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#31
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#32
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On Tue, 05 Sep 2006 06:24:58 -0400, Cubdriver usenet AT danford.net
wrote: On Tue, 05 Sep 2006 10:08:31 +0100, wrote: pages that have straight sides were not parallel. Interesting. The glasses presumably were correcting for a problem that your mind had already corrected for. I'm sure that's right. I discoverd after all those years that's why binoculars were difficult to get properly focussed. It was die to astigmatism. I had not found any problem until the perspective was change with the glasses. What amazes me it I wear the glasses all the time but apart from a change of focus I don't see the perspective change with glasses off or on. I read long ago that if you wear lenses that invert the world, after a few days it will turn right-side-up. Then, when you take the lenses off, the world appears upside-down. Yes I saw that demo on TV a number of years ago, amazing what the brain can do. I surely had a lot of trouble learning to land the Cub. Could it have been the glasses? I suspect if you wear glasses all the time you can't blame the glasses - sorry :-) |
#33
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Sylvain wrote:
something you may want to practice with an instructor or another pilot on board, but have you tried to fly with the glasses off? I mean, just in case; I was somewhat surprised to find out that I can land the thing if I have to (if I happen to loose both glasses) I lost my glasses once while snorkling the Itchtucknee River in northern Florida; didn't have any others with me either. Damn. One of the guys with me was an airline captain but he hadn't flown a small airplane in some time. I see well enough to fly instuments without the correction, I can see the runway, etc. What I can't see is traffic. I had the corrective lenses that are epoxied into my face mask but it would fog up if I used it out of the water. So.... I used the airline pilot as my spare eyeballs for distance vision.. Worked out fine. I will say I never flew without backup glasses after that. I also constructed a zip up pouch to go on my buoyancy compensator so I wouldn't lose my glasses when I go in the water again. That's worked out fine also. And my sunglasses are corrected now as well. Better safe than sorry. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#34
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So.... I used
the airline pilot as my spare eyeballs for distance vision.. Did you log it as simulated instrument time? Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#35
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Jose wrote:
So.... I used the airline pilot as my spare eyeballs for distance vision.. Did you log it as simulated instrument time? Jose Poor eyesight _is_ a "view limiting device"! G |
#36
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An airline senior captain went to the company doctor for his
regular 6 month First Class physical. There was a new doctor on duty, seems the old doc had to go to the hospital because of hip surgery. Anyway, the captain filled out the forms and the young doctor proceeded with the examination. Everything was fine until they got to the eye exam. The captain could see just fine close up, but could hardly even see the eye chart from 20 feet away. The young doctor was shocked, he knew that the captain's eyes had not gotten so bad in only 6 months. He asked the captain, "How do you see to fly?" To which then captain answered, "I'm the most senior pilot with the company, I get my choice of routes and crew. I always select the new co-pilots. I let them do a lot of the work. I can see the instruments just fine and can nail an ILS right down to 100 feet." "But how do you land?" asked the doctor. That's the easiest part, I just keep the ILS centered until the co-pilot screams "Oh, my God!" Then I flare. "Mortimer Schnerd, RN" mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com wrote in message ... | Sylvain wrote: | something you may want to practice with an instructor or another | pilot on board, but have you tried to fly with the glasses off? I | mean, just in case; I was somewhat surprised to find out that I | can land the thing if I have to (if I happen to loose both glasses) | | | I lost my glasses once while snorkling the Itchtucknee River in northern | Florida; didn't have any others with me either. Damn. One of the guys with me | was an airline captain but he hadn't flown a small airplane in some time. I see | well enough to fly instuments without the correction, I can see the runway, etc. | What I can't see is traffic. I had the corrective lenses that are epoxied into | my face mask but it would fog up if I used it out of the water. So.... I used | the airline pilot as my spare eyeballs for distance vision.. | | Worked out fine. I will say I never flew without backup glasses after that. I | also constructed a zip up pouch to go on my buoyancy compensator so I wouldn't | lose my glasses when I go in the water again. That's worked out fine also. And | my sunglasses are corrected now as well. | | Better safe than sorry. | | | | -- | Mortimer Schnerd, RN | mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com | | |
#37
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B A R R Y wrote:
Jose wrote: So.... I used the airline pilot as my spare eyeballs for distance vision.. Did you log it as simulated instrument time? Jose Poor eyesight _is_ a "view limiting device"! G Is that still the case if you can't see the instruments, either? |
#38
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Jose wrote:
So.... I used the airline pilot as my spare eyeballs for distance vision.. Did you log it as simulated instrument time? No... I was able to see the horizon way off in the distance and used that for my distance reference. G What I couldn't see was any aircraft between me and it. That's why I had the ATP up front with me. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN mschnerdatcarolina.rr.com |
#39
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Emily wrote:
Poor eyesight _is_ a "view limiting device"! G Is that still the case if you can't see the instruments, either? so you log simulated instrument time AND partial panel training, can't beat that ;-) --Sylvain |
#40
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On 2006-09-05, Robert M. Gary wrote:
I had a student that used monovision contacts for distance/near vision. I'm not sure how but she managed to get an unrestricted medical that allowed her to use them in flight. At my first medical the AME gave me a vision test with my contacts in... After he realized that, he just put down the 'corrective lenses' requirement. -- Ben Jackson AD7GD http://www.ben.com/ |
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