilots are not targeted at situations "when tolerances are tight", and there a numerous situations when tolerances are tight in which autopilots are NOT required (and in fact, in which they would not even work). And when visibility is low, they foolishly require instruments. Again with the limited visibility. There is no question that when you cannot see outside the airplane, one need instruments to fly the airplane. That's not at debate here, and no matter how many times you prop that straw man up, knocking it down proves nothing. Don't they realize that pilots fly best by the seat of their pants? It does seem that certain pilots think that way. If a *good* pilot can see outside the airplane, a *good* pilot DOES fly best by the "seat of their pants". Besides, autopilots most certainly DO depend on sensations. They use their own form of sensory input. It's not biological in nature, but it's still sensory input (ie "sensations"). They use data from instruments, just like a competent human pilot flying IFR. So what? My point is that the autopilots have their own sensations. Many, in fact, use sensory input BEYOND what is available to a pilot via the flight instruments. No one has said sensations are *sufficient*. But some seem to be saying that they are necessary, and that's clearly not true. Others also seem to be saying that they are reliable, and that's not true, either. Not a single person has written that non-visual sensations are necessary. What has been said is that proper use of non-visual sensations greatly enhances a pilot's control of the aircraft. As far as "reliable" goes, when coupled with visual feedback in the form of a view outside the aircraft, non-visual sensations ARE extremely reliable. To say otherwise is to exercise the same arrogant ignorance you've exhibited over and over. Frankly, I'm getting a little sick and tired of your inability to accept just how little you know. Amazingly, in each and every post you not only manage to avoid admitting your errors, you somehow come up with entirely new incorrect things to write. You are a fount of anti-knowledge. I'm beginning to believe that you are beyond redemption. I notice I'm one of the few people left even bothering to reply to your posts. You obviously know nothing about flying, but I'm left wondering if I have a clue with respect to who is worth conversing with. Pete |
#67
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I've just learned that (based on this thread) Monty Python's Flying
Circus is considering re-writing "The Argument." Jay B |
#68
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... Only a pile of accident reports a mile high. And they were all certain that what they saw out the window was more reliable than any instrument. Where are these accident reports? Show us ten from the last year. I doubt you can come up with even one, but this supposed "mile high" pile ought to provide you plenty of documented evidence with which to support your claim. Show us. Remember, we are talking about in-flight situations during good daytime visibility here. They are far less prone to failure than human perception. That's why they are there. They are NOT less prone to failure than human perception when one can see outside the aircraft. [...] Instruments communicate their own perception of reality, viewed through the pilot's own perception of reality. Which is much more trustworthy than the pilot's perception alone. In IFR, 90% of the crucial interpretation is done by the instruments, which do not get tired, confused, or overconfident; the other 10% is done by the pilot, and since much less of the overall interpretation is done by him, the overall system is more reliable. Again, you have no clue with respect to what IFR flight entails. Most of the interpretation is done by the pilot. The flight instruments provide raw data, and the pilot is required to integrate that mentally into an overall situational picture. Moving map GPS has alleviated this somewhat, but a) most non-transport airplanes still don't have moving map displays, and b) they introduce a whole slew of new ways to become confused by the flight instruments. Until such time as you have actually flown a REAL aircraft in REAL instrument conditions BY YOURSELF, do not presume to lecture this newsgroup about what happens in IFR conditions. They are an indirect and highly suspect means of determining reality when compared to using one's own eyes to directly observe reality. Highly suspect? How frequently do instruments fail in flight? Well, according to a recent informal survey in this newsgroup, about one instrument failure per 500 hours is about average. My personal average is a little higher than that, but in all but one case the instruments were non-critical engine instruments. That one exception was a vacuum pump failure, resulting in the failure of both my attitude indicator and my directional gyro. During the entire timespan of those failures, I have not once had my sensory perceptions fail me during good daytime visual conditions. [...] All of the history of aviation demonstrates that instruments are more reliable. There is nothing about the history of aviation that demonstrates any such thing. That's why instruments are the reference when things are confusing, and even when they are not. Instruments are not the reference when things are not confusing. Any certificated pilot is perfectly capable of flying an airplane without any instruments whatsoever. The sky is very unforgiving of those who think they know better than their instruments. It is even more unforgiving of those who arrogantly insist that they know more than people with actual first-hand experience. I'll say one thing, perhaps the only thing, you have exactly right: you definitely do NOT belong in the pilot seat of any aircraft. Pete |
#69
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On Sat, 23 Sep 2006 17:07:17 +0200, Mxsmanic
wrote: Peter Duniho writes: What you SEE on the instruments is just as subjective as what you SEE out the window. Furthermore, the instruments are mechanical devices subject to failure. They are not infalliable, and they are significantly less infalliable than the view out the window. They are far less prone to failure than human perception. That's why they are there. Instruments are 100% affected by human perception, unless you're talking about coupled autopilot operations. Instruments are as much a part of the perceptual environment as the whoosh of the wind, the sound of the engine, the smells, the view out the windows, the pressure of the seat against ones butt, the pull of the seatbelt, the force of the hand against the controls, the vibrations, the loose objects flying around the cabin. The pilot integrates all of these indications to get a more accurate picture of the state of the airplane. In instrument training, a common admonition from the instructor is, "Look at everything, stare at nothing." The advice doesn't apply only to the instrument panel. They are an indirect and highly suspect means of determining reality when compared to using one's own eyes to directly observe reality. Highly suspect? How frequently do instruments fail in flight? Far too often, unfortunately. I've had vacuum pumps fail, all in VFR conditions fortunately. I've had an electric turn coordinator fail. I've had an altimeter fail. In that case I ended up rejecting the altimeter reading and relying on my eyes or I'd have made a mark on the landscape. Everything on the airplane is subject to Murphy's law, it can fail, and that includes instruments. There's a good reason why every time you fly with a CFII he/she will bring along some suction cups or Post-it notes to stick over instruments. And of course when a gyro fails, you may need to disable the autopilot so it won't be misled by erroneous indications. RK Henry |
