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Mxsmanic wrote:
brian whatcott writes: Let's see: would I know to turn on the two hydraulics control breakers, the FMS1 and the FMS 2 breakers, spin up the APU , turn on the pneumatic manifold to spin up one main engine, select radio frequencies via the FMS CDU, initialize the INS - and on and on..... Yes. Of course, you wouldn't need to know all these things just to land the airplane, particularly with help from an instructor on the ground. But you'd need them to fly the aircraft competently, and you wouldn't learn them in a Cessna. In any case, when it comes to landing the 747, a Cessna pilot wouldn't really have any clear advantage over a non-pilot--the few things he might know how to do would either be useless on a 747 or would be too trivial to help without assistance. You mean like what the controls do and how to make a turn, what a stall is, pulling the nose up decreases airspeed, putting the nose down decreases airspeed, little things like that? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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On Jun 20, 7:19*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
*In any case, when it comes to landing the 747, a Cessna pilot wouldn't really have any clear advantage over a non-pilot- WRONG. DEADLY WRONG if you really believe this. OH, I guess it isn't deadly wrong since you have no clue what it takes to fly a real plane. |
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On Sun, 20 Jun 2010 11:45:01 +0200, Mxsmanic
wrote: Wingnut writes: So, you're sayign that flight experience is irrelevant to flying an aircraft? That depends on the experience, and the aircraft. Flight experience in a Cessna 152 will not necessarily be of any use in flying a 747 or a SR-71. The lady in question has a commercial license, which implies more experience than noodling around in a 152. At a minimum the lady would know pulling back on the yoke raises the nose and and pushing forward makes for nose down. She would also know that turning the yoke will not make the plane turn unless the pedals are also used. And, of course, she will know most of the lingo and will know where to look when told to watch the air speed or the artificial horizon. She will presumably know the difference between mag north and true north and will have a pretty good idea of which direction runway 120 points. She would know the purpose of the flaps, the VOR, and so on. She will know how to read an air chart. The basic principles are the same, but nothing more. Just as experience in driving a Yugo doesn't necessarily help in driving a Formula 1 car. It will help in driving the Formula 1 from the garage to the street. The notion that experience at something improves one's ability at that something is a "myth"? Since when? A person with experience in a Cessna 152 still has none in a 747, and so he will not necessarily be any more useful in a 747 cockpit than a non-pilot would. Nonsense. While teh cockpit of a 747 is pretty complex, it still contains the basic instruments of a twin-engine Beech. Pilots of small private aircraft who believe that they could just slip into a 747 cockpit and fly it are just as naive as non-pilots who believe the same thing. I don't recall anyone here saying they could. To fly an airliner, you need experience and/or training in flying airliners, not Piper Cubs. Well, duh. That's not the question at hand. I don't think anyone here has claimed that. Though the less someone knows about operating an aircraft, the poorer their odds. Yes. I've heard many people claim this, however, and it only shows that they are uninformed. You've heard many people claim this? Who? And especially, who here in this thread? As usual you're making up straw men. A person with no flying experience who is compelled to take the controls of a small aircraft without any automation runs a high risk of crashing. In a large transport-category aircraft with heavy automation, though, he has a much better chance of being able to land safely, if someone can give him instructions over the radio. (Without instructions, his chances are just as poor as they would be in the small aircraft.) But this is a case where it would be especially helpful if the person taking over the controls had, say, a commercial license, for the reasons I cited above. Not the scenario here. This person was a commercial pilot, not just someone who had operated their own personal plane. The same principle still applies to a certain extent, unless the commercial pilot experience was in the same type of aircraft. If the FA had a CPL but had not flown for 20 years, she may never have flown an airliner. See the reasons I cited above. Among other things, an average passenger sitting in the left or right seat would probably go into shock at the mere sight of an airline instrument panel. Some one with a commercial license, would immediately look for the instruments familiar to him or her. -- ************* DAVE HATUNEN ) ************* * Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow * * My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps * |
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On Jun 20, 7:30*pm, Hatunen wrote:
See the reasons I cited above. Among other things, an average passenger sitting in the left or right seat would probably go into shock at the mere sight of an airline instrument panel. Some one with a commercial license, would immediately look for the instruments familiar to him or her. Not sure if you realize MX is a MSFS simmer, has never flown a real plane, not a CGI, and no real world experience inside a real plane. He just misrepresents himself as a pilot. He doesn't understand the real world as you describe above. Your last sentence is the key. Somebody with piloting experience would know what the altimeter would look like in the myriad of instruments presented in front of him or a DG for directional awareness. A non pilot may not be so quick to identify it. Put in glass cockpit in the mix, and you would have me lost trying to interpret the information being presented. I simply can't imagine a non pilot trying to figure it out especially with altitude and such. |
