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#21
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"Peter MacPherson" wrote in message news:jY9kd.386904$D%.80590@attbi_s51...
How does owning your own airplane make you a better instructor? I own my own airplane, have "another job", fly a lot of actual, and he is STILL a better instructor than I. I think "better" may be a relative term. A CFI that only does training will be very good at getting you through the checkride. However, when you ask real questions, like how to you manage ice you will be met with a blank face. As an example, any CFI who says the solution to ice in a non-ice approved plane is to stay out of the ice has never really flown IFR outside of the training env. In actual flying (long cross countries, flying IFR because you need to) you will end up getting ice when its not forcast and not suppose to be there. Having the practical background on how to come up with alternates and what type of ice to expect in what real-world situations, how different types of ice can be escaped, is where a good CFI gives benefit. Getting out of clear ice can be different than getting out of rime simply because of the environment they form in. Any CFI can read the FAA pubs and spew back what the pubs say. Owning a plane and flying it all over the place is one way to get this experience. Flying 135 could be another. Having said all this, none of this makes someone good at teaching. Teaching is mostly an art, you either have it or not. The best CFIs combine a natural ability to teach with real world experience of flying. -Robert, CFI |
#22
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Journeyman wrote \
Any statement that a private pilot with 1000 hours could be a good instructor based on that qualification alone is so ridiculous I won't even address it, and I sincerely hope that the people on this group are smart enough to realize that this is pure nonsense. I didn't make the statement Nor did I, nor would I try to defend it. It's indefensible. In fact, it's a perfect example of a straw man argument - change what someone actually said to what you know you can argue with, then argue with it. Knock down the straw man. It's used a lot because it works - all too often, people won't take the time to notice that it's happened. It's essentially a cheap rhetorical trick, and reflects poorly on anyone who uses it. What I actually said: Becoming a CFI involves a lot of jumping through FAA hoops, but it's certainly not difficult or challenging. In fact, I can't say it requires acquiring any skill or knowledge that the average 1000 hour instrument rated private pilot owner doesn't already have. Note that I never said that "becoming a good CFI" or even "becoming a competent CFI." Quite the opposite. And I stand by what I said - meeting the FAA requirements to become a CFI will not require the average 1000 hour instrument rated private pilot owner to acquire any new skills or knowledge. That's mostly a commentary on the sad state of affairs in instructor certification, and a suggestion that more owners should try their hand at instructing since the bar is set so low anyway, they can hardly do worse than the average timebuilder and might do better. It's safe to assume that someone with 1000 hours of actually going places has learned something worth teaching to to someone who wants to use an airplane to actually go places. Right. This at least assures the owner-turned-CFI has SOMETHING of value to teach. It may not be much, but it's still better than what the average timebuilder can offer. Michael |
#23
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Journeyman wrote
First of all, there is absolutely nothing involved in owning an airplane that makes one better or not better qualified as an instructor....absolutely nothing. There are things you learn about flying by going places that you don't learn sitting in the training environment. None of it's on the PTS, but it's vital information if you're going to fly out beyond hectobuck- burger range. This is objective truth. If you don't fly long trips, you just won't know what you're missing. As a renter pilot, such trips are inaccessible or prohibitive. As graduate student, er, instructor, most "timebuilders" just won't have the money to pay for this kind of training, and it doesn't advance their careers. This is part of it. An important part, don't get me wrong, and I didn't snip it so it could stand as refutation to the nonsense above it. But there is more. As a rule, owners get involved in the maintenance of their aircraft. There are exceptions, but not many. Even those who don't actually do the work themselves don't generally hand over checkbook and keys - they want to know what is being done, why it is being done, and how it is being done. Once you become involved in the maintenance of the aircraft, you begin to understand a lot more about how it is put together, how the sytems work - and thus what the failure modes and their early warning signs are. An instructor who just flies can teach you to handle a total engine failure emergency. If the main seal dumps all the oil or a jug grenades itself, that's all that counts - but most problems are not so cut and dried. An instructor who has taken care of engines for a while can tell you a lot about when it's practical to nurse an