#70
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... Peter Duniho writes: If that happens, you trust what you see out the window. I don't. What in the world does that mean? You have never, and will never, be in that situation. Any personal claim on your part regarding what you would or would not do is meaningless. [...] However, it's also likely that about half of the people DO have instrument ratings. Your "impression" (such as it is, based on your own highly flawed "understanding" of aviation and piloting) is unlikely to be anywhere close to correct. You just speculated that half the people here are not instrument rated, therefore I'm pretty close to correct. Maybe it's some whacked out French thing (or wherever you're from), but around here the word "mainly" is not at all a synonym for "only half". The mindset that is willing to believe optical illusions and misleading sensations over instruments. No one is suggesting that one believe optical illusions and misleading sensations over instruments. Those things simply aren't present during good daytime visual conditions. Why bother with instruments at all, if one is magically endowed with the ability to perceive reality perfectly with eyes and semicircular canals? It's not magic. It's biology. And the answer to your question is, you don't. That's the point. If you have information available via your eyes and other sensations, you have no need for instruments. The instruments are for when you are deprived of those biologically-granted abilities (in particular, the visual aspect, as that's the sense that keeps everything else working correctly). [...] I'm not sure what that's supposed to mean. If they have no clue about the use of their instruments, then they are going to be helpless if the weather deteriorates. If they are convinced that instruments are less reliable than their perceptions, then they'll be in even deeper trouble. What does "if the weather deteriorates" have to do with this discussion? We're not talking about instrument conditions, we're talking about visual conditions. No one is claiming that instruments don't have their use. They do, in instrument conditions. That's why they call those conditions INSTRUMENT CONDITIONS. But we're not talking about that. A pilot not trained for instrument flight is unlikely to do well is instrument conditions, just as you are unlikely to do well flying an actual airplane. So what? Well, apparently the non-IFR pilots don't hesitate to talk about IFR, but they don't like it when non-pilots talk about piloting. Hmm. What non-IFR pilots have been talking about IFR? And even if they have, how does that make your own insistence on writing about things on which you have no actual knowledge any better? Some minimal training is required, yes. But so what? The training is intended for when the pilot encounters INSTRUMENT conditions. When in VISUAL conditions, there is no need to use any instruments in the airplane at all. You see it as a need; I see it as a convenience. Again, please read what I wrote. The words I wrote are "NO NEED". I don't see instruments as a need. For that matter, you do NOT see them as a convenience...you have specifically written that you see them as a need. No, they are not. In visual conditions, the likelihood of the external view becoming compromised in a way that affects the safety of the flight is practically nil. And what is the probability that the instruments will fail? Relatively high. As in, any pilot with any reasonable amount of experience has likely had at least one flight instrument fail during a flight. Yes, they are. There's no magic switch in a full-motion simulator that disables your sensation of acceleration. Simulators trick your sensations, and your imagination fills in the rest. That's true. But they don't trick your sensation of acceleration. I do indeed know how they work, and the tricks they play to make pilots think they are actually moving. Then why don't you write about that, instead of making stuff up that has no basis in facts? As I have already pointed out, full-motion simulators take advantage of the acceleration of gravity, combined with misleading visual information, to fool the body into thinking they are under a state of constant acceleration. It's much more complicated than that. MORE complicated? IMHO, the description I gave is plenty complicated. The point isn't whether it's complicated, it's whether your sensation of acceleration is being fooled (or rather, whether someone's sensation is...obviously, since you've never been in a full-motion simulator, none of your sensations have ever been fooled, sensation of acceleration or not). If visual cues were sufficient, you'd get the same sensation of acceleration at your PC. Sometimes you do, especially with multiple screens. That's why many people get motion sickness playing Doom. They aren't moving, but the effect of the visual input they see is strong enough to convince their brains that they are. Wrong. They get motion sickness for the very reason that their sensation of acceleration is NOT being fooled. You seem to be confusing the sensation of acceleration (that is, the body's direct acquisition of data indicating acceleration, a biomechanical process) and the mind's impression of acceleration (which is a mental process that integrates a number of biomechanical processes into a single perception of reality). The reason a person gets motion sickness is that their vision sends signals of acceleration and other motion, while the sensory organs that provide direct data of acceleration do not. The conflict results in the motion sickness. If the simulator were effectively fooling all sensation of acceleration, there would be no motion sickness. [...] If the body were so accurate, it would notice the simulator returning to a neutral position, and it would notice the rotation of the simulator when the net acceleration vector shifts. But that doesn't happen. Again, how would you know whether that happens or not? With respect to returning to neutral position, if it happens quickly enough (the one way to fool one's sensation of acceleration is to sneak up on it), it does happen. This is not uncommon if the simulator gets frozen mid-flight and reset, for example. As far as noticing the rotation, this is accounted for in the motion of the simulator, and the rotation is combined with the forward motion that obscures it from one's sensation. No, it's not. If you'd ever seen a full-motion simulator in operation, you'd never even think of saying such a silly thing. I have seen them in operation. Why weren't you paying attention then? Why did you not notice that the simulator pitches up even before the airplane itself has been pitched up? Pete |
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