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http://overtheairwaves.com/
I refer to the first article on this page. -- Oz Lander. I'm not always right, But I'm never wrong. |
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![]() "Oz Lander" wrote in message ... http://overtheairwaves.com/ I refer to the first article on this page. -- Oz Lander. I'm not always right, But I'm never wrong. From the article- "Fortunately for the good guys, FAR 61.65(e) limits the use of flight simulators to 10 or 20 out of the required 40 hours required for the instrument rating. This means that the instrument student must actually fly a real airplane for a minimum of 20 to 30 hours in either simulated or actual instrument conditions." Now, I'm not a pilot (real or imagined) but I'm surprised that ANY simulator time is credited toward the actual "40 hours required for the instrument rating". I would think that the simulator would be a good tool to acclimate the student to the environment prior to making the requisite 40 hours of actual flight time but not to replace flying time. (Is simulator time credited hour-for-hour?) As a skydiver I recognize the benefits of using vertical wind tunnels to "pretrain" first-jump students in stability and orientation. It's also useful for working out problems a student may have in mastering a stable freefall, but to get your license you gotta do the actual jumps. |
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On Apr 15, 9:01 am, "Oz Lander" wrote:
http://overtheairwaves.com/ I refer to the first article on this page. He also questions whether training for an Instrument license using sims and view limiting devices is valid. FAA says yes. Kev |
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Oz Lander writes:
http://overtheairwaves.com/ I refer to the first article on this page. It's just another expression of opinion, exactly similar to what has been given here. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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muff528 writes:
Now, I'm not a pilot (real or imagined) but I'm surprised that ANY simulator time is credited toward the actual "40 hours required for the instrument rating". I'm not. Much of instrument flight is watching instruments, following procedures, and other activities that can be very accurately simulated. It's the exact opposite of "seat of the pants" flying (which most simulators handle poorly, unless they provide full motion). -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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![]() I'm not. Much of instrument flight is watching instruments, following procedures, and other activities that can be very accurately simulated. It's Incorrect statement. Learning to fly on instruments also entails learning to firmly shut out the "seat of the pants" sensations. The "seat of the pants" sensations are not there when flying a desktop computer so its incorrect to say that instrument flying can be "accurately simulated" on a desktop. Only when you fly a real airplane on instruments can you fully learn to ignore the often contradicatory sensory input from the movements of the airplane. |
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On 2007-04-15 06:01:45 -0700, "Oz Lander" said:
http://overtheairwaves.com/ I refer to the first article on this page. Settle what? I disagree with him vehemently on several points, not least the usefulness of view limiting devices. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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On Sun, 15 Apr 2007 13:01:45 +0000, Oz Lander wrote:
http://overtheairwaves.com/ I refer to the first article on this page. Cite "Hey . . . anybody can fly these airplanes," goes the hype! /Cite The author would have lamented the marketing for the early tricycle geared aircraft from Cessna. The idea behind simulations for education is one that's of interest to me. Given a gross mistrust of schools (and prompted by an excellent if poorly named book on teaching math to children: http://www.csam.montclair.edu/~kenschaft/Mathpower.html), I've been introducing math to my 4 yo. Recent additions to his education have been negative numbers and number lines. But given those, I introduced a couple of days ago how the pairing of two number lines can be used for addition and subtraction. It's a "simulation" of the mental process (and also an introduction to mechanical computing, which I view as having its own value). Is this a Bad Thing? I'm teaching use of a tool very early. So I've some doubts. On the other hand, I've found a site with printable paper E6Bs. That's one of my goals for the future pilot grin. - Andrew |
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On 2007-04-15 06:01:45 -0700, "Oz Lander" said:
http://overtheairwaves.com/ I refer to the first article on this page. To expand a little on my earlier reply: I have a real problem with instructors who begin by running down other instructors, the FAA, the manufacturers, etc. It demonstrates a serious authority problem, a very dangerous attitude. Apparently he does not like the instructional techniques that have proven successful for years. Who is Bob Miller? Yet, he thinks he knows more than the FAA, more than the Kings, more than Rod Machado, more than the AOPA, more than Bob Gardner, and even more than me. Only two people seem to know anything about flight instruction: Bob Miller and God, and God is sometimes wrong but Miller never is. What, is this guy a retired surgeon or something? The US Air Force, which presumably knows something about flying, successfully uses simulators and view limiting devices for instrument training. I strongly believe that the instrument student should get all the simulator time he can (we are talking about real flight simulators, not toys published by game companies). I do not think that simulator time is enough, obviously. You have to fly in order to learn to fly, and that includes instrument training. But flight simulators are invaluable in getting your procedures down cold. As for view limiting devices, I should point out that they have been use since the very earliest days of instrument flying. We don't paint the cockpit black like Jimmy Doolittle did, but we come close. I am convinced that it is harder to fly an airplane with a view limiting device than it is in actual instrument conditions. As for the "weather adverse" (sic) flight instructor, perhaps Mr. Miller has forgotten that most of the largest flight schools are located in the desert? And for good reason -- the instructors are not weather averse, as he claims, but you cannot learn to fly unless you fly. Most places have too many days where the weather is below minimums -- and surely Mr. Miller is not recommending that anyone fly in weather like that. Neither are "personal minimums" training to less than competency. Aircraft vary widely in equipment, and their pilots in experience. I have much higher personal minimums for a piston single equipped with only one VOR and one radio than I do for a turbo-prop with a flight director. It is not a matter of competence, it is a matter of allowing a margine of error for equipment error or outright failure. You lose that single VOR on the piston single in an approach to minimums and you might as well get yourself measured for another, more permanent set of wings. This guy probably has a problem with the whole concept of dangerous attitudes. If this is the way he really thinks, he is a statistic already. He just doesn't know it yet. -- Waddling Eagle World Famous Flight Instructor |
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