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#1
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What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when
preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? |
#2
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? Extra fans for your computer Bertie |
#3
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In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic wrote:
What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43? C)? Turn on the air conditioner in your hovel. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#4
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On Jun 29, 10:56*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? Dehydration is the main one, I take a six pack for every planned flight hour, including reserves, and just a can for taxi allowance either end. And dont forget to include them in your weight and balance. Terry PPL Downunder |
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On Jun 28, 8:56*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? The negative effects of high density altitude. |
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On Jun 29, 12:03*pm, wrote:
On Jun 28, 8:56*pm, Mxsmanic wrote: What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? The negative effects of high density altitude. we have tried to explain the density altitude concept to him before. it ended up in a debate about the gas laws, and how ( according to mxs) they dont apply to the atmosphere. believe me its a lost cause trying to explain anything to him. |
#7
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On Jun 29, 10:56*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? Not being a simmer myself, but dont you guys look at performance charts and weather reports and make pretend flight plans and all that sort of stuff that real pilots do? or do you just jump on the computer and take off? |
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On Jun 29, 12:56*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
What are the main things I have to give special consideration to when preparing to fly in very hot weather (43° C)? Sweat dripping onto your keyboard and BO attracting the landlord. Next? Cheers |
#9
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terry writes:
Not being a simmer myself, but dont you guys look at performance charts and weather reports and make pretend flight plans and all that sort of stuff that real pilots do? or do you just jump on the computer and take off? It depends on the simmer. Some go to extremes with details, others do not. In simulation, you can simulate the part you enjoy, and skip the part you don't, which is one of its key advantages. At least in the case of online flight, flight plans are routinely filed (and of course they are required for IFR). I look briefly at weather for the departure and destination airports and sometimes at weather along the way; I do a lot of flying in the American southwest, where the weather tends to be perpetually VMC, so detailed analysis isn't usually required. If I'm flying through Alaska or through the Midwest in winter, or any place where VMC is not the rule, or any place unfamiliar, I look more closely. I only look at performance charts in unusual situations (such as this one). I fly the same aircraft regularly and in normal situations I have a good idea what performance to expect. Yesterday I noted the temperature on the ramp to be 42.9° C, and so I worried a bit about any potential problems that I might have forgotten about that are associated with high ambient temperatures, which is why I asked about it. There are simmers who have simulated passenger and cargo manifests, virtual airlines for which they fly, and other simulated details highly peripheral to the flight itself, but I don't usually bother with those, although I try to come up with weak pretexts for having different numbers of passengers aboard in small aircraft. In large aircraft I generally assume that I'm flying a private jet with a fairly fixed weight and a constant fuel load so that I don't have to constantly recalculate things. I keep more than enough fuel aboard in both cases to cover the time range that interests me (no more than two hours or so for a flight, and often much less). There are also simmers who are very close to gamers, in that they'll just jump into the aircraft and take off, and buzz buildings and fly loops and all sorts of tremendously unrealistic things. They are only a problem if they do this online, as online flight (at least on VATSIM) is supposed to be just like real life, and this means no Mach 2.5 passes over the runways at LAX or anything like that. In simulation there is also a type of pilot that one would never see in real life, namely, a pilot who has flown only airliners and only with full automation. These pilots have learned only how to load something into their FMC, and depend on the computer to handle the flight; they maneuver by adjusting controls on the autopilot, and every landing is an autoland. They aren't much of a hindrance if all goes well, but since they are often incapable of flying the aircraft without the FMC, any instruction from ATC that requires manual intervention leaves them dangerously confused. I'm not sure what sort of person would only be interested in loading the FMC and going, without ever being curious about the other aspects of piloting, but they seem to be common. Perhaps it's the ATC that attracts them, and they just want to sound cool on the radio. |
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More_Flaps writes:
Sweat dripping onto your keyboard and BO attracting the landlord. The hot weather was in the sim, not in real life (fortunately). That's another advantage of simulation. There would be nothing fun about flying at 43° C in real life. |
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