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Bob Gardner
Further dumbing down of america.
I guess next we'll just let the auto pilot take the checkride.
I'm just answering the OP's question. June 15 is the effective date.
Bob
Further dumbing down of america.
I guess next we'll just let the auto pilot take the checkride.
I'm just answering the OP's question. June 15 is the effective date.
What's the practical value in doing navlogs by hand?
Maybe I'm missing something here (and granted, I'm a low-time pilot, not a CFI) ... but I don't see how doing it with a pencil is in any way superior to doing it with a spreadsheet or calculator or Foreflight.
As I see it, a good pilot has to plan flights accurately, period. You've got to know where you are, how much fuel you have, and how much you'll have when you land. You've got to have backup plans for everything, including if your precious electronics fail (I fly with a certified GPS, ForeFlight on the iPad, ForeFlight on the iPhone, handheld radio, and paper charts and A/FD just in case). If you use generous fuel reserves and check that your calculations are accurate, you'll be very safe.
I just don't see how spending 3 hours on paper vs. 3 minutes on ForeFlight gives you any real-world advantage.
As a training tool, I suppose it could be like high school trigonometry. I haven't used it once in real life, but supposedly it helped my brain grow in some way. Not sure it was effective
But as a student pilot, I always felt like the navlog was a distraction. I got so caught up in the trees — which number goes in which little box on my CFI's planning sheet — that it was harder to see the forest. "Flight planning" became about mastering one particular process that's virtually worthless in the real world. I just wonder if those many, many hours I spent planning my student cross-countries on paper would have been better spent learning something I'd actually use in the cockpit today.
I just see it as a rite of passage, or a skill to show off at the world's most boring cocktail party
What's the practical value in doing navlogs by hand?
You've got to have backup plans for everything, including if your precious electronics fail (I fly with a certified GPS, ForeFlight on the iPad, ForeFlight on the iPhone, handheld radio, and paper charts and A/FD just in case).
What's the practical value in doing navlogs by hand?
Maybe I'm missing something here (and granted, I'm a low-time pilot, not a CFI) ... but I don't see how doing it with a pencil is in any way superior to doing it with a spreadsheet or calculator or Foreflight.
As I see it, a good pilot has to plan flights accurately, period. You've got to know where you are, how much fuel you have, and how much you'll have when you land. You've got to have backup plans for everything, including if your precious electronics fail (I fly with a certified GPS, ForeFlight on the iPad, ForeFlight on the iPhone, handheld radio, and paper charts and A/FD just in case). If you use generous fuel reserves and check that your calculations are accurate, you'll be very safe.
I just don't see how spending 3 hours on paper vs. 3 minutes on ForeFlight gives you any real-world advantage.
As a training tool, I suppose it could be like high school trigonometry. I haven't used it once in real life, but supposedly it helped my brain grow in some way. Not sure it was effective
But as a student pilot, I always felt like the navlog was a distraction. I got so caught up in the trees — which number goes in which little box on my CFI's planning sheet — that it was harder to see the forest. "Flight planning" became about mastering one particular process that's virtually worthless in the real world. I just wonder if those many, many hours I spent planning my student cross-countries on paper would have been better spent learning something I'd actually use in the cockpit today.
I just see it as a rite of passage, or a skill to show off at the world's most boring cocktail party
I feel like it has less to do with "when the batteries fail" and more to do with understanding the process and how the inputs result in the outputs. Like one poster said, would it be any use at all to have a calculator if you didn't understand the basics of multiplication and division?
It reminds me of college, when I majored in psychology. My only C I ever got was in Psych Statistics, which was a pre-requisite before the class where you learned to use the computer programs that computed all the stats for you. You had to understand how to make the sausage, so to speak, before just using the computer program. No single researcher anywhere does this stuff by hand anymore, but if you didn't learn it, and the computer spit out some garbage, you might not even recognize that there was a problem.
I didn't mind grinding out the paper nav log; it was enlightening to see how much winds and deviation changed a magnetic course. And when I hit my headings and checkpoints in the air, I felt like a BOSS. And when I was off by a little bit, I got to understand shifting winds aloft and how they can change things. Will I use it after I get my PPL? Who knows. But if Foreflight spits out some weirdness at me, I will KNOW that something is up.
Now I want sausage for lunch.
I had to grind out a million stiffness matrices by hand
Sounds like high school when my parents weren't home.
HEY-O!!! I'll be here all week, folks. Tip your waitresses.