ailing engine along, and what can be expected from it. That can be very important when you're over a field that is rough but probably survivable, and an airport is a few miles away over probably unsurvivable forest. Lest we forget, there was the guy who nursed the Cub home on the primer. In Russia, there is a proverb about 'the exception that proves the rule.' There is in fact a small handful of renter (more commonly, club member) pilots who, never having owned an aircraft, nevertheless have been involved in the maintenance, done long trips, and in general learned the things an owner learns. Sometimes it comes from being in a really good club, sometimes by growing up in a family where aircraft are owned and flown, sometimes by simply having been at the right place at the right time and having the opportunity to fly and maintain aircraft owned by friends. But those exceptions are just that - exceptional. In choosing an instructor, one generally has a huge number of candidates - most of whom aren't worth much. Practically speaking, one can only effectively interview a small handful. Further, there is a question as to how effective the interview really is - after all, you're hiring the instructor specifically to teach you that which you do not know. For that reason, it is very important to have useful ways to cut the candidate pool. Call those ways filters, generalizations, or what you will - they are a way of elimintaing a significant fraction of the candidates while eliminating a significantly smaller fraction of the GOOD candidates. No filter is ever perfect, no generalization ever 100% true. Even the best filter will take out a really good instructor along with that large number of bad ones. However, without filters, if you individually interview every possible flight instructor, your odds of finding a good one before you give up, start doubting your evaluation, and take what you can get are exceedingly small because the good instructors are a distinct minority. Every time anyone proposes a set of generalizations, someone pipes up to say "well I know this guy who is a great instructor and he doesn't fit this generalizaiton." I don't doubt it. Generalizations are of little use when evaluating a specific instructor you know because you already know him - but if you don't have the time get to know him, they're the best you have. Think of the process of selecting a flight instructor as analogous to the process of hiring an employee (because to a large extent that's what you are doing). It is exceedingly common for a set of qualifications to be written for a given position - and then to have someone hired from inside, or based on acquaintance, who lacks one (or more) of those qualifications. Does that mean that the set of qualifications was wrong? No, of course not. It means that MOST of the candidates who can do the job well will have those qualifications, and nobody has the time to interview every possible applicant, nor is an interview necessarily a good test. However, when you're dealing with a known quantity, it's not that important. You already know he can do the job. Michael |
#24
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Andrew Sarangan wrote
Except for weather Yes, except for weather. But you know, except for weather, effective and complete pilot training could be done in about 40 hours. Except for weather, there would never be a need to get an instrument rating. Except for weather, all trips could be planned in detail before leaving. Except for weather, you could plan your flight and fly your plan with complete confidence. Are there other factors? Terrain? Would not be a factor except for winds and temperature (weather). Traffic congestion? Could be planned for perfectly, if weather was fully predictable. In reality, weather is probably the biggest issue in light airplane flying. The longer the trip, the lower the probability of completing it without encountering questionable weather. You can wait out the weather on a 200 mile trip; on a 2000 mile trip you're going to have to fly in it. That requires a higher level of skill and (if you're dealing with any sort of time constraint) judgment. Of course there are always exceptions - you can fly a Champ around the country, landing in every state, and never fly in any questionable weather. In fact, you can do the flight entirely in sunshine. It will take months. Weather is different in different parts of the country, but the basic principles of mechanics and thermodynamics that underlie it are the same everywhere. If you always fly in the same area, you learn the specifics of that one area, and you can do that without a solid understanding of the mechanism. You can learn by rote - red sky in morning, sailor take warning. If you cross weather systems, you have to learn weather at a deeper, more fundamental level - or get stuck a lot. Having said that, I don't necessarily agree with your other points either. ATC is not the same everywhere. You can fly on the Gulf Coast for years without getting a reroute in the air. On the East Coast, I've never managed an IFR flight of more than 200 miles without a reroute. That may well reflect my limited understanding of the system - perhaps other people can do better - but that's only further proof that making more long trips makes a difference. Then there are the factors that