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#21
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Andrew Sarangan wrote:
Thanks for all the discussion on this topic. Regardless of your personal opinion on the subject, this is a topic of high relevance due to the rapid changes in technology taking place in the way we fly. I agree it is a subject that is very relevent. One additional comment I would like to add is that, we should not equate computer usage with lack of understanding of the basics. Automation has the potential to allow us to focus on the important tasks and let the computer take care of the mundane tasks. I think you would find that in order to know the student had a full grasp of the fundamentals you would end up teaching them the "old" way. Automation is great. Computers are great, hell they allow us to have this conversation. But just like I still need to be able to ask a local fellow flyer a question from time to time there will be times when computers and the internet aren't going to be available to the pilot. I once had a student many years ago who computed all headings with great precision, by hand using an E6B, only to find that he had reversed all headings by 180 degress. He was all caught up in the details of the computation that he forgot to see the big picture. With automation that is less likely to happen. However, if it is not taught properly, it can also be harmful. The exact same thing could easily happen in a flight planning program or even worse. He types in the wrong airport code and flys the plan without catching it. There was an article in a recent aviation magazine (I can't remember the magazine title) where they compared students who learned to fly in glass cockpitsat Embry Riddle vs the traditional instruments, and the conclusion was that students who learned in the glass environment were just as good as or even better than the previous generation. I'm sure they did. I also wouldn't be surprised if those trained in glass didn't transition easier to steam. So obviously a discussion on modernizing training methods is something that need to be taken seriously. The problem is there are lots of different flight planning programs and services out there. Which one are you going to teach. All the ones I've used seem to be designed so that someone who understands the "old" way can figure them out. The flip side of that is that if you teach someone via a specific program are they going to be able to understand the operation of another program or even the same one after a major revision? |
#22
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![]() "Andy Lutz" wrote This sounds a bit overwhelming. I am only 9 hours into my training but is this what I might expect to see in a VFR PPL checkride? I know I have lots to learn and get comfortable with, including navigation and flight planning, what does a DE want to see in this arena? I'll look at the PTS, but you scared me. What does a typical checkride look like? Whoa, big fella! You are getting way ahead of yourself. Are you a reasonably intelligent person? Do you have a determination to take on this thing called flying, and achieve it? If you answered yes, then don't worry about what happens on the check ride. You have a person that is as interested as you are, in seeing you get your private ticket. He is called your instructor. DE's want you to get it too, as long as the DE is not one of those people with a goal of making you look foolish, and your instructor will not send you to one of them. Take one step at a time. When you master one skill, you build on it, and then learn a new skill and master it. It is like eating. You can't shove a whole meal in your mouth at one time. You eat a big feast -one bite- at a time. Take a deep breath. Stand back and look at what you have learned, and relax, and enjoy the new experiences, and the challenges of learning new skills. You can, and will do it, if you stick with it. -- Jim in NC |
#23
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Suffice it to say that I am in complete disagreement with your position.
