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#1
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I think that I have. I recieved the IR in 1998 and have flown over 1500hrs
since then in the same airplane and virtually all of the flying in the MU-2 is IFR because of the fuel savings in the flight levels. I no longer consciously "scan" the instruments, I just look at the panel and take in the information. I also find that my skills don't atrophy as fast as they did 1000hrs ago. I get about 6hrs of simulator time every year at Simcom, virtually all of which is IMC. I don't do any practice approaches or training in the airplane. I don't know how much of this is avionics (Garmin 530/430, GPS roll steering, Flight Director, dual HSI's and RMI's) and a stable airplane vs how much is applicable to experience. I am somewhere between conscious competent and unconscious competent in the Helio. I certainly haven't mastered the airplane but I no longer conciously think about "dancing" on the rudder pedals and that kind of stuff. Mike MU-2 "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote: 4) Unconsious competent-you can do the task without thinking about it. Have you made it to "unconscious competent" yet? After 5+ years of instrument flying, I must say I haven't achieved this state. I doubt I ever shall, flying only about ten actual approaches per year plus a dozen for practice. I find that flying approaches in IMC still requires intense, deliberate concentration for me to stay ahead of the situation. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#2
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I don't know how much of this is avionics (Garmin
530/430, GPS roll steering, Flight Director, dual HSI's and RMI's) and a stable airplane vs how much is applicable to experience. I suspect it's mostly flight experience. My experience and outlook is rather similar to yours, except that I do my recurrent training in the airplane. My recurrent training cycle is about 3-5 hours every 6-10 months, mostly under the hood or in IMC. Last time I stretched it a bit to fit in the ATP. I don't have any of those gadgets in my airplane (not even a single HSI) and don't miss them. I find that an approach is IMC is no particular challenge unless I'm doing something unusual, like a full procedure NDB to mins where I've decided to actually fly the ADF needle rather than LORAN/GPS. Michael |
#3
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I'm an insurance actuary; it took me 8 years of home study to be fully
accredited. The IFR written was a lot easier. I just got my rating last year, and find that routine IFR is no big deal, but proficiency is another story - the process of doing 3 approaches in rapid succession with successive holds and route intersections typical of what you do for the practical exam requires a level of concentration which in my life compares only with high-level musical performance (I'm a singer in my spare time). |
#4
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![]() Interesting how many engineers, and especially EEs there are on this thread. Anyway, I've got a BSEE and work in the semiconductor business. To me, comparing flying IFR and doing my job is really just apples and oranges. I don't do enough flying in IMC to say that it is second nature for me, and it probably never will be, but overall, the intellectual task is not anywhere as difficult as circuit design. Then again, when I was doing design, if I got confused while doing my day job, I could get up, get a cup of coffee and chat in the breakroom until I was ready to face my workstation. Can't do that in an airplane. Nowadays, I'm an FAE (Field Apps) and, while meeting with customers there is a real-time component to the job, but still, it's nothing like IFR flight. As someone else said: death is not a likely outcome from a customer meeting. (Aside from the times I want to kill my customers.) So, I think the difference is that learning to fly IFR is not as taxing mentally as an advanced degree or practicing an art that requires an advanced degree. However, flying requires quick thinking and constant attention that few other domains approach. For the computer nerds: design engineering is like running a huge, cpu and disk instensive cad tool on your GHz PC. Flying is like a little high-priority service routine that only burns a few MIPS of that CPU. However, god help you if you don't handle that interrupt in a timely manner. For all you super-duper engineer pilots out there, try solving Schroedinger's wave equation while flying in IMC. No autopilots or scratch paper allowed. Dave J jacobowitz73 --at-- yahoo --dot-- com |
#5
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#6
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"G. Sylvester" wrote in message
m... I got into a discussion with an non-pilot MD comparing a professional degree versus flying... This person I had the discussion with is under the impression of flying is probably more like driving and anybody can do it... So the big question, compared to a your profession, how does flying VFR and IFR compare with regards to training, proficiency, continued training, mental challenge and anything else that comes to mind? There are two comparisons in question he flying vs. driving, and flying vs. professional training. Flying is harder than driving, in several respects. There are important aspects of flying that are initially counterintuitive (not just pulling the nose up if you're about to land short, for instance). Flying (safely) requires more knowledge about weather conditions and the vehicle's interaction with them. There are more emergency procedures that need to be instantly deployable. Navigation while flying is more complicated than while driving (except perhaps with GPS). Flying requires more multitasking. There are more regulations to be familiar with when flying. But there's no comparison between flying and professional training. Flying requires only a high-school student's knowledge, skill, and judgment (that's why we license 16-year-olds to solo, and 17-year-olds to carry passengers). Getting a PPL requires perhaps a month's full-time study (usually spread out over a much longer period, though); an instrument rating is perhaps another month. Compared to the years of complex study needed for an MD or a PhD, flight training is a relaxing diversion. That's why retired doctors and scientists often become pilots, but retired pilots seldom become doctors or scientists. ![]() --Gary |