you supposedly know about. We all learn about density altitude and doing full-power runups, but it's a very different experience when you take off and your rate of climb is 200 fpm. Especially when there is thermal activity. You can read about it in a book, but it's not the same as actually being there. If it were, experience would not count. On a long trip, you go places that not only have you never visited, but nobody you know has actually visited. You have to learn to handle surprises - like that beacon that got moved half a mile, to the other side of the runway, that all the locals know about, but which is still depicted in the old location on the approach plate. Makes shooting an NDB approach to mins at night a real treat. Long trips are concentrated experience. There really is more to it than a series of short local trips. I find it amazing that someone who has actually done a lot of long trips would not see that. Michael |
#25
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In article , Andrew Sarangan wrote:
I am an instructor, and I have flown long trips for personal business. But I fail to see how those long trips are an essential experience for instructing. It makes a good hangar story, and it may impress an uninformed student. In my opinion, critical examination of the issues (like the discussions taking place in this NG) to be far more valuable for the experience and knowledge of an instructor. However, you have a valid point about things that are not in the PTS. This is particularly true for the IFR environment. There are many unwritten rules of IFR that you only learn by flying in the system. But it is not difficult to incorporate those elements into the standard IFR training. You don't have to embark on a 1000NM trip. ATC works the same way whether it is Cleveland Center or Albuquerque Center. Tracon works the same way everywhere. FSS works the same way. FAR's are the same. Except for weather and regional accents, what else is so different that is critical to the experience of an IFR pilot? Please explain. Leaving out weather? Weather's the biggest part of it. I was sitting in the FBO at South Bend, IN this summer looking at the radar, watching a line of thunderstorms develop outside my destination at Iowa City, IA (Hi, Jay). Looked to me like I could go South around it and then come back North. I asked a local pilot who was sitting around updating his Jepp plates. He says, look at the way it's curling, it's probably going to continue forming along this curve. Why don't you go to Peoria and get an update there. Did that. Landed short of the storms, with options to call it a day or wait it out before continuing on. Looked at the radar. It formed exactly the way he said it would. Experiencing the different weather patterns gives you a chance to improve your decision making. Do you rush to beat the weather? Wait it out to see how things develop? Divert North? Divert South? Backtrack? Fly over the highway, or across the mountains? Climb above the clouds or run the scud? Fly direct or along the airways? Aside from weather, there are other things you learn going beyond hectobuck-burger range. Knowing to keep a roll of quarters in case lunch is whatever you can get out of the vending machine; knowing to keep enough cash on hand so you can pay the friendly mechanic who saves your butt when the alternator fries itself. Knowing that an unbusy midwest controller might forget about you and knowing what to do when you've gone out of radio range. Knowing that this particular IFR route takes you mostly over a highway but that one takes you over hostile terrain, but the weather is better. Knowing when to land at a smaller airport and when to land at a larger one. Knowing when to call it a day and when to push it. Besides, ATC is different around the country. Around here, they're busy so you have to be crisp with your radio work, and don't even hope for a pop-up clearance. Around the Midwest, they may be so bored they forget to hand you off. In the Pacific Northwest during icing season you have to know you can request "shuttle vectors" to climb over the low terrain before proceeding on course over hostile terrain. I had my first inflight rerouting flying from ORF to HPN when I bought the plane. I filed a route that took me over JFK. I was cleared as filed. About halfway there, the controller gives a bunch of fixes and airways that take me in a neat arc around The City. Okay, you do your diversion exercise for the private, but by the time you do it, you already know the area you're flying in. It's just _different_ when you have to do it IRL. Talking about these things is never going to be the same as experiencing them. But talking with someone who has experienced it is more valuable than talking with someone who only has book knowledge. Morris |
#26
