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#141
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gatt writes:
I don't either. That's like saying I don't fly to feel the carb heat or landing gear switches, or to use checklists. Some people clearly fly for the physical sensations. That has nothing to do with it anything, and you're not qualified to suggest to pilots what's what about flying because you have no experience in it, anymore than I have combat experience because I played Battlefield 1942. I hope that your intense desire to contradict me doesn't turn you into an NTSB statistic one day. |
#142
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: gatt writes: We're telling you, as the FAA and other sources tell you, that they're important. Not under IFR. We're also telling you that they're reliable. Not under IFR. Pilots don't enjoy severe turbulence or wing icing, but these too are realities of aviation. VFR pilots are often very much into the sensations of flying. If they cannot tear themselves away from that, they should stay VFR and never attempt IFR in IMC. I'm an airline pilot and I stil use them. We all do, fjukktard. Bertie |
#143
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: gatt writes: I don't either. That's like saying I don't fly to feel the carb heat or landing gear switches, or to use checklists. Some people clearly fly for the physical sensations. You don;t fly at all, moron. Bertie |
#144
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Mxsmanic wrote:
gatt writes: We're telling you, as the FAA and other sources tell you, that they're important. Not under IFR. Sorry. You're not authoritative, you cite no sources, and you have no experience or demonstrated proficiency. Your opinion on the matter is empty. Next... -c |
#145
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Mxsmanic wrote:
gatt writes: I hope that your intense desire to contradict me doesn't turn you into an NTSB statistic one day. LOL! What kind of ego must you have that you'd think somebody contradicting you would cause them to be an NTSB statistic? I'm not interested in what you "hope." You still haven't cited any authoritative sources for any of your opinions and, as a system administrator I can tell you, only a fool would believe something just because Microsoft says it's so. -c |
#146
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gatt writes:
Sorry. You're not authoritative, you cite no sources, and you have no experience or demonstrated proficiency. Your opinion on the matter is empty. Next... Next, ask Dudley. |
#147
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gatt writes:
LOL! What kind of ego must you have that you'd think somebody contradicting you would cause them to be an NTSB statistic? It doesn't require any ego. I've read the literature and I know what it says. I don't make this up. I'm not interested in what you "hope." You wouldn't be, if you fit the profile I have in mind. It reminds me of some CRM studies I've read, in which it has been shown that some people would rather die than give up an opinion or risk rejection from a group. |
#148
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In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic wrote:
It reminds me of some CRM studies I've read, in which it has been shown that some people would rather die than give up an opinion or... Hmmm. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#149
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#150
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On May 16, 1:49 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" wrote:
I was ok with the location of the trim wheel, but the adjustment was too coarse for me, but I could be a bitchy sissy. My wheel was graduated, with a zero mark and did not quite give the fine adjustment I wanted. That could be cables out to the tail, I should have learned the mechanism! Nothing to do with the cables. Cessna's trim is anything but sensitive, having four or five full turns of the wheel for the trim range. Try a Citabria sometime, where the trim is a lever that moves about eight or ten inches for the full range. Much more twitchy. As far as others have asked about sim trim, the good, commercial training sims (Level II) have a pitch control mechanism centered by some strong springs that supposedly simulate elevator pressures. The anchor points for those springs are movable, and those are what the trim mechanism moves. So in slow flight the yoke is well back, against the springs, so that the trim moves the spring anchors back until the pressure disappears. The yoke does not move and the pilot, if he's "flying" right, doesn't let it move. He just trims off the pressure. Mx's stick, on the other hand, trims electronically so that he has to gradually center the stick to keep the nose where it's supposed to be. Not realistic at all. And the springs in those cheap things are so feeble as to be a joke. Flying the real airplane is much more work. If you had realistic spring forces you'd have to bolt the stick to the desk and anchor the chair to the floor. I built our own procedures sim here. Proper frame welded up, proper adjustable seat, huge monitor, real rudder pedals with realistic spring feel, real stick with a heavy non-discrete center spring and an adjustable anchor to simulate a reaslistic trim. Real steel throttle/prop/mixture quadrant. Robbed the electronics out of the CH stick and pedals to drive it. But still, it's used only as a procedures trainer, not for teaching how to fly. The students use it for free to practice what they learned on our certified Elite sim or in the air under the hood. It's much more work to fly it, thanks to the big springs I put in it. I need to redesign the mechanical trim to get more travel, though. Underestimated the degree of elevator movement between high cruise and slow flight. And it has a collective for helicopter flight. Dan |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Typical power settings during cruise and other phases of flight | Mxsmanic | Piloting | 99 | October 2nd 06 10:12 AM |
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ALTRAK pitch system flight report | optics student | Home Built | 2 | September 21st 03 11:49 PM |