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#41
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David Megginson wrote in message ...
(Snowbird) writes: I agree entirely that a handheld GPS in the flightbag is an excellent safety investment Well, just to clarify my views: a handheld GPS in the flightbag is next to useless. It has to be set up, turn on, and acquired at the beginning of the flight to have practical value if things go south. I can see how that would be helpful, but I'm not sure I would be that strident about it. Suit yourself. We've been in a couple sticky situations IMC, and I can vouch that the handheld GPS had great value ONLY because it was turned on and acquired. If we'd had to dig it out, set it up, turn it on, and let it acquire it might as well have been located in Cahokia. Again, the most important thing in IMC is to keep the plane right-side up And how do you do that? You keep the wings level. How do you keep the wings level? You HOLD HEADING My moving map GPS is a great help in holding heading partial panel. I can fly partial panel with the map shut off, but it's clearly much easier with the map, especially in nasty conditions where the compass is waving around like a bobber with a prizewinning Bass on the hook and the TC is vibrating. So I feel you underestimate the value of GPS for fundamental instrument flying. JMO of course. Cheers, Sydney |
#42
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David Rind wrote in message ...
(Snowbird) writes: Well, just to clarify my views: a handheld GPS in the flightbag is next to useless. It has to be set up, turn on, and acquired at the beginning of the flight to have practical value if things go south. Can you expand on this position? I keep a GPS in my flightbag with the thought that if I had a total electrical failure in IMC that I could climb/circle/continue on course as appropriate using the vacuum instruments during the five minutes it would take to have the GPS out and knowing its position. That's a fine viewpoint -- IF you have a stable plane which is easy to control and continue on course while you dig out the GPS. And IF you have 5 minutes to spare while you wait for it to acquire. Is there something I'm missing that you feel would be a major hazard while getting the GPS out should I ever find myself in this situation? It seems like entirely unnecessary division of attention and labor which could be done quickly and easily on the ground, so as to be prepared. When we had smoke in the cockpit, we had another problem to work. Yeah there were two of us, but the last thing we needed was to screw around setting up another piece of equipment. If the smoke hadn't stopped when we slapped off the master switch, we needed the GPS to take us somewhere flat we could let down -- NOW -- not in 5 minutes. This was on the E coast btw flatlands. Near coast. Perhaps you don't consider these "major hazards". Dunno. Sydney |
#43
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Snowbird wrote:
That's a fine viewpoint -- IF you have a stable plane which is easy to control and continue on course while you dig out the GPS. Well, honestly if I have a total electrical failure, I don't care that I hold course all that precisely while turning on the GPS as long as there's no terrain around. I'm pretty sure I can keep the plane upright while pulling the GPS out. It seems like entirely unnecessary division of attention and labor which could be done quickly and easily on the ground, so as to be prepared. When we had smoke in the cockpit, we had another problem to work. Yeah there were two of us, but the last thing we needed was to screw around setting up another piece of equipment. If the smoke hadn't stopped when we slapped off the master switch, we needed the GPS to take us somewhere flat we could let down -- NOW -- not in 5 minutes. Hadn't thought about a possible fire situation where I would tolerate a brief landing delay (use the GPS to get to a field) rather than an emergency descent and landing. Certainly in that situation, having the GPS up and active could make all the difference. I think that that's a sufficient reason to want the GPS up and running when flying IMC. I'll have to add that to the things I get set when going IFR in actual. Thanks. -- David Rind |
#44
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#45
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"Snowbird"
David Megginson (Snowbird) writes: I agree entirely that a handheld GPS in the flightbag is an excellent safety investment Well, just to clarify my views: a handheld GPS in the flightbag is next to useless. It has to be set up, turn on, and acquired at the beginning of the flight to have practical value if things go south. I have a panel mount and don't have a handheld yet. Flying single pilot IFR sans George, I've always assumed that effective use of the handheld as backup strongly suggests having it out, mounted, powered and acquired. The trick to keeping it upright and level when doing the single pilot dance is preparation and organization. No question that you can retrieve a loose relief bottle from under the back seat in light turbulence while handflying in the soup.... *if* you get to pick the time. But if the power goes out in a puff of smoke while I'm using same bottle, the handheld GPS needs to be out and ready. |
#46
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David Megginson wrote in message ...