Electronic aids are wonderful, but every pilot needs to know how to navigate by pilotage. Bob Gardner "Andrew Sarangan" wrote in message ups.com... This question is directed at student pilots and flight instructors. How many of you learn/teach cross country navigation using the traditional methods using paper charts, protractors, E6B and navigation logs? During my training more than 10 years ago, xc planning was a fairly elaborate process that involved filling lots of numbers in small boxes. The flight was broken down into approximately 25 mile legs, and each row had distance, true course, winds, temperature, variation, wind correction angle, magnetic heading, time, fuel. Then we add up the columns to get total time and fuel. We also compute the time required to climb and descent. If we want to be more precise, we also compute the fuel needed for taxi and run-up. Once airborne, we religiously write down more numbers at each checkpoint and recompute ground speed. All fine, but I don't do any of these on a typical flight. I use an online source such as skyvector.com to view the charts. Then I use an online software to compute heading and time. That plus a paper chart is pretty much all I need for a VFR flight. I've been toying with the idea of taking a different approach to teaching flight planning by skipping a lot of these things. I don't see the purpose of doing things by hand when it is done much easier on a computer. It feels like using a typewriter instead of a computer. In addition, the less stuff you have in the cockpit, the simpler the organization becomes. All these papers and pens flying around the cockpit becomes an organizational nightmare. So what are your thoughts on this? Is the ability to compute a flight by hand really important? Are there important aspects I am overlooking? |
#24
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![]() destination into a machine and letting it do the flight plan breeds a little too much complacency. Putting a little thought into your routing can yield great rewards. Yeah, true. I am still quite bad at doing it the old fashioned way (even after passing a checkride) but I still take the trouble to do it that way because it feels more rewarding. Besides, just using the GPS makes it a bit like flying in a simulator. However I do find it hard to do a diversion to an unknown airport and fold the chart to draw an imaginary line, figure out a new heading, correct for wind etc. I tend to cheat in that situation and get help from flight following or rely on the GPS if I have one. |
#25
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"Andrew Sarangan" wrote:
This question is directed at student pilots and flight instructors. How many of you learn/teach cross country navigation using the traditional methods using paper charts, protractors, E6B and navigation logs? Hey, what have you got against sextants!? (I finished reading "Fate is the Hunter" a couple weeks ago.) Frankly I don't trust any method that involves pens or pencils - the pens are likely to run out of ink at the worst time and I always manage to break the points on the pencils. ;-) |
#26
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![]() I think many people are interpreting 'computer-aided flight planning' to mean GPS navigation. That is totally not what I meant. I re-read my original post, and I didn't even use the word GPS anywhere. I fully agree that pilotage and dead reckoning are critical skills. My question was not about in-flight use of electronic aids, but their use on the ground during preflight planning. Furthermore, I am not taking a 'postion'. I am raising it as a topic that needs to be discussed. On Mar 13, 5:56 pm, "Bob Gardner" wrote: Suffice it to say that I am in complete disagreement with your position. Electronic aids are wonderful, but every pilot needs to know how to navigate by pilotage. Bob Gardner |
#27
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On Mar 13, 12:16 pm, "Andy Lutz" wrote:
This sounds a bit overwhelming. I am only 9 hours into my training When I was 9 hours into my PPL training, this would have sounded way overwhelming to me too. At that point, I hadn't even learned to land an airplane reliably under optimal conditions. At the 60-70 hour mark, it didn't seem so bad at all. When I was 9 hours into my multiengine training, I could barely land the airplane single engine. At the 25 hour mark, a partial panel single engine NDB approach with circle to land on a short runway seemed no big deal. Trust me, it gets better. Look at the PTS if you like, but realize much of it may not make sense just yet. Many instructors believe in trotting out the PTS from day one, to keep your eyes on the prize, I suppose. I don't think much of that strategy. The PTS is a test standard, not a training syllabus. Your instructor has (I assume) a training syllabus. Many fine ones are commercially available, and many flight schools have their own. By the time you get to the end of the syllabus, the things I discuss will not seem so overwhelming. but is this what I might expect to see in a VFR PPL checkride? I know I have lots to learn and get comfortable with, including navigation and flight planning, what does a DE want to see in this arena? I'll look at the PTS, but you scared me. I'm sorry I scared you. That was not the intent. The intent was to explain to another instructor what I thought was missing in his asessment of the utility of manual (as opposed to automated) flight planning. I would be more than a bit surprised if, at 9 hours, you were exposed to most of the concepts I discussed. That will come. Right now, those are not your big issues. The only navigation I would teach a student at your level is basic pilotage and map reading. I wouldn't expect you to be venturing more than 10-20 miles from home just yet. At this stage of the game, you need to be focusing on aircarft control through the flight envelope, flight with reference to the ground, and basic takeoff and landing skills. If you're really sharp, you might just be soloing - but that would be unusual these days. Since you have already started flying, consider taking and passing your written test as soon as practical. If you are still worried after that (it will include a lot of flight planning stuff) then ask me the question again, and we'll discuss it. Michael |
