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In rec.aviation.student WJRFlyBoy wrote:
On Fri, 29 Feb 2008 14:32:07 -0600, Michael Ash wrote: Maybe I misunderstood. You are relating the advanced disassembly of a glider with post flight travel arrangements of motorized aircraft as comparable deficiencies in training? Sounds like you are unfamiliar with glider assembly/disassembly. There is nothing "advanced" about it. It's something that all glider pilots are allowed to do and all should be able to do. On the average day when my club operates with good soaring conditions, there are several gliders assembled in the morning and disassembled in the afternoon after the day's flying is done. The average glider takes two or three people 15-20 minutes to assemble or disassemble. Never done one, seen it done only. Just out of curiosity, what did you see which made you term it as "advanced"? Certainly I've seen difficult assemblies. There's a big difference between a couple of experienced people assembling a single seater for the Nth time and a group trying to assemble a heavy two-seater which might get this treatment twice a year. Maybe you just got "lucky" and saw a painful one. And yes, I am comparing it to the non-flying portions of traveling using a powered aircraft. If you feel the comparison is not apt, perhaps you could elaborate. You said: Of course this is pretty glider-specific. The equivalent for "normal" flying would, I imagine, be how to travel with a plane, how to deal with courtesy cars and arrange transportation at the destination and so forth, which I've seen talked about here as lamentably un-discussed during training. I don't see the comparisons between a manual task that requires physical, hands-on work and picking up a telephone or using a computer. Relative to capabilities, the glider would be world's different than the travel arrangements for me. Others, maybe you, if you were stunted socially, I can see the latter being more difficult. I am stunted mechanically. The comparison isn't on what you actually do, it's on how it relates to your training. Both are highly "practical" knowledge which don't relate directly to flying. Technically speaking you don't need to know how to assemble or disassemble a glider to fly one (although the PTS does require a small bit of knowledge here), just like you don't need to know how to deal with the logistics at the destination when travelling in an airplane to fly one. But in both cases, you'll have a tough time doing too much with your certificate without this knowledge. In case I didn't explain myself too clearly, here's a post made to this group a couple of months ago by one of the instructors talking about this sort of logistical knowledge, and lamenting that it isn't generally covered during training: http://groups.google.com/group/rec.a...48afef1266fbff -- Michael Ash Rogue Amoeba Software |
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