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Glass cockpit hard to read



 
 
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Old October 6th 07, 09:30 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
Bertie the Bunyip[_19_]
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Posts: 3,851
Default Glass cockpit hard to read

"Peter Dohm" wrote in news:x1SNi.1432$aa.376
@bignews1.bellsouth.net:


"Bertie the Bunyip" wrote in message
.. .
Phil wrote in news:1191696116.820241.83540@
19g2000hsx.googlegroups.com:

On Oct 6, 10:21 am, Arno wrote:
Hello,

I am computer scientist and usually really like fancy technology.

But
I just had my first flight with a "glass" PFD (Avidyne) and must

say
I
am not impressed. In particular reading altitude and airpeed from
these scrolling bands requires a lot more attention than with

regular
gauges, just like reading a digital clock takes longer than reading

an
analog one. Glancing at it and checking against a known picture,

like
"speed at 3 o'clock is fine on final" or "altitude at 20 minutes

past
midnight is minimum", just does not work anymore, instead I end up
reading the actual numbers every time I look. Does anyone feel the
same? Am I missing a particular technique?

Arno

I am a fellow computer geek, and a student pilot. I usually fly a
plane with steam gauges, but a couple of times now I have flown with
digital displays. Like you, I found it a little hard to adjust to

the
digital displays. The digital displays I was using presented

altitude
and tachometer values simply as numbers. The analog displays I am
used to present these values as positions on a dial, showing the
current value in its context of a spectrum of values. With the

analog
displays, I am used to adjusting the position of the pointer. With
the digital display, I need to simply set the correct numerical
value. It's a little mental adjustment, and given that I am a

newbie
to all this it is an extra distraction.

But, I do think that it is mostly a matter of what you are used to.




Flying is a right hand brain activity. At least the handling portion

is.
The right hand side of the brain dosn't do abstractions like numbers,

at
least not until the left hand side (which can't fly worth a ****)

sends
it over to the right side in a readily digestable form which enables

the
right brain to chew it into a picture.

An analogue display cuts the left hand side out of the loop and

enables
the calcualtion rate to increase the right sides "frame rate" so that
corrections can be made more frequently thus enabling the pilot to

fly
the airplane more smooothly and with more authority.
Caorse rule of thumb math can be laid over this for descent angles,
interceptin angles and wo on, but generally, the fewer numbers

involved,
the better.
People who prefer the numbers usualy don't fly very well at all.


You don't do trig while you're shooting pool and expect to win the

game.


Bertie


Very well said!



Thenkew

Bertie





 




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