Fearless Tower
Touchdown! Greaser!
<---- pulls the ejection handles on this thread.
Right behind you. It seems OP is more intent on trolling than learning anything.
<---- pulls the ejection handles on this thread.
(yells from the ground) Make sure you grab your first aid kit before you punch out. The ground is rough and hard and I cut my knee on a rock. I'm down here doing the Peter Griffin thing.
Anyway, as long as there is a cold beer somewhere near where I hit the ground, and my arm is still intact enough to reach for it, we're all good
Okkkkkkkkk, instead of aborting with enough remaining runway, or aborting and ground speed decreasing rapidly as you run off the end of the runway and possibly into your trees, and letting the wings take the punishment while the your safer in the fuselage.
I'm only PIC when I'm solo and when I'm solo, I'm doing what I've learned from a very competent man. He'll be the first to attest that I don't hide behind his authority, as I question things at every chance and sometimes deviate from "his methods" to methods that work better for me. I'm not afraid to call him out on things if I don't think they are right. However, in the case of checking instruments and gauges during takeoff roll, I think he is correct to advise such and that it is unnecessarily dangerous to do otherwise.
Are you sure this is true? Reference "logging vs. acting." I'm not saying one way or the other, but give it some thought.
Huh? I know this wasn't directed at me, but...
I've given it some thought. What am I missing here?
In thousands of youtube videos of various takeoffs the incantation of the airspeed vrility from the PIC comes at the critical time between forward throttle and liftoff.
modern pharma says it's ain't no big difference any more.Vitality, not virility. It's "Airspeed alive", not "Airspeed erect".
The idea is to push for a reference, rather than a "My CFI said..."
So I'm asking him to back up the assertion - can a student pilot BE PIC, even if he can't LOG PIC.
Youtube cannot lie, so the question: why anyone care for the airspeed to be undead at takeoff?
In thousands of youtube videos of various takeoffs the incantation of the airspeed verility from the PIC comes at the critical time between forward throttle and liftoff. Thinking rationally about this, among the several performance indicators that are truly important at takeoff (RPM, Fuel Pressure) and general desirability of keeping eyes outside why would anyone care about validating the pitot static system then and there. It is not critical for the flight at that point, so why even bother?
I was taught to keep my eyes outside the cockpit at all time during takeoff. I am somewhat lax at that since majority of my flights originate and terminate at class Charlie airport where there are others tasked with assuring the separation. So I do briefly check the RPM and Fuel Pressure during acceleration, simply because the loss of those would leave me next no time to react. But the thousands of takeoffs on youtube, which cannot lie, make no references to RPM or FP, and the incessant parroting of "Airspeed is alive" makes me suspect there is a secret society of pitot static observers I was not somehow invited to join.
Anyways, whats with the "Airspeed is alive" magic spell?
I do (check the ASI). I am PPLd with fairly short hours (about 200TT). I am at the point where the routine aviating tasks are more or less habitual and I can pay some attention to analysing/questioning my cockpit "habits".
It takes literally a half a second to look see your airspeed is alive. Takes another half second to make sure your gauges are green. Both of things are very critical to the first few moments of an IFR flight, or any flight. Not checking them is just flat negligent.
I have had the airspeed indicator not come alive before. I was in VMC, but catching it through 30-40 knots gave me plenty of time to safely stop the plane and fix the problem.
I have also had my the oil pressure drop to 0 on a takeoff run. Had a lose tube. Had I taken off, I would have probably been landing in the desert somewhere.
Not checking those things on the takeoff run to "keep my eyes outside" is just stupid. Fly the plane first, and in this case, make sure the plane wants to fly.
Glance is one thing...Yeah, I'm a bit lost on why someone would choose not to do this. My CFI always has me glance down to make sure everything is "in the green" during takeoff roll (especially oil temp & pressure). When I do that, I also quickly check my ASI and RPM. Figure it's best to abort a takeoff than deal with problems airborne...
I do check the ASI and the FP/RPM. The goals here are safety and the efficient use of my mental focus (limited resource). What I've observed is that I look at the panel way too much, cause that's how my mind is wired, I am an engineer by trade. Where I want to get to is eyes out all the time except the specific and limited cockpit tasks. Right now with the time I spend looking at the panel I am making myself less safe than I could be.
THe airspeed is alive callout reminds me of the "Stop, do not move" callout in armed self defense classes. Both seem perfunctory and somewhat disingenious to me.
The idea is to push for a reference, rather than a "My CFI said..."
So I'm asking him to back up the assertion - can a student pilot BE PIC, even if he can't LOG PIC.
Either way, you are looking down at the ASI to confirm that it's working... which is the point. And if you passed a checkride then you at least did this at that time.
So what, exactly, is your beef with this practice again?
My guess... trolling.
Just stumbled upon this train wreck.
Phillip's posting style is eerily familiar. I suspect it's not his first rodeo, so to speak.
The main beef is the cost of the distraction from actual aviating.
Just stumbled upon this train wreck.
Phillip's posting style is eerily familiar. I suspect it's not his first rodeo, so to speak.
The main beef is the cost of the distraction from actual aviating.
Student pilots can most certainly log PIC time. Unless you're being coy and trying to intimate that a student pilot is "acting the role" of PIC whilst sitting abeam/abreast/aside/afore/aft of a CFI, who is really the acting PIC and is eligible to log such dual time as PIC. And Cajun Flyer is a girl, not a "him."
You do realize that "actual aviating" involves safety checks too, right? Pretty much everything that keeps one alive while the engine is running is actual aviating.
...d@mnit... I bit the bait. I'd make a terrible fish
Negative. Think of it this way: if the instructor is in the plane, and is not PIC, then he's a passenger, and a student pilot can't carry passengers.The idea is to push for a reference, rather than a "My CFI said..."
So I'm asking him to back up the assertion - can a student pilot BE PIC, even if he can't LOG PIC.
Negative. Think of it this way: if the instructor is in the plane, and is not PIC, then he's a passenger, and a student pilot can't carry passengers.
Cajun has it right: the only time a student pilot is PIC (acting, or logging for that matter), is when solo.
Cajun has it right: the only time a student pilot is PIC (acting, or logging for that matter), is when solo.
And how do you know that to be true...
That's what I'm trying to push for here. Cajun should be able to answer that one without having to start with "my CFI told me..."
You do realize that "actual aviating" involves safety checks too, right? Pretty much everything that keeps one alive while the engine is running is actual aviating.
...d@mnit... I bit the bait. I'd make a terrible fish
You do realize that "actual aviating" involves safety checks too, right? Pretty much everything that keeps one alive while the engine is running is actual aviating.
...d@mnit... I bit the bait. I'd make a terrible fish
Long time listener, first time caller. You'd be wrong.
You do realize that "actual aviating" involves safety checks too, right? Pretty much everything that keeps one alive while the engine is running is actual aviating.
Minus the submissiveness and the "holier than thou", evident in your remarks.
Ah, yes... The dreaded Phase of Complacency. Enjoy it, for it typically does not last long.
Goodness! Are we making progress with Phillip, or wearing him down? :wink2:
No sir. No magic spells on my checkride. I was not taught any verbalizations on takeoff. If I were, I wouldn't be asking the question, I guess, or I'd be asking it differently. Maintain directional control, look out, keep the hand on the throttle, that's about it, AFAIR.
The main beef is the cost of the distraction from actual aviating.
Oh c'mon man, Cajun wasn't coming across like that. She was just disagreeing with you, like most on this post have. Someday though it'll all come from together for ya!