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#21
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#22
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"Mark T. Dame" wrote in :
I have a friend who gets vertigo so bad in actual (but not with the foggles) that if he flies into IMC, he'll put on his foggles. Everyone is affected differently. Which is why you want your first experience in it to be with an experienced instructor. I certainly agree with this. But the sad fact is that most instructors, both CFI and CFII, don't have adequate experience. This isn't likely to change, either, given the economics of the field. -- Regards, Stan "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." B. Franklin |
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: one. Red light makes reading charts and LCD-based too hard to read for
: me. Also, it makes no sense to me to use red light when the instrument : lights are white anyway. The human eye is most sensitive to green light, : so you need less of it to make things visible. My aircraft has red cabin illumination, but with the dimmer it can be turned *way* down. Between that and the tiny green LED light, you can even make out some semblance of color. I think I read somewhere that the red/green debate is that red light damages night vision the least. That's a fact. Turns out, what's more important to preserving night vision is the *amount* of light. Since the eye is most sensitive to green, it can be at a lower level than red and still be useful. My completely anecdotal experiences have bourne this out. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#24
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Stan Gosnell wrote:
"Mark T. Dame" wrote in : I certainly agree with this. But the sad fact is that most instructors, both CFI and CFII, don't have adequate experience. This isn't likely to change, either, given the economics of the field. Very true. I was fortunate in that one of the three instructors that I took instrument training with was experienced and competent flying IMC. He's the one I flew with the first time I flew in actual IMC. I had three instructors during my training for exact that reason. My primary instrument instructor is a very competent pilot and good at teaching techniques, but he's a "weather wimp". He got a corporate job and quit after a few months because he wasn't comfortable flying in actual IMC. (Now he's a dispatcher for a regional airline, so he doesn't have to worry about it.) Since I knew I wasn't going to get any quality IMC time with him, I flew with a couple of other guys for that. I think my primary instructor was secretly relieved that he didn't have to do that part! -m -- ## Mark T. Dame ## VP, Product Development ## MFM Software, Inc. (http://www.mfm.com/) "...he began by assuring me that it was actually pretty simple -- a promise engineers always make just before they start speaking in tongues." -- J. Kluger, Discover, Aug. 1993 |
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