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#21
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![]() Michael wrote: wrote But, the single pilot guy in a light aircraft has a whole different set of issues to deal with. I learned multiengine flying from an airline captain, and he taught me to fly as much like the airlines as possible. I suppose that wasn't a bad thing, but I also wound up carrying a copilot around for many of my early IFR flights, until I developed the proficiency AND altered my procedures to where I could handle the workload single-pilot. That's sort of like teaching someone to be a cop without the benefit of the support of the resources of the police department. Then again, only the most current and proficient pilot should be flying an approach to RVR 2400, or so, where often no "break out" ever occurs. I've done it a few times (my lowest to 2000 RVR). Frankly, it's a cakewalk compared to a circling-only NDB approach at night to a poorly lit runway in 2 miles vis. Then again, it may have been the airline-quality training I got that made it a cakewalk... No doubt that an ILS is far safer than circle-to-land under almost any conceivable circumstances. |
#22
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David Megginson wrote
Still, if you're not a freight dog struggling to survive at the bottom of the aviation food chain, a medevac pilot with a dying patient, or a pilot in an emergency with flames shooting out from under the cowling, why push down below minima when you cannot see the runway clearly even if it is technically legal (say, because you made out a few of the approach lights)? Because it's not just technically legal - it's entirely acceptable if you use the right techniques - exactly the techniques you claim are a bad idea. Also because diverting to the alternate means you didn't get where you wanted to go when you wanted to be there. I think it makes sense to maximize the utility of the airplane by flying to published minima, rather than some higher minima required to accomodate substandard flying technique. We seem to lose a lot of good, experienced IFR pilots to approaches in IMC, both in Canada and the U.S., and I suspect that one of the reasons is pushing too far when there's not a clear visual transition available. I don't buy that in the least. I suspect the real reason we lose so many is the abysmal quality of initial training and the almost non-existent recurrent training, combined with a real lack of understanding of what you can and can't do. Lack of a clear visual transition is a fact of life when shooting approaches to visibility minima. Michael |
#23
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"John R Weiss" wrote
There may be a lot of differences between single-pilot and 2-pilot operations, but a lot of "airline" concepts are very applicable/adaptable to current "typical" GA equipment... I've flown IFR in GA, single- and multi-pilot military, and [currently] airline aircraft; the basics remain the same regardless of individual procedures. Well, when you get down to it the basics are always the same. However, procedures optimized for a well-equipped crew-operated aircraft may well be suboptimal for a single pilot private aircraft. These days, GPS is more typical than strange in GA, especially among IFR-equipped airplanes, and most of them have more capability than airliner installations! Once you get away from the very low end (IFR-equipped 172s and 182s), you're likely to see a 2-axis autopilot as well. I don't have two-axis autopilot (no altitude hold), and neither do most of my friends. BTW, I fly a twin and so do most of them. There's also a huge difference between a copilot and an autopilot. A copilot can be given the plane; an autopilot can't. GA autopilots are all single-gyro dependent; none of them are immune from going hard over on the controls in seconds if a gyro or an associated curcuit/connection fails. I consider my autopilot to be the most dangerous piece of equipment in the airplane, and normally will not even turn it on in IMC. Mostly it's just a way to reduce workload and let me rest on long boring segments. Further, those who have an IFR-certified GPS NEED to be "geared towards" their equipment I agree. This is a big problem with IFR-certified GPS. The user interfaces are highly constrained by FAA regulation. If one of my programmers turned out something as klunky as a KLN-94 user interface, I would fire him. Even the GNS-430 has more quirks than I am comfortable with. On the other hand, lots of handheld GPS units offer great functionality with a user-friendly and pilot-intuitive user interface. Michael |
#24
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Roy Smith wrote
Most of the guys I fly with want to just get in and go. I think we've got a lot to learn from airline pilots. Maybe the specific procedures don't translate well to spam cans, but the attitude should. It's the specific procedures I referred to - especially the handoff of the airplane on an instrument approach that precipitated this. My specific procedures for operating my airplane have evolved substantially since I was trained in it. The operating philosophy has remianed largely the same. What you describe in terms of pretakeoff briefings and such is contingency planning. It's not really so much a skill as it is an attitude. I guess I don't recognize it as an airline attitude because I was quite familiar with it long before I ever met any airline pilots. My first introduction to aviation was skydiving. My first 'flight' was about four minutes - and was preceded by over five hours of ground training. Most of that was emergency preparation, but a good chunk of it was the plan for my flight under canopy - really a very low performance glider - because that first flight would be solo. In skydiving it is quite common to spend thirty minutes planning a flight that might only take thirty seconds. It is equally common (or was) to sit around at the end of the day, discuss the 'what might have beens' and analyze the safety issues. This is largely absent from GA flight training, and that's not a good thing, but I would hardly call that 'airline procedure.' Michael |
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