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#51
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Because flying above the clouds, etc., is the second biggest thrill, after
sex. I thought sex was for people who didn't fly aeroplanes? |
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#52
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Actually, flying the ILS to minimums (as I did Wednesday going into
Boston Logan on an Angel Flight) and seeing those beautiful lights in front of you when you are at 250 ft is certainly among THE greatest thrills. There are many, many times when ONLY the immediate area of the airport is fogged in, particularly Cape Cod, Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard and Boston. After an IFR departure, in 20 minutes you can be in clear blue VFR. Without the rating, you are STUCK until the fog lifts. This discussion has surfaced frequently over the years I have been on this NG . . . and I remain a strong advocate of the Instrument Rating when it comes to optimum utilitization of an aircraft and pilot's advanced education. I don't see ANY downside. |
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#53
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I HATE the foggles. I am required to wear reading glasses when I fly,
and for good reason. I need them to read charts, plates, and GPS. They work fine. But putting on the foggles makes me unable to read even with the glasses. So I have to look down, raise the foggles enough to be able to read, and then replace them. It sucks. |
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#54
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#55
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"Andrew Gideon" wrote in message
online.com... Others have mentioned the instructor as a possible issue. But I recall how, early in my training, I tried several different "view limiting devices" before I found one (Foggles) that I disliked the least. As much as I did enjoy the IR training, I never grew to like the foggles. It was especially bad when I got a new pair of glasses that were smaller in the vertical dimension than my previous pair. The area blocked by the foggles covered most of my corrected vision range. Foggles, and in fact all the other vision limiting devices that you attach yourself, are a pain in the butt. The only type of thing I found any good was to have louvred screens in the aircraft which prevent the left-seat driver from seeing out of his/her side of the windscreen and the side windows, but which allow the resident of the right seat to see OK. D. |
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#56
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David Cartwright wrote:
Foggles, and in fact all the other vision limiting devices that you attach yourself, are a pain in the butt. You're using them improperly. - Andrew (who couldn't resist {8^) |
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#57
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Ross,
Have you tried bifocal or variable focus glasses? We use them with the Flipup JeffShades which are quite comfortable. |
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#58
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#59
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#60
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"Matt Whiting" wrote in message news:zorje.2569 Well, not quite as great a thrill as seeing a mountain when you break out at 250'. :-) If you had a chance to fly the approach into KaiTak, you *would* see a mountain (big hill) right in front of you when you broke out at about 650. Then you turn. Promptly. :-) |
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