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#51
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On Feb 14, 5:02 pm, C J Campbell
wrote: On Tue, 13 Feb 2007 17:40:31 -0800, wrote (in article .com): On Feb 13, 7:22 pm, Mark Hansen wrote: You know using the autopilot in the simulator to just hold altitude is one thing I haven't thought about. The only autopilot I have in the 'real' plane is a single axis (heading only) which I'm not using while learning the rating. Very good idea! I would recommend becoming at least familiar with using it IFR. The examiner might expect you to use it, even. A little practice wouldn't hurt. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor Actually I belong to a flying club. There are two planes that I will be using. A Warrior (no autopilot, no ADF, no DME, no GPS, no backup vacuum) and a Dakota (single axis autopilot, ADF, DME, Garmin 430 GPS, with backup vacuum). I will be using the Warrior for the check ride since no ADF means no ADF approaches ;-) After getting the rating I will probably be using the Dakota on real IFR trips just based on safety, but it's cheaper to practice in the Warrior. Plus I won't get spoiled using all those sophisticated avionics! |
#52
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![]() Steve, I forgot to mention that I had heard of the Elite program before but did not want to buy it because of the cost (I already own several versions of MS FS and X-plane). After visiting a flight school and got a chance to checkout their Elite program (with the avionic stacks and a CFII, you can log sim time - the program is the same as the 'home' version), I decided it was worth the money and got it. It is extremely useful when use in conjunction with Elite excellent training syllabus which start from the basic instrument settings, scanning practice, oscar pattern etc. to approaches. Once finish with the lesson, you can compare your tracks with the program tracks (including the vertical dimension) to evaluate your progress. Elite also sells several different ATC scenarios which are very helpful for IFR ATC communication. We had our instrument ratings in May 05 and each had logged close to 100hrs of instrument time (actual and simulated) since then in our Cardinal. We still use the Elite program every so often to practice a new approach at a new airport or just to sharpen our skills when the weather is too crappy to fly (we had just shoveled a foot of snow today!). Hai Longworth |
#53
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![]() "Longworth" wrote we had just shoveled a foot of snow today!). Dang! I know lots of people will want to shoot me for this, but it has been several years since we have seen a real snow. Would you mind sending some of that snow our way? g -- Jim in NC |
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#55
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Mxsmanic wrote:
I have to disagree with you here. If you rely on autopilot all the time, the day will come when the autopilot goes on strike in the soup. Good luck keeping the shiny side up, staying ahead of the airplane, and keeping your situational awareness if you aren't proficient at hand-flying on instruments. There's no way to maintain that proficiency without doing it. There are many pilots who've perished when George went on strike in the soup and the pilot wasn't proficient with hand-flying in the soup. I use the auto-pilot to reduce my workload when I am attending to other tasks, and for that it is a gread load reducer. In a cross country flight, there is a lot of time spent when you are not particularly busy, and that is a good time to pull the plug on George and get some good old hand flying time in. Mxmanic, do you have an instrument rating? Your posts regarding user fees make it sound to me like you don't even have a PPL. |
#56
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"Ray Andraka" wrote in message ...
Mxsmanic wrote: Mxmanic, do you have an instrument rating? Your posts regarding user fees make it sound to me like you don't even have a PPL. Ray, I think you deciphered the code! :-) |
#57
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I've been told that all sims have overly sensitive pitch. That has been
my experience with a Frasca, ASA's Instrument Procedure Trainer, and Elite. Hard to understand why no one fixes it, but apparently they don't. I haven't tried those simulators, just MSFS. I would be willing to pay the bucks if it would help. It's a lot cheaper than an extra lesson (or two or three). I have read that the old Link Trainers were very sensitive in pitch, and also much more slippery than the aircraft they were intended to train for--such as B17's. In the case of the Link, I presume that was by design; however I have difficulty believing that MSFS would have been done that way deliberately. I have no experience in the Link, or in any of the PC based sims. I am simply curious and inviting comment. Peter |
#58
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On Feb 14, 5:29 pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: I don't want to have my life dependent on a working autopilot, so I am purposely avoiding it for now. If you have a choice between a working autopilot and nothing, the working autopilot is generally preferable. Your life depends on an autopilot each time you board a commercial flight, particularly if it's not a U.S. airline. In IMC, you use all the resources you have in order to not get killed. Eschewing the autopilot because you resent automation will put you at a disadvantage if you are stuck in IMC and the autopilot can save you but you can't remember how to use it. I have nothing at all against autopilots; I think they are great. In fact I love all technology which makes life easier and safer. Since I won't be flying a commercial airline with redundant everything, I want a way to mitigate the effects of single points of failure. Some non- redundant items I can't do anything about (one fuel supply, one engine, one pilot), but the ones I can I will. I have used the autopilot flying VMC, and plan to become proficient flying with it in IMC as well. Autopilots (at least the single axis one in the Dakota) are just not that hard to use. I