My .02 cents: While it will be acceptable to use a program to put your nav log together in June, I would recommend doing it manually. I feel that if I used a program, my DPE would have asked me more questions. Sure, you will still get questions but possibly fewer because the manual way indicates some level of proficiency and understanding. I feel your pain as it does take some time, I had to wake up really early to put mine together making a long day longer. With that being said, while flying on my checkride, the DPE had me divert to another airport as expected so i used the chart, wheel and pencil with 5nm marks on it. He then asked why I didn't use the gps in the plane and told me that I was required to know how to use all equipment on the plane. I tried to use the GPS as little as possible because i thought if he felt that i was relying on it, he would turn it off.
What's the practical value in doing navlogs by hand?
Maybe I'm missing something here (and granted, I'm a low-time pilot, not a CFI) ... but I don't see how doing it with a pencil is in any way superior to doing it with a spreadsheet or calculator or Foreflight.
As I see it, a good pilot has to plan flights accurately, period. You've got to know where you are, how much fuel you have, and how much you'll have when you land. You've got to have backup plans for everything, including if your precious electronics fail (I fly with a certified GPS, ForeFlight on the iPad, ForeFlight on the iPhone, handheld radio, and paper charts and A/FD just in case). If you use generous fuel reserves and check that your calculations are accurate, you'll be very safe.
I just don't see how spending 3 hours on paper vs. 3 minutes on ForeFlight gives you any real-world advantage.
As a training tool, I suppose it could be like high school trigonometry. I haven't used it once in real life, but supposedly it helped my brain grow in some way. Not sure it was effective
But as a student pilot, I always felt like the navlog was a distraction. I got so caught up in the trees — which number goes in which little box on my CFI's planning sheet — that it was harder to see the forest. "Flight planning" became about mastering one particular process that's virtually worthless in the real world. I just wonder if those many, many hours I spent planning my student cross-countries on paper would have been better spent learning something I'd actually use in the cockpit today.
I just see it as a rite of passage, or a skill to show off at the world's most boring cocktail party
Diversions are another thing. It's important to do them timely.My .02 cents: While it will be acceptable to use a program to put your nav log together in June, I would recommend doing it manually. I feel that if I used a program, my DPE would have asked me more questions. Sure, you will still get questions but possibly fewer because the manual way indicates some level of proficiency and understanding. I feel your pain as it does take some time, I had to wake up really early to put mine together making a long day longer. With that being said, while flying on my checkride, the DPE had me divert to another airport as expected so i used the chart, wheel and pencil with 5nm marks on it. He then asked why I didn't use the gps in the plane and told me that I was required to know how to use all equipment on the plane. I tried to use the GPS as little as possible because i thought if he felt that i was relying on it, he would turn it off.
The first one might take that long, but I got it down to about 30 minutes by my checkride, counting recopying due to all the wind revisions. These days I know not to use quite so many waypoints.Because you need to understand the workings behind foreflight, if you can't do everything it can do you're not going to be able to as easily see when it's giving you had numbers. Do you believe children should learn basic math even though they'll always have a cell phone with a calculator on it?
If it takes you 3 hours to do a nav log by hand, that's case and point you need to invest some time to better understand the math and process.
I wasn't addressing your post as being out of whack by the way lol...I agree with your post
I had to grind out a million stiffness matrices by hand
Sounds like high school when my parents weren't home.
I wasn't addressing your post as being out of whack by the way lol...
See it now?
Doesn't it cause blindness?
During my check ride (PPL), when asked for a diversion, I looked at the chart, made a decent estimate of the direction and turned, then started to dial in the destination on the Loran (this was 2006). The DPE asked what I was doing. I told him and he said "The Loran failed. This is supposed to be pilotage." You can't win...
John
Diversions are another thing. It's important to do them timely.
I ended up using MEMORY. I knew where the diversion airport was and how far it was. I didn't do that on purpose. I thought the DPE was being chatty when he asked me where Napa was. So I told him. Over there (pointing), past Oakland and up the eastern bay shore. How far? Just under 50 miles. How much fuel (now I figure out what's going on)? Low altitude through Class C, so full rich and 10 GPH. At 100 knots, 30 minutes. So, 5 gallons.
Napa? Mine was Byron, just "around the corner"
OP, my hand-done navlogs were tedious and time-consuming. However, it's cool. Enjoy it and make the most of it. Use it as an opportunity to become fluent with the sectional. And it's kind of awesome using the plotter and drawing out different routes, etc. It might be very "retro" but there's some nostalgia and flight history there.
What's the practical value in doing navlogs by hand?
What's the practical value in doing navlogs by hand?[/QUOTE]
Examiner will want to see it. Some even require you to do it at the beginning of the practical and tell you where to plan it for (destination airport). IOW not ahead of time.