Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
- Messages
- 16,022
- Location
- DXO124009
- Display Name
Display name:
Light and Sporty Guy
Not everyone.Everyone has watched the video.
Not everyone.Everyone has watched the video.
He's Jerry Wagner's biggest fan and defendant. That's what you're working with, you're wasting your time.
That’s all well and good. What about a GPS black out? It won’t matter how many gadgets you have. A few old charts for your route within reach could make the difference. It happens.
Lol. Jerry was the biggest anti-GPS luddite...until he learned to use one.
Stop using the vacuum radio powered by a wet vacuum pump and use modern solid state electronics and failure rate will dramatically decrease.
In reality, there are very limited reasons for modern electronics to fail. Heat, power, and software bug are the three most common. For the first, power off and let it cool off, or lower cabin temp. Second, you have backup sources right? Three, reboot.
At the end of day, old avionics have actually much higher failure rates than modern solid state ones do. The issue is that the old ones are known, with these new fangled things are scary when they fail because I just spent $$$$ and do not understand why it failed.
This largely is a known risk verses the unknown. Human nature prefers the known risk even if much higher than the unknown.
Tim
Sent from my HD1907 using Tapatalk
That doesn’t really apply either. Sure a blackout would render GPS navigation useless, but charts and approach plates are still going to be easily accessible on ForeFlight, Garmin Pilot, etc.. As a couple of others have pointed out flying with a backup tablet and a phone plus some extra power sources pretty much ensures safe and reliable access to electronic charts. In the early days of ForeFlight, I kept my paper chart subscription for until I realized how pointless it was with quadruple redundancy of a G1000, tablet, backup tablet, and phone. Throw in a Stratus or simular device, there’s an additional GPS receiver, AHRS, and ADS-B weather if your electrical system decides to depart unexpectedly.
The thread title should have been ... "Are you a child of the Magenta?"
Sometime some of you guys should look at old accident reports. Go ahead, might be edumacational. Used to be a percentage of airplane accidents were people getting lost, running out of gas. and crashing. Happened regularly. Wasn't the most common cause of accidents, but it happened. Pilotage is great until you hose it up. You don't really see those sorts of accidents anymore.
Like I said Ed, it works great until you hose it up, and pilots hose it up lots. Always have.
This is a simple thing Ed. So simple even you can get it. Used to be lots of guys crashed because they got lost. In lots of places everything looks the same from the air. I kinda live in one. In the age of GPS those accidents have all but disappeared. You can say "well, had they done everything right they would have all been fine". Some of those flights were instructional.Same with landings. And takeoffs. And everything else. Maybe we should skip the landings and take offs too because someone might screw them up sometime?
This is a simple thing Ed. So simple even you can get it. Used to be lots of guys crashed because they got lost. In lots of places everything looks the same from the air. I kinda live in one. In the age of GPS those accidents have all but disappeared. You can say "well, had they done everything right they would have all been fine". Some of those flights were instructional.
Do what you like, I honestly don't care. But that's the data.
Don’t start with the personal attacks. There are plenty that can be thrown in all directions.He's Jerry Wagner's biggest fan and defendant. That's what you're working with, you're wasting your time.
You know, apparently from my comments about pitching paper charts and plates within reach, I think people are getting the idea that I reject modern navigational tools. Nothing could be further from the truth. My Mooney has 430W, JPI, 345, an iPhone on the yoke and FF on my lap with ADS-B IN/OUT on the 430, the phone and the pad. My Little Cessna has ILS capability, an ADS-B IN/OUT transponder, a phone on the yoke, a Pad in my lap and will have a 420 in the panel before I fly it again this week. Does that sound like someone who denies the value of current technology?
I am retired from a career in electronics and automation system development. The automation world is filled with redundant systems. My mentality, when it comes to control systems and other mission critical instrumentation and controls, is all about redundancy. Even on a control system with programmable controllers and computer based control systems to the max, there is still an old fashioned red mushroom emergency stop switch to interrupt power and shut everything down immediately. There are also paper based procedures for various emergency situations.
So why am I such a villain because I choose to take a “just in case” approach?
Do people go to AAA anymore and get paper street maps?...no, but they are still navigating.
Because some people feel personally attacked if someone else has a differing opinion.So why am I such a villain because I choose to take a “just in case” approach?
....and I hope that neither of us ever find a paper sectional necessary, but there could be a time when you would really like to have one handy.
I’d have “liked” the post, but I can’t condone that behavior.I may have mentioned before I was a bit of a scofflaw in my younger days.