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![]() "Michael" wrote in message om... Journeyman wrote \ Any statement that a private pilot with 1000 hours could be a good instructor based on that qualification alone is so ridiculous I won't even address it, and I sincerely hope that the people on this group are smart enough to realize that this is pure nonsense. I didn't make the statement Nor did I, nor would I try to defend it. It's indefensible. In fact, it's a perfect example of a straw man argument - change what someone actually said to what you know you can argue with, then argue with it. Knock down the straw man. It's used a lot because it works - all too often, people won't take the time to notice that it's happened. It's essentially a cheap rhetorical trick, and reflects poorly on anyone who uses it. I made the statement, not journeyman..... and I see no straw man argument here. The general context of your statements was what I was addressing, NOT your use or lack of use of the words "good" or "competent" . Your entire context in commenting on the CFI issue is that it's easy to become a CFI, and that it takes no special skills, other than what can be found in any 1000 hour pilot, which as I said, is ridiculous. There most certainly are special skills required, or no FAA test would be necessary for that 1000 hour pilot you're talking about. Although you can restrict your comment to mean only the obtaining of the rating as that pertains to passing the FAA tests as the source opinion for your comment, I would submit that from your posts on this issue here, and from your posts in the past that generally address your "opinions" about instructors in general, it is quite reasonable to say that you believe CFI's generally are of inferior quality and that you would attribute this inferior quality at least in part to the average CFI not owning an airplane, or partaking in long trips, which is again ridiculous. The qualities you would attribute to making a better instructor are not in my opinion of prime importance to this issue, and show a certain lacking of understanding on your part of exactly what qualities ARE necessary in a CFI. My comments about "good" or "competent" CFI's are just an expansion on my own opinions on this issue, and should be in no way shape or form misconstrued by you to be a misuse or twisting of your comments in a straw man scenario. Sorry, but I'm simply disagreeing with your opinions on flight instruction as usual. In the interest of clarity, I'm perfectly willing to deal with your comments verbatim if you wish in the future and I'll make my expansion comment more clear for you in the future to eliminate any misunderstanding. :-) Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship for email; take out the trash What I actually said: Becoming a CFI involves a lot of jumping through FAA hoops, but it's certainly not difficult or challenging. In fact, I can't say it requires acquiring any skill or knowledge that the average 1000 hour instrument rated private pilot owner doesn't already have. Note that I never said that "becoming a good CFI" or even "becoming a competent CFI." Quite the opposite. And I stand by what I said - meeting the FAA requirements to become a CFI will not require the average 1000 hour instrument rated private pilot owner to acquire any new skills or knowledge. That's mostly a commentary on the sad state of affairs in instructor certification, and a suggestion that more owners should try their hand at instructing since the bar is set so low anyway, they can hardly do worse than the average timebuilder and might do better. It's safe to assume that someone with 1000 hours of actually going places has learned something worth teaching to to someone who wants to use an airplane to actually go places. Right. This at least assures the owner-turned-CFI has SOMETHING of value to teach. It may not be much, but it's still better than what the average timebuilder can offer. Michael |
#27
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![]() I agree with you about having to face weather changes on a long xc flight. But the orginal poster implied that there were many factors that were different about long trips. That is what I was questioning. Also, just because someone flies short trips does not mean that person always flies in good weather. You don't have to go on a long trip to see how weather changes. If you wait long enough, that same weather system will move towards you. You can trade time for space. I know what you are thinking - the pressure to continue in deteriorating weather is greater when you are on a trip. I agree with that. But that is a judgement issue. You don't have to send someone on a 2000NM trip to learn a judgement skill that they could learn at home. Weather is meant to be learned at home, not in the air. You don't have to fly into a thunderstorm or icing to know that it is not a good idea. OK, so what's the big deal about reroutes? We get them here quite often. As a matter of fact, just got one today on a training flight. We get a reroute even during a 150NM trip. If a student does not know how to handle reroutes, that is a weakness in his training. I agree that you are more likely to encounter a reroute on a long trip. But you can do the same on a short trip. Just file an impossible route. If you are lucky, you will get a reroute before departure. If you are not lucky, you will get rerouted in the air. There are also strategies that one can use to avoid reroutes, even in unfamiliar areas. That is a different subject matter that I will be happy to discuss. You don't have to go on a super-long trip to experience reroutes. Regarding density altitude that I 'supposedly know about' (please, you don't know what I supposedly know), I have lived in the Rockies, and have given mountain flight training, and I have taught IFR in the