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What in your view are the easiest and hardest aspects about flying? I
mean in the phase between takeoff and touchdown, so the obvious "taxiing" doesn't count ![]() Hardest would be countering windshear on finals or flying IFR through a storm at low altitude, I'd imagine. Hoping this thread gets responses ![]() Ramapriya |
#3
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That's a lot of good stuff written in there, Pete. Thanks. Quite
surprised to read about taxiing difficulties, though - especially since you won't likely cross 40 mph ![]() Ramapriya Peter Duniho wrote: I'm not sure that's a reasonable limitation. There are some airplanes for which taxiing *is* one of the hardest things to do. Sometimes it's only in a crosswind, other times it's because taxiing the airplane is just plain difficult. |
#4
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#5
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The hardest and most important aspect of flying is the continuous
exercise of good judgement. We all have lapses, and those lapses can put us in conditions that test our skills at times when we didn't intend those tests. For example: deciding to land for fuel within a hour''s flight of home because reserves would be marginal. Or continuing an approach just a little lower than minimums because "I think I see the field." Or taking off not feeling quite right physically. I'm a fairly high time PP Instruments, been there and done that, and still sometimes driving back from the airport I realize I had made one or more really stupid decisions, but you know what? There are always new stupidities to commit. As for the easiest? It's deciding to fly! Clear! Flyingmonk wrote: wrote: What in your view are the easiest and hardest aspects about flying? I mean in the phase between takeoff and touchdown, so the obvious "taxiing" doesn't count ![]() Hardest would be countering windshear on finals or flying IFR through a storm at low altitude, I'd imagine. Hoping this thread gets responses ![]() Ramapriya Flying in general: --Hardest: Communication with ATC, and as Peter has pointed out, weather interpretations. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Flying Airplanes: --Hardest: Remembering when to use flaps and how much. I suppose, taxiing a jumbo might be hard because you'd be way out ahead of the front wheel, having to pass your turn off thirty feet to turn into it gotta feel strange at first, but I can only immagine. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Flying Helicopters: --Hardest: At first learning to hover was the hardest thing to do; after getting the hang of that, it is performing autorotation with the CFI or the examiner in the cabin with you. Although we 'are allowed to practice autos on our own, I experienced carb icing once and was able to do a very good autorotation right down to the ground. While practicing, we were not permitted to auto all the way to the ground. We had to do a "power recovery" at the bottom. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Monk |
#6
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![]() Flyingmonk wrote: wrote: What in your view are the easiest and hardest aspects about flying? I mean in the phase between takeoff and touchdown, so the obvious "taxiing" doesn't count ![]() Hardest would be countering windshear on finals or flying IFR through a storm at low altitude, I'd imagine. Hoping this thread gets responses ![]() Ramapriya Flying in general: --Hardest: Communication with ATC, and as Peter has pointed out, weather interpretations. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Flying Airplanes: --Hardest: Remembering when to use flaps and how much. I suppose, taxiing a jumbo might be hard because you'd be way out ahead of the front wheel, having to pass your turn off thirty feet to turn into it gotta feel strange at first, but I can only immagine. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Flying Helicopters: --Hardest: At first learning to hover was the hardest thing to do; after getting the hang of that, it is performing autorotation with the CFI or the examiner in the cabin with you. Although we 'are allowed to practice autos on our own, I experienced carb icing once and was able to do a very good autorotation right down to the ground. While practicing, we were not permitted to auto all the way to the ground. We had to do a "power recovery" at the bottom. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Monk "Although we 'are allowed to practice autos on our own" That should have been "Although we aren't allowed to practice autos on our own" Monk |
#7
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In a tailwheel plane taxiing is the hardest.
I find that every student has their own area that is most difficult for them. Its always amazing to me to see what each person will have a hard time with. From my experience there are no "universal" hardest and easiest for everyone. -Robert, CFII wrote: What in your view are the easiest and hardest aspects about flying? I mean in the phase between takeoff and touchdown, so the obvious "taxiing" doesn't count ![]() Hardest would be countering windshear on finals or flying IFR through a storm at low altitude, I'd imagine. Hoping this thread gets responses ![]() Ramapriya |
#8
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In a previous article, said:
What in your view are the easiest and hardest aspects about flying? I mean in the phase between takeoff and touchdown, so the obvious "taxiing" doesn't count ![]() Hardest would be countering windshear on finals or flying IFR through a storm at low altitude, I'd imagine. The hardest aspect of flying, and the most important to master, is the ability to say "no, I don't think so, maybe tomorrow" when you or your passengers really want to get where you were planning to go. Whether it's weather, a minor squawk, or just a bad feeling at the back of your head, you've got to know when to say "no", and how to make that "no" stick. -- Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/ Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. -- Arthur C. Clarke |
#9
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I have to agree on the "exercising good judgment" thing being the
hardest. It's not just because it is difficult but it is also because the payback for doing it well can be so negative. I was thinking of landing some difficult to handle tail dragger in a strong crosswind landing as being one of the hardest. Yes, it can be difficult, but the feedback is so immediate and direct and the successful conclusion so damn satisfying, that it's somehow easier to do than... ....canceling a flight to the beach with 2 excited friends because a brake is a little spongy. ....or successfully making a precautionary off-field landing when you know that extraction will cost many bucks and much time. Exercising good judgment is the hard one. Tony wrote: The hardest and most important aspect of flying is the continuous exercise of good judgement. We all have lapses, and those lapses can put us in conditions that test our skills at times when we didn't intend those tests. For example: deciding to land for fuel within a hour''s flight of home because reserves would be marginal. Or continuing an approach just a little lower than minimums because "I think I see the field." Or taking off not feeling quite right physically. I'm a fairly high time PP Instruments, been there and done that, and still sometimes driving back from the airport I realize I had made one or more really stupid decisions, but you know what? There are always new stupidities to commit. As for the easiest? It's deciding to fly! Clear! Flyingmonk wrote: wrote: What in your view are the easiest and hardest aspects about flying? I mean in the phase between takeoff and touchdown, so the obvious "taxiing" doesn't count ![]() Hardest would be countering windshear on finals or flying IFR through a storm at low altitude, I'd imagine. Hoping this thread gets responses ![]() Ramapriya Flying in general: --Hardest: Communication with ATC, and as Peter has pointed out, weather interpretations. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Flying Airplanes: --Hardest: Remembering when to use flaps and how much. I suppose, taxiing a jumbo might be hard because you'd be way out ahead of the front wheel, having to pass your turn off thirty feet to turn into it gotta feel strange at first, but I can only immagine. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Flying Helicopters: --Hardest: At first learning to hover was the hardest thing to do; after getting the hang of that, it is performing autorotation with the CFI or the examiner in the cabin with you. Although we 'are allowed to practice autos on our own, I experienced carb icing once and was able to do a very good autorotation right down to the ground. While practicing, we were not permitted to auto all the way to the ground. We had to do a "power recovery" at the bottom. --Easiest: Straight and level of course. Monk |
#10
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