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#51
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Chris W writes:
How is not wanting to embarrass yourself in front of your significant other, a "19th-century mindset"? Wanting to do things "among the girls" would be a 19th-century mindset. In any case, her reason for refusing is a matter of total speculation. It could have been anything. Why not just accept it and move on, without casting aspersions upon her simply because she is different? Not wanting to look stupid in front of other people seems to be a pretty timeless concept to me. My own guess is that she simply wasn't interested in flying a plane. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#52
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Jay Honeck wrote:
It just seems odd to me, and rather sad. I don't want folks believing that airplanes fall out of the sky as soon as an experienced pilot lets go of the controls... -- One EAA Young Eagle flew, like a fair % of them, love (even if reluctant at first) to take controls for a little while once in cruise. But once on a calm, summer evening, this kid (about age 11) was loving it so much, I "vectored" him back to the nontowered airport. He couldn't see my periodically nudging the trim wheel, and visible, periodic throttle reductions got us down to pattern alt, and he steered us pretty good to direct enter the downwind. Thence he turned base as instructed; no need to touch throttle after base, just trim; so he got us lined up perfect on final, glidepath and ASI nailed though not any of his doing. I hadn't intended to let it go this far, but the kid was doing so well in the calm conditions. Only one hand on the wheel as directed. Hey, that is easier, he had earlier said. I was about to take control 1/2 mile final as the rwy was looming larger, and kid finally looks up at me and suggests I better land it. Roger, and excellent job there, Mr. First Officer. On the ground, the kid runs to his Mom all excited and told her what he just did! I've tried this in MSFS, and it's not that easy. Is there someone out there who can tell me what I'm doing wrong? Fred F. |
#53
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Jay:
You would do well to concentrate on the topic at hand, rather than making gross generalizations and speculating about things I personally might have said or done. TROLL ALERT !!! "Morgans" wrote: I think there is another interloper in our midst. Anyone else notice that, from the few posts already made? Not you, Jay ! g Since Jay's quote above was in response to me, are you referring to me? Did I say something wrong? Not everyone posts here every day, or even every week. I've posted once in a while, and I know the group's other "Jay" IRL. You guys complain that there aren't enough women in aviation ... if this is the way you welcome us (by sounding a "Troll Alert"), what do you expect? And why would you sound the alert anyway? Did I say something wrong? or uncivilized? or out of line? This was a topic I have had personal experience with -- being a woman, a pilot, having people so eager to want you learn to fly that you feel like they're trying to *convert* you to a religion (!), and having a strong passion for flying, but knowing what it feels like to be pushed into something you simply aren't ready for...yet. Thankfully and happily, I made it through in my own time, not being egged-into doing things I wasn't comfortable with just to *prove* to someone that I was interested or serious. That may or may not have been the case with the young woman in Jay's post, but it is another perspective than the one Jay came away with...and that is, after all, the topic of his post, isn't it? He did say he didn't "get it", so I offered some other reasons than all the negative ones he offered. So, if you don't post often or agree with you regulars, you're a troll? |
#54
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In article ,
john smith wrote: That first lesson was an eye opener - a plane is like a 3D motorcycle. Now I'm hooked. I'll be tooling around central Indiana in a J-3 Cub an hour and a half from now. Scott, are you Time Pieces members? Don't know what that is, so I assume I'm not a member. :-) I just got back from the field and can't believe how much fun the Cub is. Fly a 500' pattern, one big swooping turn to final from abeam the numbers, chop the throttle once clear of the power lines then drop like a rock until leveling out and touching the grass soft as you please. Couldn't figure out the portable radio so just did without. Visited a couple grass strips then a big paved runway for some crosswind wheel landing practice. I've only flown the club's Champ from the front and just can't feel what the tail is doing so I end up watching the ball too much. From the back of the Cub I can feel slip/skid in the seat of my pants and any passenger in the front seat blocks the instruments anyhow. After 7 hours carting the family to the inlaw's for Thanksgiving in a Skyhawk it felt good to fly something with character. I passed 70 hours in my log book today. I think I'll use the Cub to build some of the 50 x-country hours I need for the IR. Won't get very far, but the FAA counts hours, not miles. -- Scott Post |
#55
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In article . com,
