BalooAirService
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2016
- Messages
- 108
- Display Name
Display name:
Cloud Kicker
ok dude lol.
wow.
wow.
ok dude lol.
wow.
Please don't hate me just because I am beautiful.Arrogant much?
Miss the humor much?Arrogant much?
Please don't hate me just because I am beautiful.
I thought so, but it was a little hard to tell on that one.Miss the humor much?
"Gonna be" sounds like an over-generalization to me.Very diffrent worlds, truly - skills and muscle memory and depth of knowledge; yeah, someone flying fighters or bombers or airliners exclusively is gonna be shaky in a GA taildragger. Or even a 172. . .and vice versa, of course...
lol, I love this capt Thorpe guy.
I bet the transmissions between him and ATC are hilarious lol.
I think you and the OP overestimate the difficulty of flying a GA plane. Think about it. Someone off the street can learn to fly sufficient to solo in 10 hrs or less. Flying is a skill kind of like riding a bike, once you get the basic concept you tend to remember the fundamentals. Airline and fighter pilots have learned that skill and are still exposed to some of it even if they aren't flying GA. There might be a little rust, but nothing that can't be knocked off in an hour or so.Very diffrent worlds, truly - skills and muscle memory and depth of knowledge; yeah, someone flying fighters or bombers or airliners exclusively is gonna be shaky in a GA taildragger. Or even a 172. . .and vice versa, of course.
Flying for pay, I think with the profiency gained in regular flying, constant reinforcement, recurrent training, most/most of those folks are plenty skilled, both systems and stick-and-rudder. Hours is just hours - 1500 in fighters is a lot; 5,000 in airliners, not so much. If you have 2,000 hand-flying a GA airplane, and plenty of it recent, that is a lot.
Before I started flying (flight training and just small planes only/since) I always thought the "guy in a little piper/cessna" private plane was just an average pilot, no where near a 747 pilot (for example). This is common thinking among most people. But as time went on my view on this has completely switched around.
Airline pilots are spoon fed (I work in the airline industry as a non pilot and see this everyday) everything except literally having the auto pilot turn itself on automatically at 100 AGL after takeoff.
Almost dumbed down to a point that given certain bad situations I personally think a lowly private pilot in a piper would react better than an FO (even with yearly recurrent training) who has 3000 hrs flying an A319 or a CRJ. Just because I think certain skills and real feel are not being used the way they were before they started flying super highly advanced aircraft. So many incidents/crashes has proven this.
The lowly cessna pilot flying into the Alaskan bush, off airport-ers, and the piper guy taking his family cross country without an auto-pilot or FMS.. these pilots are my heroes.
NOT the guy flying a 787 14hrs to Beijing.
I think you missed my "exclusively", and I don't think it would be all that hard, as you say - I have all the respect in the world for professional pilots, and I'm sure they can get up to speed in a cub or a 172 much, much faster than a non-pilot off the street, no doubt. But the physical kills required in one don't map to the other. And those first few landings can/can be gruesome, for anyone who hasn't flown a tail-dragger. I don't think a pro, with decades out of the GA cockpit, would jump into a cub or a Pitts, or even a 172, and handle the airplane particularly well. Just as a bush pilot, or crop duster, or helo driver wouldn't perform so hot in an airliner. There's just such a wide variation in performance, handling, systems, etc.I think you and the OP overestimate the difficulty of flying a GA plane. Think about it. Someone off the street can learn to fly sufficient to solo in 10 hrs or less. Flying is a skill kind of like riding a bike, once you get the basic concept you tend to remember the fundamentals. Airline and fighter pilots have learned that skill and are still exposed to some of it even if they aren't flying GA. There might be a little rust, but nothing that can't be knocked off in an hour or so.
At one point I went well over 10yrs without flying GA. My first BFR back, I didn't have even the slightest difficulty, and it was in a plane I had never flown previously. I would guess that my experience would be representative of most professional pilots. There are some differences, but it just isn't that hard.
Guess you don't realize many of those 'unskilled' airline pilots own GA planes, and a lot live on grass strips.
Hasn't there been some discussion in the airline industry recently, about having their pilots do more hand-flying?
I can attest to this. I fly out of a very small airfield with a 2800x40 ft strip surrounded by trees. A couple of months ago, a guy and his buddy were passing through in a very nice Pacer tail dragger, really nice guy, got to talking to him, he was an A320 Captain for American....
I had jurty duty earlier this year, we had one alternate that happened to be an A380 Captain for American that flew overseas, got to talk to him a lot over the course of the week (and learned a ton from him), and the thing that surprised me the most was how much hand flying he said they did. Said there were very few restrictions on when they had to use the AP (I think certain DP's were required but that is it if I recall correctly). To my surprise he said a good portion of approaches were actually flown by hand as well. Thought that was pretty cool.
I did not know that American had any A380s. In fact, I do not think they do.
Yup, typo on my part. Meant 330.They don't. Probably meant the 330.
Now, that makes more sense.Yup, typo on my part. Meant 330.
Now, that makes more sense.
Sorry. Someone mentioned God's gift to aviation. Sorry I'm late. I was off being amazed.
Even gods have their idols.Fixed that for you
No worries, I'm here now ... no more kneeling necessary