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#131
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![]() Why can't people who have decided not to install an autopilot just admit that they have chosen a slightly lower level of safety? Probably for the same reason that those who have one but don't use it won't admit they've "chosen a lower level of safety", and those who insist on flying themselves rather than having a professional pilot co-pilot team fly them around in a part 135 aircraft are "choosing a lower level of safety". There are autopilots in all the club aircraft I fly. I never use them. (ok, I tried playing around with one once; it just didn't feel like I was flying an airplane any more). I much prefer to be a pilot than a passenger, I much prefer to have my hand on the yoke and my feet on the pedals. That's the whole point, isn't it? Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#132
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Snowbird wrote:
(andrew m. boardman) wrote in message ... FWIW, our AA5B does fine hands-off if the pitch trim is OK, even in bouncy stuff, using one's feet to keep it vaguely straight. I don't know what to say about this. Do you have aileron trim? Do you have the 100 hr aileron AD or the terminating condition? No and yes; we're happy to deal with the AD considering all the horror stories I've heard about the aileronectomy. He becomes noticably left-wing heavy in rain, to the extent that if I'm flying under the hood I can tell immediately when I enter and exit IMC just by the feel of the yoke. Ours too, although not in all IMC; there seems to be a critical level of moisture that causes it. (You've probably heard all the same theories I have about *why*, I just wish I could make it go away.) The above comment about driving with the feet does definitely *not* apply when it's doing this. (It's really also less active than "driving with the feet"; more like "figuring out how much rudder pressure I need to compensate for the heavy wing so I can hold approximate heading in uncoordinated flight long enough to go deal with whatever I need to deal with.) Once upon a time, in very smooth air (11500' over one of the flat states), self and copilot went for about 20 minutes thinking that the autopilot was on when it wasn't; the plane was tracking perfectly. I have flown in smooth air and have never encountered anything remotely like this. If our autopilot weren't engaged, we'd know right away. All I can say is it really happened! We were playing with all of the electronics on the delivery flight, and decided to see how the Century I did with course tracking. I'd read 2^n pieces of advice about how they don't work worth beans unless they start out on course and on heading, so I took some time getting everything perfectly dialed in and on the beam and then settled back to watch, but never actually switched it on. I *was* periodically tweaking the pitch trim to hold approximate altititude. The plane eventually went into a very gradual right bank, and we waited a bit for enough of a CDI deviation for the C-1 to kick in with a course correction, and only twigged to what was really going on after we were 20 degrees off and getting (slowly) worse. The air was smooth as glass, and the two pilots on board were inert if not somnolescent. I was reading the first part and thinking maybe you're just a stud-muffin ace pilot... No worries there! ...who doesn't notice the constant slight adjustments you're making and I'm a putz, but the above is just totally foreign to our experience. Hmm. I've flown a few four-seat Grummans (though I'm *far* from being Mike LeTrello), and while the experience related above is indeed so far a unique one, I've never felt like I couldn't let go of the controls for a bit for some vaguely-straight-and-level. Maybe I've just got looser tolerances for what I'm willing to recover from after I finish fishing around in the back seat? You're welcome to come fly Tigger and generalize about 4 place Grummans after you do. Thanks! And vice-versa, too. Might even be at Baraboo... |
#133
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Peter,
that an IFR flight plan must be airways only. Perhaps it is similar in Germany? Can you fly IFR more or less anywhere (like you can in the UK)? You file airways, but sometimes you get direct. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#134
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#135
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"Tom S." writes:
Also, learn to handle the yoke without using a death grip. It may require a bit more than fingertip pressure to handle the yoke in turbulence, but "white knuckles" only makes the sensations worse. Right -- thumb and forefinger only for me, with elbow on the armrest (actually, I normally use only thumb *or* forefinger). All the best, David |
#136
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#137
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#138
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David Megginson wrote:
The hard part is figuring out how big the risk is, and we simply don't have the stats available to do that. The people who *do* have the stats -- insurance companies -- do not give a discount for private IFR pilots flying small planes with an autopilot (as far as I've seen), so they must figure it's too small a risk difference to affect the amount of claims they pay out. Another possibility is that the whole risk pool is just too small to come up with any statistics meaningful enough to sub-divide the pool and offer different rates. I think there's no doubt that if you take two equally skilled pilots and put them in otherwise equal airplane and flight conditions but give one an AP (with appropriate training) and make the other hand-fly 100% of the time, the one with the AP will have a lower workload, which translates directly into higher reserve of ability to handle the unexpected which in turn translates into a safer flight. On the other hand, for all I know, the guy with the AP in his plane will, over the long run, tend to get complacent and dependant on the AP, letting his hand-flying skills erode. This leads to a decrease in safety. Which is the stronger factor? I have no clue, and I suspect the insurance companies don't either. |
#139
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Roy Smith writes:
I think there's no doubt that if you take two equally skilled pilots and put them in otherwise equal airplane and flight conditions but give one an AP (with appropriate training) and make the other hand-fly 100% of the time, the one with the AP will have a lower workload, which translates directly into higher reserve of ability to handle the unexpected which in turn translates into a safer flight. On the other hand, for all I know, the guy with the AP in his plane will, over the long run, tend to get complacent and dependant on the AP, letting his hand-flying skills erode. This leads to a decrease in safety. Which is the stronger factor? I have no clue, and I suspect the insurance companies don't either. But they do have better statistics about accidents than we can get publicly. They know a lot about their individual policy holders, both the ones who get in accidents and the ones who don't. To help everyone in this discussion avoid jumping to absolutes (I'm not accusing you of that, by the way), here's a different way to approach the problem. Let's say you have a basic plane like mine -- a 125 kt, 160 hp, fixed-gear Warrior II with dual NAVCOM, DME, and ADF -- that you fly a few hours each month in actual IMC and the rest in VMC or marginal VMC (filed IFR, in that case). You decide that you can afford to install *one* new permanent system costing from USD 4K to USD 10K this year, and possibly one in each following year (but not for certain). Arrange the following list in the order that *you* think would make your IFR flying safest, putting the highest priority item at the top. If you want, you can assume that you already have some kind of backup vacuum system. These are currently in alphabetical order: Electric AI (backup) Engine monitor (i.e. EDM 700) HSI (slaved) IFR GPS (non-moving-map, at this price) Stormscope (or Strikefinder) TPAS Wing leveller (or other general single-axis AP) For some people, there will come a point in the list where it makes more safety sense each year to spend the money on additional maintenance, inspections, and proactive replacement of typical failure items like the alternator or vacuum pump (or even the navcom radios); others will likely run down the full list and want to add more at the end. I'll post my own list shortly, but I will mention in advance that neither the IFR GPS nor the wing leveller will be at the bottom. All the best, David |
#140
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