![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#151
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You didn't read the information at the link to the California Vehicle
Code that I provided. I didn't read it all, but I read the "speed trap prohibition" part, and then since it didn't say anything about what a speed trap was, I looked at the definitions area. It wasn't there. Is this a speed trap for readers? Jose -- There are more ways to skin a cat than there are cats. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#152
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Larry Dighera writes:
Right. But there is no need to take the aircraft to altitude when practicing flying on the back side of the power curve. It would just be a waste of time, as there are no physical consequences of crashing a simulated aircraft. Part of the motivation for simulation is to approach reality. Without that motivation, there's no reason for practicing flying in a simulator, either, since even poor flying will not result in any physical consequences. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#153
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steve Foley writes:
What 'inherent bounce' is that? If you hit the ground at just the right speed, you bounce. Hit it any harder, and you crash. Hit it more softly, and you have a nice landing. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#154
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Skylune writes:
The sim is better than real life. I've done both. In the little planes, when u need to urinate, you do it in your pants or into a container. As for the other bodily functions, you just gotta hold it and hope that there isn't alot of traffic ahead of you before its your turn to land. (And the pilots wonder why more women don't want to deal with this). The Air Force (in the U.S.) did a study on this and did find a way for female fighter pilots to deal with it. It's not pretty for either sex. However, your points are well taken. These are some of the advantages of simulation. While it is true that no simulation can perfectly duplicate real life, it's possible to come very close--and at the same time you can dispense with the parts of real life that don't contribute to your enjoyment, such as flying around with a bursting bladder. In the little planes, you are oftentimes dealing with 1960s technology. The little planes are either too hot or too cold. They can't get you where you want to go unless you have an IFR license and a capable plane. In the little planes, you have to worry about other marginally trained pilots running into you (either on the ground, mid-air, or in the traffic pattern). Why wouldn't collisions be a worry for larger planes? I remember some PSA pilots who regretted losing track of a small plane (and the small plane had experienced pilots, too). In the little planes, you will waste at least $100K between the training, equipment, insurance, gas, etc. This is one of the key reasons why I do not pursuit flight in real life. And, best of all, in the sim world you can fly into and out of Megis Field to your heart's content! I don't like Meigs Field. I find that I tend to fly around areas that I've already seen from the air in real life, although sometimes I pick places I've never been to before. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#155
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Larry Dighera writes:
Granted, one can pull over and stop with an automobile; it's a little more difficult in a light aircraft, but nowhere near as confining as being trapped on a boat in high seas. However, unless you relish being trapped in the quagmire of congestion on today's freeways, aircraft are a far superior means of transportation for trips longer than fifty miles or so. How do you get to and from the airports? And if you don't own your own plane, how do you fly somewhere for the weekend? Can you rent planes in the same way you rent cars--complete with the option of dropping the plane off at a different airport from the one where you picked it up? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#156
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Margy Natalie writes:
Never had someone hit me in a plane, in the car is another story. We fly VFR rather frequently and get where we are going and back. A key difference is that if you had been hit in a plane, you wouldn't be here to talk about it. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#157
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Duniho writes:
Anyway, that's a long way of saying I don't generally like to bring up my involvement with MSFS. IMHO, the product released makes me look bad by association. Was there something specifically bad about FS 2000 that is no longer present in FS 2002 or FS 2004? I've been playing with MSFS for almost two decades but I don't recall what FS 2000 was like (or even having it, although I must have had it at some point). -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#158
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay B writes:
How many times will people have to tell you you are wrong about your assumptions? I'm not assuming. I priced it. I stopped when it exceeded my budget, which it did almost immediately. Yes, there is a significant outlay up front but there are affordable ways to fly IF YOU WANT TO. What kinds of flight? Just flying around the airfield? Cross-country flights for real transportation? Flights of commercial jetliners? I suppose if all you want is touch-and-go between two tiny airfields for a few hours a month, it might not break the bank (at least not some banks--it would bankrupt me). But if you want to use an aircraft as a practical means of transportation, or if you're interested in anything other than the tiniest tin can of an aircraft, big money problems loom. If you want to do something bad enough you find the time and a way to make it so. Not if you don't have enough money. That's one reason why some people starve. It's not as though they don't want to eat badly enough. Not every flight has to be Lindberg crossing the Atlantic. Sometimes just 45 minutes of going around the patch a few times is sufficient. For some lucky pilots, yes. But someone who is interested in other types of piloting may not find this worthwhile. The piloting you describe might please someone whose primary purpose in flying is to feel the sensations of being in the air. However, someone who wants to use aircraft as practical transportation wouldn't be happy. And someone who prefers sensations other than those of a tiny private plane would also be unhappy. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#159
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Leonard Milcin Jr. writes:
Isn't it obvious? If it were obvious, I wouldn't ask. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#160
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter Duniho writes:
Flaps enhance lift at the expense of drag. On a small airplane, large complex flaps would not produce a significant enough reduction in drag during cruise flight to justify the cost, complexity, and weight. However, the larger and faster the airplane, the more there can be accomplished by reducing drag significantly during cruise, especially compared to the airfoil required to land such planes safely and within the runways available to them (generally no longer than a couple of miles or so). You could land a 747 without flaps, but you'd use a LOT more pavement (maybe double?), runway length that just isn't available. On the other hand, you could design a 747 with an airfoil that allowed for shorter landings, but cruise speed would suffer. The airplane is large enough and fast enough that the extra expense and weight of flaps more than makes up for its cost during cruise, while still allowing for reasonable landing performance. Thanks. That makes sense. Hopefully this one example has answered the general question of "why do large airplanes have features not found on small airplanes?" You could spend months asking that same question, using different features, and the answer would always be the same: economics and usefulness. You're saying that there really isn't any technical, aerodynamic reason why a large aircraft would require extensive flaps while a small aircraft would not? That is, the advantages and disadvantages from a flying standpoint are the same in both cases? I know there are economic considerations, but since small private planes seem to handle quite differently from large planes I was wondering if there are fundamental differences in the aerodynamics that might be related to scale (physical dimensions). That is, would a giant version of a small plane, three times as big but with identical proportions and size-to-weight ratio, fly in the same way? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|