mountains. I know very well what density altitude does. I really doubt that a transient pilot on a long cross country will learn enough about density altitude effects to make him experienced. Most transient pilots do not go into airports that really require intimate knowledge of density altitudes. Most runways are long enough for this to be a non- issue. Have you flown into Leadville? It is the highest airport in the US, but it is really not a big deal due to the long runway there. Then try Glenwood Springs. That is serious. Most transient pilots don't go there. They land at places like Santa Fe and Colorado Springs, where they can get away with little knowledge of density altitude. The textbook knowledge is enough to survive there. I don't see what is so profound about landing at those places. Living in the mountains and flying there is what gets you the experience. But that involves short trips, not long trips. That is ironic. Most of the pilots who get killed in Colorado are from other states. Most airplanes laying at the bottom of Independence Pass are from out of state. I'll show my ignorance here, but if an NDB has moved by half a mile, would there not be a NOTAM amending the approach chart? I don't want you to get the wrong impression. I realize the value of long trips. I have done many myself. I just don't see what is so profound that makes them so important for IFR experience. If you are encountering new stuff on a long trip that you have never encountered before, then you missed out some things in your training. But I do agree with you that the PTS leaves a student far short of real IFR knowledge. The CFI-mills that produce instructors that barely satisfy the PTS is where the problem lies. I think we agree on that. Where we disagree is that a pilot who has made many long trips is necessarily any skillful than someone who has received a _well-rounded_ training in a local environment. (Michael) wrote in om: Andrew Sarangan wrote Except for weather Yes, except for weather. But you know, except for weather, effective and complete pilot training could be done in about 40 hours. Except for weather, there would never be a need to get an instrument rating. Except for weather, all trips could be planned in detail before leaving. Except for weather, you could plan your flight and fly your plan with complete confidence. Are there other factors? Terrain? Would not be a factor except for winds and temperature (weather). Traffic congestion? Could be planned for perfectly, if weather was fully predictable. In reality, weather is probably the biggest issue in light airplane flying. The longer the trip, the lower the probability of completing it without encountering questionable weather. You can wait out the weather on a 200 mile trip; on a 2000 mile trip you're going to have to fly in it. That requires a higher level of skill and (if you're dealing with any sort of time constraint) judgment. Of course there are always exceptions - you can fly a Champ around the country, landing in every state, and never fly in any questionable weather. In fact, you can do the flight entirely in sunshine. It will take months. Weather is different in different parts of the country, but the basic principles of mechanics and thermodynamics that underlie it are the same everywhere. If you always fly in the same area, you learn the specifics of that one area, and you can do that without a solid understanding of the mechanism. You can learn by rote - red sky in morning, sailor take warning. If you cross weather systems, you have to learn weather at a deeper, more fundamental level - or get stuck a lot. Having said that, I don't necessarily agree with your other points either. ATC is not the same everywhere. You can fly on the Gulf Coast for years without getting a reroute in the air. On the East Coast, I've never managed an IFR flight of more than 200 miles without a reroute. That may well reflect my limited understanding of the system - perhaps other people can do better - but that's only further proof that making more long trips makes a difference. Then there are the factors that you supposedly know about. We all learn about density altitude and doing full-power runups, but it's a very different experience when you take off and your rate of climb is 200 fpm. Especially when there is thermal activity. You can read about it in a book, but it's not the same as actually being there. If it were, experience would not count. On a long trip, you go places that not only have you never visited, but nobody you know has actually visited. You have to learn to handle surprises - like that beacon that got moved half a mile, to the other side of the runway, that all the locals know about, but which is still depicted in the old location on the approach plate. Makes shooting an NDB approach to mins at night a real treat. Long trips are concentrated experience. There really is more to it than a series of short local trips. I find it amazing that someone who has actually done a lot of long trips would not see that. Michael |
#28
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Owning a plane and flying it all over the place is one way to get this