I'm very happy to have it available, and have no desire to go back in time. As I mentioned earlier, I think that the handheld GPS and cell phone are extremely valuable (and cheap) insurance, and never fly without both in my flightbag, VFR or IFR. I think we're debating only the finer points in the middle rather than pro/anti GPS. Hi David, With all respect, I don't think we're debating a fine point at all. I think we have a fundamental philosophical difference on two points. The first point is that you feel very confident in your ability to continue to aviate, navigate and communicate, while coping with an emergency or unusual circumstance AND set up a GPS. Perhaps I'm just a lesser mortal, but I couldn't disagree more. I feel that in a tight spot, the last thing I need is an additional distraction. Even if in normal circs and unstressed I can do an additional task with no problem, I don't want to bet the rent I can do that when the going is tough. So for me, if something is gonna be useful in an emergency I want it set up before I leave the ground. It's not a fine point to me, it's a fundamental principle. The second point is, I feel very strongly that for something to be useful in an emergency, it has to be something I use frequently and am very comfortable with. That means I fly with it under normal conditions. Again, it's not a fine point to me, it's a fundamental principle. All the best, Sydney |
#47
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#48
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Peter writes:
The problem is that in IMC there is often (usually here in the UK) a lot more turbulence than there is in clear air. It cuts both ways where I live. Morning ground fog and low stratus are, of course, the smoothest air you're ever going to see. Thick afternoon cumulus will happily knock the fillings out of your teeth. All the best, David |
#49
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David Megginson wrote
Interesting you mention this point. I am in the process of watching a few of the Richard Collins Sporty's aviation DVDs. In the IFR Tips and Techniques DVD, he offers a PoV that suggest a pilot hand flying in IMC does not necessarily have the big picture view that a pilot who uses an AP might. I haven't heard that before. Is it because hand flying doesn't leave you as much time to look at charts, etc., and interpret secondary information? That's basically the argument, and I've heard it before in various incarnations. In its most virulent form, it suggests that single pilot IFR without an autopilot is inherently unsafe, because the pilot simply doesn't have enough spare capacity to deal with ATC, keep a weather picture, monitor the systems, and all the other stuff he needs to be doing. The fundamental assumption here is that the fairly trivial task of maintaining heading and altitude on instruments in cruising flight absorbs enough pilot workload to materially impact higher order thinking. For some reason, such arguments with regard to IFR operations are actually taken seriously, while similar arguments with regard to VFR operations (see for example the r.a.piloting thread "Charts in the cockpit - no more for me." sorry for the long URL http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...3D30%26hl% 3D n ) are treated with the contempt they deserve. I have my own theory about this, and this being usenet I'm going to share it. I think the fundamental reason so many pilots actually take the idea seriously is poor transition and recurrent training. In general, the curriculum for the instrument rating in the US is relatively good. In addition to the basics required to operate in the system, such as ATC communications, approaches, and airways/direct navigation, the training also includes holding procedures (including random assigned holds and figuring out the correct entries on the fly, intersection holds, etc.), partial panel approaches, and even partial panel holds. There are steep turns and unusual attitude recoveries (full and partial panel). It's not that there aren't shortcomings - they are legion. There are glaring deficiencies in the way the the visual segments of approaches (especially circling approaches) are taught, and don't even get me started on weather planning and management. But in comparison to the instrument transition training most pilots get when stepping up to a more complex, higher performance aircraft the training is wonderful. The instrument portion of a multiengine checkride these days consists of a single full-panel ILS on one engine. A complex endorsement and high performance endorsement won't include ANY demonstration of instrument skills in most cases. On paper, once you've gotten an instrument rating in a Cherokee and added complex and high performance endorsements in day-VFR conditions, you're legal to go fly night IFR in a Bonanza. The recurrent training requirements for IFR flight are pretty sad. Sure, if you let your currency lapse by a year, then you need an IPC, which is pretty thorough these days, requiring most of the checkride tasks to the same tolerances. However, if you do six approaches and a hold with a safety pilot every six months, you're exempt. So let's say you have a typical green IFR pilot. Like most, he got his rating in a C-172, a Cherokee, or something similar. He's pretty comfortable flying that class of airplane IFR, and while he might like an autopilot, he views it as a luxury rather than a necessity or safety-critical item. Eventually, as his skills develop and maintaining heading and altitude becomes second nature, he starts to wonder what the big deal is. I actually have a friend who has racked up hundreds of hours of night and IMC time in his Cherokee 140. He reads books while flying IFR, and he has no autopilot. However, most people (unlike my friend) don't keep flying hard IFR in a Cherokee 140. They usually move up to something with more speed, more range, and better redundancy. Usually this means less stability, more things to do, and less time to do them. There is a right way to approach this and a wrong way. The right way - practice until you are consistently able to perform all IFR tasks in the new airplane to the same standards as on the old airplane (PTS standards or better) including handling any new equipment, emergency procedures, etc. It takes time, it takes effort, and it probably means a fair amount of frustration somewhere along the line. Then, because there are more emergencies (gear issues on a retract, single engine ops on a twin) and because the old emergencies have more bite (vacuum failure hurts a lot more in a Bonanza than in a Cherokee) you take regular recurrent training. And maybe you carry a copilot until your skills get to the desired level. Too many people choose the wrong way. They simply assume that the more demanding aircraft requires an autopilot (rather than more skill) to fly IFR. They never really develop the skills for single pilot IFR in that airplane, even though they might have been fine in something simpler and slower. In my opinion, when transitioning to a more demanding airplane for IFR operations, anything less than a full IPC to PTS standards without use of autopilot or moving map is inadequate - not just because those things fail, but because needing those things means the skill level just isn't there yet to be taking that kind of airplane into the soup without help. However, what I see more typically is an hour or two of hood time and maybe a couple of ILS's. I know some pilots who make it a point to not let their currency lapse - they want to retain IFR privileges, and I think they know that they wouldn't pass the checkride if they had to take it again in the plane they're flying. They're often the same people who claim that real IFR isn't real practical without an autopilot. I know one light twin pilot who will only make one trip with an inop autopilot - a day-VFR flight to the autopilot shop. On the other hand, the airline captain who taught me to fly my twin flew his own twin all over the country, for hundreds of hours, sometimes spending several hours in the soup - with no autopilot. That kind of flying shaped his standard of IFR proficiency - and he trained me to that standard, not the multiengine PTS. And so I flew my twin all over the country, for hundreds of hours, sometimes spending several hours in the soup - with no autopilot. When I eventually installed one, I found that I only used it to rest on very long flights - and never in IMC. The insurance companies are only now starting to wake up to this - my insurance (renewed a month ago) requires me to have an IPC in make and model in the 12 months prior to the flight I'm making. I have a feeling that this is going to become standard for twins and complex singles, and will cure a lot of ills. Michael |
#50
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