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On Sun, 20 Jun 2010 19:26:24 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Jun 20, 7:30*pm, Hatunen wrote: See the reasons I cited above. Among other things, an average passenger sitting in the left or right seat would probably go into shock at the mere sight of an airline instrument panel. Some one with a commercial license, would immediately look for the instruments familiar to him or her. Not sure if you realize MX is a MSFS simmer, has never flown a real plane, not a CGI, and no real world experience inside a real plane. He just misrepresents himself as a pilot. I'm quite familiar with Mixie. From time to time I get fed up and killfile him, but it's usually set to expred after thirty days of no kills, and he seems to have gone away for that long this time. He doesn't understand the real world as you describe above. Your last sentence is the key. Somebody with piloting experience would know what the altimeter would look like in the myriad of instruments presented in front of him or a DG for directional awareness. A non pilot may not be so quick to identify it. Put in glass cockpit in the mix, and you would have me lost trying to interpret the information being presented. I simply can't imagine a non pilot trying to figure it out especially with altitude and such. While a heavy jet is a big sucker with a very complex panel (although lighter aircraft are now sporting some pretty compicated-looking electronci panels now) the principals are basic for any one who has flown a plane for even a short time: keep it level except coordinated turns. To land glide down to near stall speed, flare at the runway apron and make it stall just as the wheels tough the runway. Of course, that last part takes some real practice (I failed my first flight test on the emergency landing). I don't know if modern airliners can, as they say, land themselves, or at least if they all can. I m pretty sure that if the plane is set up to land itself it has to be at a runway set up for it. -- ************* DAVE HATUNEN ) ************* * Tucson Arizona, out where the cacti grow * * My typos & mispellings are intentional copyright traps * |
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Hatunen wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote: Wingnut writes: So, you're sayign that flight experience is irrelevant to flying an aircraft? That depends on the experience, and the aircraft. Flight experience in a Cessna 152 will not necessarily be of any use in flying a 747 or a SR-71. The lady in question has a commercial license, which implies more experience than noodling around in a 152. Commercial airplane rating requires at least 10 hours training in retracts, controllable pitch prop, or be turbine powered. So it can't be completed using just a Cessna 150/152. You need some training in something like a Cessna 172RG or R182, at a minimum. |
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Hatunen writes:
The lady in question has a commercial license, which implies more experience than noodling around in a 152. You can fly any sort of aircraft as a commercial pilot, and in particular, a CPL does not necessarily imply any experience at all in large jet transport aircraft. If you want to barnstorm across the country in a 152, for example, you need a CPL. At a minimum the lady would know pulling back on the yoke raises the nose and and pushing forward makes for nose down. She would also know that turning the yoke will not make the plane turn unless the pedals are also used. Presumably, but since she will absolutely not be touching these flight controls, this knowledge is useless. And, of course, she will know most of the lingo and will know where to look when told to watch the air speed or the artificial horizon. There isn't a lot of lingo to know, but she might find it easier to locate the attitude indicator on the PFD without it being described to her, and she might find the airspeed without it being explained, although that depends largely on her ingenuity--small aircraft twenty years ago did not have PFDs. She will presumably know the difference between mag north and true north and will have a pretty good idea of which direction runway 120 points. She would know the purpose of the flaps, the VOR, and so on. She will know how to read an air chart. All she is going to do is turn a few knobs or move a few levers, which anyone can do, with or without a pilot's license. Nonsense. While teh cockpit of a 747 is pretty complex, it still contains the basic instruments of a twin-engine Beech. Actually, apart from the compass, standby AI, and altimeter, there's almost nothing in common. The cockpit does have a yoke, rudder pedals, and a couple of throttles, but she needs to stay away from those. I don't recall anyone here saying they could. This isn't the only place where I discuss aviation. Anyway, the same pilots who believe that a non-pilot would instantly crash any aircraft also tend to believe that they can fly anything, even if they've never been in any aircraft with more than two seats and a propeller. Well, duh. That's not the question at hand. Well, yes, it is. You can only stretch knowledge of one aircraft so far, then you need to explicitly study other aircraft. Knowing how to drive a Ford Escort does not teach you how to drive a tractor-trailer rig, even if they are both road vehicles. You've heard many people claim this? Who? And especially, who here in this thread? As usual you're making up straw men. As I've said, I discuss aviation in all sorts of venues, not just on USENET. But this is a case where it would be especially helpful if the person taking over the controls had, say, a commercial license, for the reasons I cited above. I've explained why those reasons would be mostly inapplicable. Among other things, an average passenger sitting in the left or right seat would probably go into shock at the mere sight of an airline instrument panel. Not so. In real-world emergency situations, people tend to be a lot calmer than they are in Hollywood movies or in imagination. There are some who panic, but many who don't. Natural selection doesn't favor people who panic easily. Some one with a commercial license, would immediately look for the instruments familiar to him or her. And would become just as alarmed as the non-pilot upon realizing that virtually nothing looks familiar. |
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Mxsmanic wrote:
You can fly any sort of aircraft as a commercial pilot, and in particular, a CPL does not necessarily imply any experience at all in large jet transport aircraft.... You can fly any type of aircraft at all on a private license. Surprise, surprise! Brian W p.s. Entertainment NGs cut out. |
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On Jun 21, 4:08*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
As I've said, I discuss aviation in all sorts of venues, not just on USENET. So pray tell, share with us your so called sources since you are not a pilot, not a CGI and pretend to be something you are not? Or are they also simulated discussions with sources like MSFS? |
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