#7
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I happen to be one of those physicians, and also work as a surgeon in Level
I trauma center. Additionally I also had an additional six years of graduate school and research training along with my multi instrument rating. My flying time is spent between cross countries in a twin or more fun doing aerobatics. Regardless, there is no comparison between the rigors of medical training, especially surgery, and flight training. As a resident, and still today we often have to stay up an entire night operating or monitoring a patient who is gravely ill or injured. There are times when we need to make immediate decisions regarding the need to do something that might save someone's life or limb. Some may call this arrogance, but some times this is created from the necessity of having the confidence to make critical decisions in the face of crisis situations. Lack of confidence and indecisiveness can lead to fatal delays. The pressures and stresses of making these decisions is much greater than seeing the ground rushing up at 200k while flying acro- there is simply no comparison. Interestingly, while working as a flight surgeon in a fighter unit, I saw the same attitudes in the pilots- some people called it arrogance, but most would agree that it was confidence from having to carry out a difficult and stressful job. |
#8
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On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 01:08:20 GMT, "G. Sylvester"
wrote: I got into a discussion with an non-pilot MD comparing a professional degree versus flying. snip So the big question, compared to a your profession, how does flying VFR and IFR compare with regards to training, proficiency, continued training, mental challenge and anything else that comes to mind? No need to convince me but more to convince the non-pilot. In particular I'd like to hear from the professions that require advanced degrees. You don't have to get as far as the advanced degrees. As someone else already said, aviation is a technical field. Look at it this way. PPL Ground school: one term, one class. Practical experience to get ready to test: about the equivalent in hours of one class, one term. Instrument rating: An additional class one term for flight and one class for books. Overall: 4 one term classes. I would liken flying more as an art than mechanical endeavor though. True, there are those who will never get beyond the mechanical phase of flying, but to those who do it is like music. However, going beyond the basic private with the instrument rating takes more learning and more time. If your add up the flying hours required to reach ATP (and get a job) it's probably close to the same as getting a bachelors degree. Continued training is a fact of life in many professions so I'd not set aviation apart in that respect. As far as flying IFR Vs my job: With only me and maybe my wife and/or a couple of passengers my decisions and competency affect only them and maybe a few people on the ground if I really screw up. As a project manager in industry and although primarily a computer jockey, the ramifications of a mistake in process control or quality control could affect thousands of individuals. Some mistakes could result in the evacuation of many people from their homes. The same is true for many of the Chemical and Electrical Engineers I worked with. I've seen things go amiss where the engineers were truely happy a particular plant was out in the country. As far as individual responsibility and pressure, I'd rate flying in solid IMC no different than going into work through rush hour traffic during a storm. Actually, I don't think I'd rate single pilot IMC as any where near that stressful. I have never felt any undue pressure flying in IMC (except as a student). Possibly as I had some very thorough instructors and lots of time in actual right down to minimums prior to taking the PTS to get the rating, I feel much more comfortable than many. I much prefer to fly cross country IFR now days as it makes things much simpler. Of course I still pick the smaller airports as my choice for destinations. It puts me up higher and *generally* out of the see and avoid crowd in high density areas. Of course it never takes away that responsibility. So, to directly answer the question: Only going through the PPL with the instrument rating is no where near as time consuming or difficult on an overall basis than getting a Bachelor of Science degree, let alone Masters or PHD. BUT this is sorta the proverbial, Apples to Oranges comparison. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Gerald Sylvester |
#9
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Look at it this way.
PPL Ground school: one term, one class. Practical experience to get ready to test: about the equivalent in hours of one class, one term. Instrument rating: An additional class one term for flight and one class for books. Another point I forgot to make originally was that most classes you take during undergraduate and even graduate programs have no value to your final profession. I took 7 semesters of math above calculus. When was the last time I took a derivative? Ummm, a long time ago. I use the concept but I certainly didn't need 7 semesters of math. So with PPL and so far with the IFR, 95% of everything you learn is practical and therefore the training is a lot more efficient. Gerald Sylvester |
#10
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G. Sylvester wrote:
Look at it this way. PPL Ground school: one term, one class. Practical experience to get ready to test: about the equivalent in hours of one class, one term. Instrument rating: An additional class one term for flight and one class for books. Another point I forgot to make originally was that most classes you take during undergraduate and even graduate programs have no value to your final profession. I took 7 semesters of math above calculus. When was the last time I took a derivative? Ummm, a long time ago. I use the concept but I certainly didn't need 7 semesters of math. So with PPL and so far with the IFR, 95% of everything you learn is practical and therefore the training is a lot more efficient. Yes, don't confuse education with training. A college degree is intended to educate you, not train you. Pilot training is definitely training. Matt |
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