I needed to prove I was a student to get a discount on an Icelandic Airways flight to Europe. I wasn’t, so I made my own ID. This was before home computers, so I used the emblem from a Pickett slide rule manual for my fake university.
And it worked!
Does AAA (or anybody else, for that matter) have street maps anymore? I haven’t been able to find them. If I could find them, I’d use them.Do people go to AAA anymore and get paper street maps?...no, but they are still navigating.
AAA still has street maps. Tour books, too (the paperbacks with hotel and restaurant listings and points of interest for each state).Does AAA (or anybody else, for that matter) have street maps anymore? I haven’t been able to find them. If I could find them, I’d use them.
That was too easy.Based on his videos, I'm not sure he has.
..because you came out fairly early on staunchly in the non GPS category with some strong opinions about it. Someone made an innocent comment about how they navigate and you asked if they were with their momSo why am I such a villain because I choose to take a “just in case” approach?
I thought the gist of the video was that it was a pilot issue, not an automation issue.I've watched the 25 minute video numerous times.. there are some good points in there. But I don't think it's fair to blame it on automation.. it should be blamed on moronic pilots who aren't flying the plane first. Magenta lines, autopilots, GPS, are there to help you. If you don't use it appropriately that's on the pilot, not the automation.
Quite right, but luck probably played a big role there. He had very little info available about the upper winds, so no amount of dead-reckoning knowledge would have gotten him to an accurate landfall if the winds hadn't chosen to cooperate that night. Others before him hadn't been so lucky.Worked for Lindberg! He went all the way across the Atlantic with nothing but the best compass he could put in the plane, a clock, and a carefully laid out chart. He fell asleep, iced up and circled and still was only six miles off course when he made land fall. Before that, he navigated the US with railroad maps.
Worked for Lindberg! He went all the way across the Atlantic with nothing but the best compass he could put in the plane, a clock, and a carefully laid out chart.
I can absolutely find my way home from McDonald's without GPS or a map.
Baby steps...
Agreed.RE: Children of the magenta line
...I find the term to be somewhat pejorative...
I've watched the 25 minute video numerous times.. there are some good points in there. But I don't think it's fair to blame it on automation.. it should be blamed on moronic pilots who aren't flying the plane first. Magenta lines, autopilots, GPS, are there to help you. If you don't use it appropriately that's on the pilot, not the automation. I bet autopilots and GPS have saved a lot more lives than it has cost. For everyone 1 pilot who lost control due to inappropriate AP use of automation (Casey Anthony PC-12, Bucharest Airbus, Air France) there are probably a hundred who are thankful they had the tools they did when they were flying an unfamiliar night approach alone or with their family on board, or navigating weather and terrain, etc., or just found themselves in IMC by accident. The blue LVL button can be a lifesaver.
The biggest value from the video is knowing when to go up or down levels of automation. I've seen people (from the right seat) get all out of sorts trying to figure out why an AP is doing something when we're IMC.. Dude just shut it off and fly the plane first. Go on the heading and altitude ATC said. If you can't find the fix in the 430 approach plan then you probably entered it wrong or hit VTF instead of loading the whole route. Ask for a vector, or slow down.. fly straight and level, and reload the thing
Technology is not bad.. debates like this are always frustrating as it hones in on one event or some CFI giving a flight review who "just can't believe that his student used direct enter enter to get back to the airport instead of taking out his paper charts and triangulating by VOR" .. where does it stop? Why not admonish him for not busting out a sextant?
How often has your flight been foiled by a GPS outage?
How many VOR are out of service at any given time?
Do you know the status of every VOR on your route of flight?
An iPad can still be perfectly useful as a chart even without GPS signal. The changes of your battery dying or the thing overheating are in the same realm of poor planning as forgetting your chart at home, forgetting to bring an update to date one, or ripping it when you're trying to unfold it in a cramped cockpit (presumably without autopilot since AP=bad and now you're slowly falling into a death spiral while you're unfolding the map)
Ridiculous.
We were on our way to a concert. As we approached an intersection, the "road" up ahead turned red. A voice, "I have a better route. Turn left next intersection."LOL. Sadly I tend toward turning on the GPS on the phone in the car these days, not because I need the directions but because of the handful of times the real-time traffic data would have saved me from sitting in an accident-caused traffic jam.
That’s the real killer app of automotive GPS. Traffic based re-routing.
Same here, although I found that Waze was too anal about saving 1 minute, and would use some really strange routings through neighborhoods. Now I stick to either Apple Maps or Google Maps.LOL. Sadly I tend toward turning on the GPS on the phone in the car these days, not because I need the directions but because of the handful of times the real-time traffic data would have saved me from sitting in an accident-caused traffic jam.