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#11
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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: Wrong, try again. http://www.airliners.net/photo/Virgi...4Q8/0314046/L/ Looks just like the sim. Not shown are the dozens of switches and buttons on the overhead panel. That's okay, I know what they are and what they do already. Yeah, so what? I noticed you snipped the part where you were wrong, i.e. where you stated there were only a dozen of so switches and buttons. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#12
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On Mar 4, 2:15*pm, wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote: writes: Wrong, try again. http://www.airliners.net/photo/Virgi...Boeing-747-4Q8.... Looks just like the sim. Not shown are the dozens of switches and buttons on the overhead panel. That's okay, I know what they are and what they do already. Yeah, so what? I noticed you snipped the part where you were wrong, i.e. where you stated there were only a dozen of so switches and buttons. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. It's been two hours staring at that screen (NOT) and I am still looking for the altitude hold button LOL I'za along with the 100's of passengers would have been dead 118 minutes ago looking for that durn thing. Is it a button, toggle switch, twist knob or what? Gee, imagine ATC describing to me where to look as gravity's unyielding force is applied against the airplane current course. MAY DAY, MAY DAY!!! Oh dang it, ATC hung up the phone because John Q pilot like myself didn't know where the altitude hold button was. |
#13
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#14
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-b- writes:
Fortunately, safe pilots are not so brazen. Instead of testosterone to assert knowledge, they rely on documentation and they cross-check. They can do that with simulation alone. |
#15
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-b- writes:
No time is spent teaching pilots "clever ways to estimate distances" as this would be inconsistent with safety. How else do they determine distances? No one can reguilarly crash and die. True. It's a different pilot each time. |
#16
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-b- writes:
Sensorial clues supported by visual clues are quite different from the former without the latter, as is widely recognized in the pertinent literature. Close your eyes in VMC, and you're not really in VMC anymoe, are you. . . If physical sensations were useful, you'd be able to fly with your eyes closed. The fact that you cannot demonstrates that they are not useful. About the best one can say about physical sensations is that they may alert you to the fact that something has changed. That isn't terribly useful, though, especially if you have kept your situational awareness to begin with. Not to worry - people regularly get confused when presented with tasks they do not comprehend. It's a recall task, not a comprehension task, and few people have perfect recall. |
#17
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Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: Yeah, so what? So I'm better informed than most of the people arguing with me. Yeah, sure you are. I noticed you snipped the part where you were wrong, i.e. where you stated there were only a dozen of so switches and buttons. It depends on which part of the panel you are looking at. Hardly. Your statement was obvious nonsense from looking at the picture of a real airplane. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#18
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In article ,
-b- wrote: In article , says... -b- writes: No time is spent teaching pilots "clever ways to estimate distances" as this would be inconsistent with safety. How else do they determine distances? By instruments. That's what they're there for. But this is news to many non-pilots, who in the face of all evidence fail to comprehend simple realities. Funny, I've determined distance many times in planes with no distance-determining instruments. An eye is fine for estimating, or a map plus landmarks for larger distances. (My index finger is about 4 nautical miles wide on a sectional.) Although I was never really explicitly taught any of these techniques, just picking them up by immersion. I have a GPS unit with my on most of my flights lately, but I don't trust it, and make sure that I can still safely fly (which requires determining distances!) should it fail. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
#19
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In article ,
Mxsmanic wrote: -b- writes: Sensorial clues supported by visual clues are quite different from the former without the latter, as is widely recognized in the pertinent literature. Close your eyes in VMC, and you're not really in VMC anymoe, are you. . . If physical sensations were useful, you'd be able to fly with your eyes closed. The fact that you cannot demonstrates that they are not useful. What a colossally stupid thing to say. "If the sense of balance were useful, you'd be able to walk around safely with your eyes closed. The fact that you cannot demonstrates that it is not useful." There's a big difference between useful and sufficient. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
#20
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On Mar 5, 1:47*am, -b- wrote:
In article , says... -b- writes: No time is spent teaching pilots "clever ways to estimate distances" as this would be inconsistent with safety. How else do they determine distances? By instruments. That's what they're there for. But this is news to many non-pilots, who in the face of all evidence fail to comprehend simple realities. - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -i Well, not quite. "Extend your downwind a mile" is obeyed sans instruments, ditto how far from the runway you fly your downind, or when center announces traffic in visual conditions. In all cases we poor two slobs who are farther away than the MX imposted 100 feet somehow manage to muddle thru. He is confusing 3D stationary observer perceptions with the real world we operate in. Ocular depth preception that depends on the distance between our ours is one kind. The other kind depends on what's between our ears, and among other things it's sometimes called situational awareness. That is very much 3D, by the way. |
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