experience. Flying 135 could be another. Agreed, but instructors can also fly "all over the place" with their students. Like someone else said, the x-c's don't have to be 1000 miles to get good wx experience. A lot of part 135 pilots don't tend to fly very far. As another example, Cape Air which flies from Boston to the Islands(Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard) and other short hops, probably have some of the best wx pilots around. They fly through all New England wx....fog, ice, etc.. and they probably never fly more than 150 miles. So if these pilots are able to get this experience (difference in equipment noted) why do instructors need to be going "all over the place" to give their students some great wx experience? Having said all this, none of this makes someone good at teaching. Teaching is mostly an art, you either have it or not. The best CFIs combine a natural ability to teach with real world experience of flying. I don't agree that with teaching you either have it or not. I think if you have the aptitude, over time you become a better teacher every day you teach. I doubt that the best teachers you know were that good on their first day because "they had it". "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message om... "Peter MacPherson" wrote in message news:jY9kd.386904$D%.80590@attbi_s51... How does owning your own airplane make you a better instructor? I own my own airplane, have "another job", fly a lot of actual, and he is STILL a better instructor than I. I think "better" may be a relative term. A CFI that only does training will be very good at getting you through the checkride. However, when you ask real questions, like how to you manage ice you will be met with a blank face. As an example, any CFI who says the solution to ice in a non-ice approved plane is to stay out of the ice has never really flown IFR outside of the training env. In actual flying (long cross countries, flying IFR because you need to) you will end up getting ice when its not forcast and not suppose to be there. Having the practical background on how to come up with alternates and what type of ice to expect in what real-world situations, how different types of ice can be escaped, is where a good CFI gives benefit. Getting out of clear ice can be different than getting out of rime simply because of the environment they form in. Any CFI can read the FAA pubs and spew back what the pubs say. Owning a plane and flying it all over the place is one way to get this experience. Flying 135 could be another. Having said all this, none of this makes someone good at teaching. Teaching is mostly an art, you either have it or not. The best CFIs combine a natural ability to teach with real world experience of flying. -Robert, CFI |
#29
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Andrew Sarangan wrote
I agree with you about having to face weather changes on a long xc flight. But the orginal poster implied that there were many factors that were different about long trips. And I think most of them relate to weather in the end. I know what you are thinking - the pressure to continue in deteriorating weather is greater when you are on a trip. I agree with that. But that is a judgement issue. You don't have to send someone on a 2000NM trip to learn a judgement skill that they could learn at home. Here I think we fundamentally disagree. No judgment can be learned in the training environment, because nothing is at stake. Tomorrow is as good as today, West is as good as North. When you actually need to be somewhere specific at a specific time, then judgment comes into play. However, on a short trip it's relatively simple - planning around the weather is not generally possible (or at least not worth it - who will take a 300 mile detour on a 100 mile trip?). On a long trip, a 300 mile detour may not add all that much. The decision matrix becomes far more complex. Weather is meant to be learned at home, not in the air. You don't have to fly into a thunderstorm or icing to know that it is not a good idea. Well, you really do have to fly in icing to know what is acceptable. Otherwise, your only option is to stay out of cloud every time the temperatures are below freezing - making the instrument rating useless in half the country for half the year. I will be the first to admit that this is where my IFR skills are weakest - not much icing on the Gulf Coast. And you really do have to fly near (not in) thunderstorms to figure out what is acceptable. Otherwise your only option is to maintain the 20 (or is it 30 now?) nm from each cell that the AIM calls for, and that means you won't be doing much flying here on the Gulf Coast. There is a limit to what you can teach on the ground - eventually you have to fly. Experience matters. OK, so what's the big deal about reroutes? We get them here quite often. And we don't get them here much at all. And yes, you CAN train for it here - but not the way you suggest. Forget filing an impossible route - around here, there's no such thing. You will have to play ATC for the student. Now, once the weather gets really ugly you will get reroutes - but we just don't have that much of it. I've been flying IFR for 4 years, I've been instructing, and I've made it a point to get all the actual IMC that I can - and I still have not broken 100 hours. I make every effort to get my students actual IMC, and 3-5 hours is all I can manage. That means that if I want to really prepare them for what happens when they leave the nest, I have