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#201
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Benjamin Dover writes:
BULL ****. You land by "the seat of your pants". How are computers able to land aircraft, then? |
#202
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Nomen Nescio writes:
I regularly travel a stretch of highway about 100 miles long. 2 trips same time of the day same traffic same speed When I use cruise control for the entire trip, I average about 18 mpg. When I use my foot the whole way, I average over 20 mpg. Do you look out the window, or look at the speedometer, or do you drive blindfolded and rely on sensations? Why do airline operators prefer that their pilots use a flight management computer instead of flying by hand? |
#203
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Clark writes:
A book does not equal a simulator. Actually it does. It describes flying without actually allowing a person to experience it. The distinction in this debate is between the alleged unique and essential character of real experience vs. simulation of real experience. Simulation can take many forms, and is not found only in the form of a desktop PC program. Reading about something is simulation. So is an instructor's illustration with paper and pencil or with a model airplane. If simulation with a PC cannot be adequate, then neither can anything else. However, the reality is that simulation is fine. The closer it is to reality and the more accurate it is, the more useful it is, but anything that simulates with any accuracy at all is always useful. The apology is in order for claiming that you know better than the folks who have gone before you when you haven't made the journey yourself. I owe nothing to them, and I feel no obligation to preserve or inflate their egos. I merely discuss aviation. Other people are names on a screen. I evaluate what they say by comparing it to what I read and learn from other sources. When I see high correlations, I assume that I'm getting accurate information. When I see large conflicts, I assume that someone or something is wrong. To me it's all facts and information, not personalities. I'm sorry if some people are so insecure that they cannot sustain a conversation without constant praise and validation, but that is their problem, not mine. Everything about flying the aircraft requires an instructor present until you solo. Why? Why do you claim that? Actually, I consider it self-evident. Tell ya what, survey practical simulator use in flight training (or just about any training) and get back to us on how many simulators are used without instructors present. People use simulators with instructors mainly so that they can officially log the hours in some way, not because simulators are not useful without instructors. Part of the instructor's role is just to verify that the student really is using the simulator. |
#204
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in
news:cPsXj.113142$TT4.57109@attbi_s22: There has to be something that a simulator can offer that does not require the instructor to be present. Much depends on the level of your simulator. If you have something like our Penguin (see it he http://www.alexisparkinn.com/flight_simulator.htm ) you can learn a lot. Of ****# Bertie |
#205
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Nomen Nescio writes:
You read something, misinterpreted it, and now think it's a fact. I read many things, see claims here that conflict with what I read, and tend to trust what I read. No amount of emotion or invective here will sway me from that policy. Give it up. You don't understand. You will never understand. And it does not matter because you will never fly. Given the vehemence of your replies, it must matter to you a great deal. |
#206
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: gatt writes: The ones that are ignored are different sensations and typically have to do with equilibrium and the inner ear. Examples are somatogravic and coriolis and inversion illusions. If your ass leaves the seat or compresses into it, however, it's not something you ignore. Yes, it is, because it is no more reliable than any other sensation. If you enter a coordinated turn at constant altitude, your buttocks will tell you that you are climbing ... but you aren't. Your inner ear will tell you the same thing, and it will be just as wrong. There aren't many/any RC pilots who haven't catastrophically augured an RC plane. Of those who have, how did they manage, without sensation? Indeed, how do they ever manage on any flight, without sensation? UAV systems are much more sophisticated than those in the average single-engine piston airplane, and--I've not flown a UAV so I'm guessing here--they're not doing things like steep-bank turns or short-field approaches. But aviation is more than single-engine piston airplanes ... much more. Those are different sensations and you have to know the difference and also what to reject or ignore. VFR pilots are subject to similar but different sensations such as visual autokinesis, reversal of motion and black hole approaches. Can you fly safely with your eyes closed, relying only on sensations, and selectively ignoring or accepting the sensations you feel? You can have those sensations while remaining perfectly still in normal flight. When your ass is sliding toward the inside or outside of a turn, or getting compressed into the seat or lifted into the lap belt, those are not illusions. But they may not be what you think they are, either. What people are asserting here is 180 degrees different from what I read in all the literature. You cannot fly by the seat of your pants. You can't fly based on sensations. They are too unreliable. Conversely, you can fly without sensations, as long as you have visual and/or instrument information. You're a moron. You're not competent to read with comprehension. Anthony, you don't know **** from shinola. |
#207
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Nomen Nescio writes: You read something, misinterpreted it, and now think it's a fact. I read many things, see claims here that conflict with what I read, and tend to trust what I read. No amount of emotion or invective here will sway me from that policy. Give it up. You don't understand. You will never understand. And it does not matter because you will never fly. Given the vehemence of your replies, it must matter to you a great deal. Anthony, the fecal matter you call a brain lacks the capacity to comprehend what you read. You don't know **** from shinola. |
#209
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Benjamin Dover writes: BULL ****. You land by "the seat of your pants". How are computers able to land aircraft, then? They don't land nearly as softly as a real pilot can. Its obvious who landed the aircraft when you're a pax and know what the sensation to look for is. Something you will, fortunately, NEVER COMPREHEND. You don't know **** from shinola. |
#210
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Nomen Nescio writes: I regularly travel a stretch of highway about 100 miles long. 2 trips same time of the day same traffic same speed When I use cruise control for the entire trip, I average about 18 mpg. When I use my foot the whole way, I average over 20 mpg. Do you look out the window, or look at the speedometer, or do you drive blindfolded and rely on sensations? Why do airline operators prefer that their pilots use a flight management computer instead of flying by hand? Another questions which is beyond your ability to comprehend. If you could think, you wouldn't have had to as the question. You're too ****ing stupid to think. |
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