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#21
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Benjamin Dover wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote in How much IFR time do you have, MX? In the sim? Probably a couple thousand hours. I don't log it. How much IMC time do you have? Translation: I have a couple thousand hours playing a game but don't have the foggiest idea what real IFR flight is like. Meanwhile, I've killed thousands upon thousands of Germans (Japanese, Russians, Canadians and even American) playing Battlefield 1942 and Call of Duty online. What I hate is when some World War II veteran tries to tell me what it was like storming a beach or charging a machine gun bunker. They don't have a FRACTION of combat time as I do in my video game. When I used to play Warbirds I racked up something over 500 career kills. That's WAY more than Chuck Yeager ever shot down. What the hell does HE know by comparison?! ; -c |
#22
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Mx, really, that is illogical even by your standards.
You are saying that "They are both simulations, therefore if one is useful then the other is useful." Wow. And no pilot would claim that flying under the hood is a perfect simulation of flying in IMC. That's why when we're training for our instrument ratings we seek out real IMC to fly in to get that experience. We also use simulators, including MSFS. Many pilots agree that MSFS is useful for instrument training, particularly with regard to flying procedures (although not with regard to learning to ignore the physical sensations of flight in IMC). Nobody is saying MSFS is not a useful tool. They are just saying that since you have only experienced MSFS, whereas most of the posters here have experienced sims, hood time and real IMC, you aren't exactly in a strong position to opine about things. Why do you do it? You are clearly intelligent enough to understand that what you have written here is illogical. And yet you love to pick holes in other people's logic. You could be a useful and well-liked contributor to this forum if you recognized the fact that pilots who have flown in real life do have some valuable experience that you can't understand. If you think flying is too risky, fine don't do it. I don't care. The risk is not worth it to you. But it's worth it to me and no amount of telling me that I can get the same experience in front of my PC will persuade me otherwise, because to me it's about the freedom of going places, not the pleasure of correctly flying a procedure (although I enjoy that too). On May 16, 11:01*am, Mxsmanic wrote: They are both simulations. *MSFS simulates IFR flight (with or without IMC). Flying under a hood in a real aircraft simulates IFR flight in IMC. *But a hood is not real IMC. *If flying under a hood is useful (and it is), then flying MSFS is also useful. The fact is, anything other than the real thing is just a simulation; if simulations are not useful, then that has to apply across the board, not just to simulations that you prefer to dismiss. *If MSFS is not useful, then neither is flying under a hood, or looking at a drawing made by an instructor, or examining illustrations in a book, or watching an instructional DVD. |
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