don't want to have to depend on it. I think I will be a better and safer pilot if I can fly safely and proficiently without all but the very basics. My comments about the use of the autopilot are for my training, not for actual use (especially when my family is on board). I understand that the airplane doesn't know if it's in the clouds, but I can sure tell. Being able to fly without an autopilot, and using only the instruments as a reference is a HUGE part of my training. Perhaps I've not made myself clear. You use the instruments to assess your situation. You use your autopilot to carry out your commands. The autopilot is not a reference or a source of information; it is a work-saving device. When you have lots of complex instruments to scan, it's very handy to have something that will fly the aircraft for you based on your instructions. There's no advantage to flying the plane by hand IFR if you have an autopilot. And flying IFR is not the time to practice controlling the aircraft; if you don't already know how to do that, trying to learn in IMC will lead to your premature demise. I have 250+ hours in VMC. I know how to control an aircraft. In VMC you have this big horizon out the window available to judge your attitude. In IMC, you just have the instruments. You have to learn to ignore all physical sensations (no flying by the seat of your pants here), and trust your instruments. The first part of every instrument training syllabus I've ever seen emphasizes the ability to control the airplane first and foremost. An autopilot will do this for you, but that's no excuse for not knowing how to do it yourself. I don't want to die from stupidity! That said, once I have my rating I will take advantage of everything (autopilot, handheld GPS) at my disposal. But I still intend to practice partial panel, no autopilot, no GPS so I don't get too rusty. Try to make the distinction between sources of information and control mechanisms. IFR is all about getting the right information; it's not about controlling the aircraft. I think both are important. In fact if you can't control the airplane, but you know everything else about your situational awareness and what exact procedures to follow, you will die knowing exactly where you are buried. It sure is a lot more interesting when all you have are the "steam gauges". But I agree with you that autopilots do make life easier (and safer). Autopilots and gauges are two different things. See above. Flying on autopilot doesn't relieve you of the need to watch your instruments, it just relieves you of the need to continually fly the airplane. Turning the autopilot off doesn't make you any better at reading the instruments, either. The PIC is always responsible for the safety on his/her ship, and of course that includes monitoring the gauges to make sure the autopilot is doing it's job. But what happens when you notice it isn't behaving properly and you have to pull the breaker? That's why it's important to have a backup plan. When your autopilot breaks, there is also difficulty in actually doing it. If you can control the aircraft in VFR, you can control it in IFR. If you can't control the aircraft, you belong on the ground. Different skill sets are required to control the airplane precisely using instrument reference alone, versus looking out the window. If your autopilot is not broken, there's no shame in using it. That's what it is there for. I would not be ashamed to use the autopilot. I'm just talking about training here. I would be ashamed to have earned my instrument rating and have to be dependent on the autopilot to be safe. But I doubt there are any CFII's out there that would let that happen. I went to Reality XP's website, and they had a side by side comparison of the "stock" gauges, and their product. Amazing. One of the planes I fly (and will be training in) has the Garmin 430, so I might be downloading that as well. Thanks for the tip. They were still photos, no? They are really impressive when they are actually operating. Silky smooth action, behavior just like the real thing, and no buttons or knobs that do not work. It's a 5 second (or so) flash(?) animation at http://www.reality- xp.com/products/FLNT/index.htm. Very impressive. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#59
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"Peter Dohm" wrote in message ...
I've been told that all sims have overly sensitive pitch. That has been my experience with a Frasca, ASA's Instrument Procedure Trainer, and Elite. Hard to understand why no one fixes it, but apparently they don't. I haven't tried those simulators, just MSFS. I would be willing to pay the bucks if it would help. It's a lot cheaper than an extra lesson (or two or three). I have read that the old Link Trainers were very sensitive in pitch, and also much more slippery than the aircraft they were intended to train for--such as B17's. In the case of the Link, I presume that was by design; however I have difficulty believing that MSFS would have been done that way deliberately. I have no experience in the Link, or in any of the PC based sims. I am simply curious and inviting comment. Peter Dunno what comments you're looking for, but I have Link time. For flying, they were *at least* as bad as you said! Stall/Spin events were an everyday occurrence. But remember, their purpose was for procedures training, not flight training. They were good for their purpose. Keep the same attitude toward the PC sims, and you'll be OK. Even FlightSafety's twin-Cessna full-motion simulator won't simulate landing. FlightSafety instructors will issue a flight review in the simulator, but only after the student certifies the required prior actual aircraft landings. |
#60
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On Feb 14, 7:32 pm, "Morgans" wrote:
"Longworth" wrote we had just shoveled a foot of snow today!). Dang! I know lots of people will want to shoot me for this, but it has been several years since we have seen a real snow. Would you mind sending some of that snow our way? g -- Jim in NC Jim, I'd be glad to send you several cubic feet of snow. The snow is free. You just pay the shiping cost ;-) Hai Longworth |
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