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#111
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I believe that the "wrong math" citation that everyone is alluding to
was when he posited that if the probability of one engine failing was 1/1000 then a single engine plane's chance of turning into a glider was 1/1000, but a twin's chance of turning into a glider was 1/1000000, although the chance of a twin losing an engine was 1/500. Our more mathematically correct and esteemed colleagues cited the exact formula (which would correct the 1/500 to 1/500- 1/1000000). I believe that any engineer worth his salt would call the second term negligible. John Theune wrote: Steve Foley wrote: "John Theune" wrote in message news:BAKXg.9272$ms1.6478@trndny05... However I've also seen him write on detailed medical and mathematical subjects and he has demonstrated a fair amount on knowledge. I can't comment on his medical knowledge, but in the mathematical subjects I recall, he applied the wrong formula for a given situation. Pretty mach the same thing he does in aviation matters. True, he was wrong there also, but he knew enough math to make it appear reasonable ( and wrong ) Not what I would expect from a minimum wage earning person. If he had that level of knowledge/training he should be able to get a better job. I know from what I've seen over the years at work the ability to be right is not required for getting a job, it's much more knowing the lingo. I'm sure you run into clueless people at work before also. One wonders how they keep their jobs but its not terrible surprising how they got them. Bottom line is I don't buy his line of poverty as a reason to not learn more about flying from a professional or even by himself from purchased book. |
#112
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On Tue, 17 Oct 2006 20:09:26 +0200, Mxsmanic wrote:
Here again, I disagree. Who cares? You've zero knowledge from which to come to your conclusion. That you choose to disagree, despite a complete lack of knowledge, with those that have the knowledge you lack is telling. Stay aware from real airplanes. I've no doubt that your arrogance combined with your distaste for actual knowledge and experience would combine to kill you in short order. And that, unfortunately, would be just another "black eye" for aviation. - Andrew |
#113
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![]() "Bob Noel" wrote in message ... ahem... older pilots tend not to have sim experience of any value prior to getting into a real cockpit. For example, I did my primary training in 1987. MSFS was a horrible toy at that time. And my first flight was in 1973, when a friend of my father got me hooked on flying with a xc in an arrow. Not many sims available in 1973. -- Bob Noel Looking for a sig the lawyers will hate I agree with Bob. When I learned to fly the airplane didn't have lights, they are electric, and electricity didn't come till later... Al G |
#114
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Emily has remarked a couple times about her inability to fly a MS-type
flight simulator without crashing it. Emily, I would be very interested to know how you'd do in a full motion simulator like the airlines use. Jon |
#115
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Marty Shapiro wrote:
140 an hour dual really isn't *that* much higher than in the US. At 4:33 AM EDT, the excange rate quoted was 1 USD = 0.7974 Euro. That makes 140 Euro = $175.57. one thing to note: although the rental prices tend to be much higher in Europe, you are also more likely to find clubs that provide instruction for free (instructors volunteering their time); so training is not necessarily so much more expensive as it might be in USA. --Sylvain |
#116
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Emily writes:
140 an hour dual really isn't *that* much higher than in the US. It is only slightly less than I earn in a week. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#117
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Andrew Gideon writes:
Who cares? Anyone who spends three paragraphs arguing about it. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#118
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Kev writes:
I guarantee that your view would change in this case. People guaranteed me all sorts of things in the past, too. They were still wrong. You see, almost everyone who first flew, had misconceptions similar to yours. I heard this, too. A lot of people are stupid. But I'm not. Perhaps, but see above. What you're missing is that many others had a similar experience. But I did not. I am atypical. While I think that you are very observant, your questions and statements do make it abundantly clear that you overestimate what you understand on this topic. You're basically at the point of someone who knows how to ride a bicycle, and thinking that the experience is equivalent to driving a car. I've heard this before as well. After decades of giving people the benefit of the doubt and being disappointed, I no longer believe it. Sorry. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#119
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Dave Stadt writes:
A half hour of real flight is worth eons of sitting behind a game. A half-hour is just a half-hour. Eons are eons. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#120
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Emily writes: 140 an hour dual really isn't *that* much higher than in the US. It is only slightly less than I earn in a week. Hmmm. A teen age high school drop out earns significantly more than that at an entry level position with McDonalds. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
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