to get good at simulating. You need to see it a few times before you simulate it. Regarding density altitude that I 'supposedly know about' (please, you don't know what I supposedly know), I have lived in the Rockies, and have given mountain flight training, and I have taught IFR in the mountains. I know very well what density altitude does. I really doubt that a transient pilot on a long cross country will learn enough about density altitude effects to make him experienced. He will learn a whole lot more than if he never goes. Sure, you know about density altitude - because you live with it. If you don't get intimate with it, it will severely limit the utility of your flying. Same for me and thunderstorms. Same for ice and the guys in the Great Lakes Ice Machine. My point is not that you can get it all in one trip, but that you will learn a whole lot more if you go than if you don't. Most transient pilots do not go into airports that really require intimate knowledge of density altitudes. Most runways are long enough for this to be a non- issue. Have you flown into Leadville? It is the highest airport in the US, but it is really not a big deal due to the long runway there. Then try Glenwood Springs. That is serious. Most transient pilots don't go there. They land at places like Santa Fe and Colorado Springs, where they can get away with little knowledge of density altitude. The textbook knowledge is enough to survive there. The part you're missing though, is that while the textbook knowledge is enough to survive, it's not enough to really be comfortable. You don't start with the tough fields. All I can tell you is that I could compute density altitude and takeoff and climb performance with the best of them when I first took off out of West Texas, but the experience of the first five minutes of that flight was a real eye-opener. The textbook knowledge was enough for me to survive - and accumulate additional knowledge. I'll show my ignorance here, but if an NDB has moved by half a mile, would there not be a NOTAM amending the approach chart? It wasn't the NDB, it was the airport rotating beacon. And no, the change was NOT recorded anywhere, though the locals all knew about it. What made the process fascinating was breaking out, finding the beacon, and then looking for the runway - in the wrong place. The beacon had been moved to the opposite side of the runway. On a clear day, not an issue. At night in limited vis - well, I almost went missed due to not finding the runway. I don't want you to get the wrong impression. I realize the value of long trips. I have done many myself. I just don't see what is so profound that makes them so important for IFR experience. I guess I'm missing something. If you realize their value, then why are you arguing against their value? If you are encountering new stuff on a long trip that you have never encountered before, then you missed out some things in your training. Absolutely. The problem is, there is so much to learn, EVERYONE misses out on some things in training. My goal in training a student, expecially an IFR student (and I admit that IFR training is most of the instruction I do - call it playing to your strengths) is to give him better training than what I had, and fewer surprises down the road. I suppose if I ever get to the point where I know ALL there is to know and good enough to get it all across, then I will train a student who doesn't need to go on any long trips to learn anything. But I'm not hopeful. But I do agree with you that the PTS leaves a student far short of real IFR knowledge. The CFI-mills that produce instructors that barely satisfy the PTS is where the problem lies. I think we agree on that. Where we disagree is that a pilot who has made many long trips is necessarily any skillful than someone who has received a _well-rounded_ training in a local environment. I suppose that could be true in theory. I just think in this case the difference between theory and practice is a lot greater in practice than it is in theory. But you're right - I'm starting from a somewhat different assumption. I know that most people DON'T get solid, well rounded training in the local environment. Those who make long trips on a regular basis get the holes filled in. However, as you pointed out with your remark about the airplanes at the bottom of the canyon from out of state, that's if they survive. It's possible that someone who has never made a long trip still has the depth and breadth of knowledge to instruct because HIS initial training was solid - but given the quality of training that is generally available out there, it's not the way to bet. And even if that is the case, there is still a difference between knowing about it and having done it. There are IFR pilots out there who have significantly less intrument experience than I do who nonetheless are much more able to handle IFR in potential icing conditions - because MOST of their IFR time is in icing conditions, while you can count my experiences with icing conditions on the fingers of one hand. On paper, though, we know all the same things. Finally, there is a difference in depth of knowledge required to teach a thing or just do it. I've done aerobatics. I can do it. I won't teach it, because I haven't done it enough. Michael |
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