#28
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I think you sort of anwered you own question by the "I don't use these
on a typical flight" I like to think of it like learning Algebra. You don't do all that homework to learn how to do homework. You do it so that you have repeated the processes enough that you retain them. Actually you probably do use much of what you did on a typical flight or at least you should. While you won't do them in detail you will use much the same processes on a larger scale. Here are some things I think you should be doing on typical flights after you get your rating.. Figuring how much endurance do you have. (Fuel - Hours) Figuring Magnetic Headings for your destination. Figuring long will it take to get to your destination. Checking your route and progress with check points. (You hopefully don't just blindly follow the GPS) Recalculate the above in the air if your destination changes. True GPS's can make most of these easy, But I have had 3 GPS's fail on me. Two were actual GPS Failures the 3rd was a Notamed outage of the GPS Signal. The point being you never know when you might have to find a pencil and map and figure out where you are and where you are going. It is a skill you should be able to do, which is why we teach it and make you practice it over and over again as a student. It is up to you to stay profecient at them after you become a licensed pilot. Brian CFIIG/ASEL |
#29
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Thanks for the encouragement. I did sound a bit scared as I read my first
post. I have heard about most of the things you mentioned in my reading. I got the test booklet from ASA last year and have read it through a few times. Without the instructor walking with me through it too, it was sounding rather complicated to do spur of the moment. But now that I have a CFI to help explain things one concept at a time, and train to competence as I need it, I should do much better. I guess I'm feeling that more may be expected of me than I think I can do. My instructor, a MCFI, by the way, I trust implicitly. He told me after my last lesson that most people take their check ride at 65-70 hours and he thought I may be ready at 50 or less. That is scary too. But as I said, I trust him and he won't push me beyond what I'm ready for. I want to push out of my mind that 50 hour comment and not expect anything like it, but it threatens to hang aroung and plump my ego, and there is no room for an ego in those small cockpits. I haven't soloed yet and I think I still have a way to go. I expect I'l be sharing about that here when the time comes. OK, for now, just breathe! Take lessons one at a time. I'll worry about not learning what I've been taught, after I've been taught it. -Andy "Michael" wrote in message ups.com... On Mar 13, 12:16 pm, "Andy Lutz" wrote: This sounds a bit overwhelming. I am only 9 hours into my training When I was 9 hours into my PPL training, this would have sounded way overwhelming to me too. At that point, I hadn't even learned to land an airplane reliably under optimal conditions. At the 60-70 hour mark, it didn't seem so bad at all. When I was 9 hours into my multiengine training, I could barely land the airplane single engine. At the 25 hour mark, a partial panel single engine NDB approach with circle to land on a short runway seemed no big deal. Trust me, it gets better. Look at the PTS if you like, but realize much of it may not make sense just yet. Many instructors believe in trotting out the PTS from day one, to keep your eyes on the prize, I suppose. I don't think much of that strategy. The PTS is a test standard, not a training syllabus. Your instructor has (I assume) a training syllabus. Many fine ones are commercially available, and many flight schools have their own. By the time you get to the end of the syllabus, the things I discuss will not seem so overwhelming. but is this what I might expect to see in a VFR PPL checkride? I know I have lots to learn and get comfortable with, including navigation and flight planning, what does a DE want to see in this arena? I'll look at the PTS, but you scared me. I'm sorry I scared you. That was not the intent. The intent was to explain to another instructor what I thought was missing in his asessment of the utility of manual (as opposed to automated) flight planning. I would be more than a bit surprised if, at 9 hours, you were exposed to most of the concepts I discussed. That will come. Right now, those are not your big issues. The only navigation I would teach a student at your level is basic pilotage and map reading. I wouldn't expect you to be venturing more than 10-20 miles from home just yet. At this stage of the game, you need to be focusing on aircarft control through the flight envelope, flight with reference to the ground, and basic takeoff and landing skills. If you're really sharp, you might just be soloing - but that would be unusual these days. Since you have already started flying, consider taking and passing your written test as soon as practical. If you are still worried after that (it will include a lot of flight planning stuff) then ask me the question again, and we'll discuss it. Michael |
#30
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