Jay Honeck wrote: That first lesson was an eye opener - a plane is like a 3D motorcycle. Now I'm hooked. I'll be tooling around central Indiana in a J-3 Cub an hour and a half from now. That's kind of the effect I'm looking for in people -- and we usually get it! What I don't understand is that you never felt the desire to try out the controls when your wife was PIC. It would have seemed the perfect opportunity to test the waters, and I (like, I believe most people) would have jumped at the chance. I think it's because I knew it would be a sham - I wouldn't really be flying the plane, so why bother? It would have felt patronizing. I'd flown with my wife enough to know how much is really involved with flying a plane and I had great respect for her skills. Taking the yoke for a bit after she'd trimmed for straight & level wouldn't really be flying so it didn't seem worth doing. -- Scott Post |
#56
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In article . com,
"Jay Honeck" wrote: Mary and I have given rides to dozens of people over the years. I usually like to let a newbie ride in the right seat with me, and will usually let them "take the wheel" once we're safely at altitude. Most people love their new-found freedom, while others are tentative and not quite sure what to think. It is a rare person, indeed, who refuses the chance to "steer" -- but it happened Friday with a 24 year old girl in the right seat. Actually, Mary was up front with her, while I was in back with her boyfriend (which is still a very weird feeling, sitting in the BACK of your own plane, in flight) -- and when Mary offered her the controls, she politely refused. What *is* that, anyway? don't know. I took a co-worker up for a ride, and it turns out that she is a bit of a timid flyer. She wouldn't touch the controls and asked me to end the flight early (which, of course, I did). I took an old college roommate flying once and he wouldn't take the controls either - in his case I think he was intimidated by all the stuff, the instruments, the radios, not understanding ATC, etc etc. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate |
#57
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"Scott Post" wrote in message
... I think it's because I knew it would be a sham - I wouldn't really be flying the plane, so why bother? It would have felt patronizing. I'd flown with my wife enough to know how much is really involved with flying a plane and I had great respect for her skills. Taking the yoke for a bit after she'd trimmed for straight & level wouldn't really be flying so it didn't seem worth doing. While I'm a strong supporter of your right to your own opinion ![]() like to point out that there is a difference between "flying" and "piloting". IMHO, the point of offering the controls to a passenger is to allow them to "fly". That is, there really is something enjoyable about simply being in control of an aircraft, and this can be shared with passengers. It's not an act of patronizing on the pilot's part, nor should the passenger feel that their control of the aircraft is in any way diminished by their lack of training. To be a *pilot* does require quite a lot of training, as well as good judgment and a variety of other personal qualities. But I don't see that as any good reason for a passenger to not find *flying* "worth doing". And even as a passenger without all the training and practice required to be a "pilot", you certainly would have been "flying" the airplane, had you accepted the opportunity to do so. It's a moot point now, but I'll point out that you were probably flying the airplane in your very first lesson (as all students do). The lack of training should not have diminished the fact that you were flying, and just as it shouldn't have then, it shouldn't in a non-training situation. The only real difference between the two situations is that in one, a qualified instructor is providing training. What *you* are doing is the same, and that is flying. ![]() Pete |
#58
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TxSrv writes:
I've tried this in MSFS, and it's not that easy. Is there someone out there who can tell me what I'm doing wrong? What trouble are you having? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#59
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"Morgans" wrote in message
... TROLL ALERT !!! I think there is another interloper in our midst. Anyone else notice that, from the few posts already made? Your troll-o-meter alarm is set WAY too low. Before you go accusing someone a troll, you might think about at least double-checking your impressions with Google first. Your last two pronouncments (including this one) are easily disproved simply by looking at what those posters actually post. |
#60
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... and that is what we are trying to tell you. Not all of us are as
keen on [certain] things as you are. If I gave you a chance to make a pot on a potter's wheel, or to run spotlight at the community theater, would you be "all over it like stink on you-know-what"? And that's the point you're not getting. The answer to both of your questions is a resounding "yes!". Life is about new experiences. To pass them up is to deny being alive. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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