Mxsmanic wrote:
writes:
Of course I do; the tower is the final arbiter of whether or not I was
in the right place, and the real tower with the real controller was
satisfied.
So did they tell you exactly how far you were? If so, how close were you? If
not, how can you make any statements about accuracy with no clear idea of what
accuracy is required?
I'll type this real slow so you have a better chance of understanding
the concepts involved, though you may still have to read it several
times to understand.
ATC, i.e. the real controller in the real tower, is the final arbiter,
judge, referee, umpire, authority, and decider of the required accuracy
of any manuever.
Real ATC does not provide "scores" because we are not playing a game.
If the accuracy of a manuever by a real pilot in a real airplane satisfies
the accuracy requirements of the real ATC controller, nothing is said about
the manuever.
If the accuracy of a manuever by a real pilot in a real airplane does
NOT satisfy the accuracy requirements of the real ATC controller, the
real pilot is informed of his error.
Since I received no feedback from the tower on the accuracy of my manuever,
the final arbiter, judge, referee, umpire, authority, and decider of the
required accuracy was satisfied.
QED.
--
Jim Pennino
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