@denverpilot my point is that a student can use the sim at home, without an instructor (either prior initial training or after training commences) to practice all of those things. Many people write the sim off because they perceive that it's not good for stick & rudder, I'm just saying it can be used for a lot more than stick and rudder.
I also stand by my point that a crap ton of instructors resist the use of simulation (either at home or at the school), and yet I see people who use it who end way, way ahead of the curve.
Essentially, it takes a lot of exposure to flying in the system to become confident when flying in the NAS. Not all of that time has to be done in an airplane or with an instructor watching you for every second. Instructors tend to be the last people who are likely to subscribe to the point of view or relay the idea to their clients, though, for a variety of reasons. I realize it's a generalization and that there will be exceptions, but I've seen it play out hundreds of times just like that. I've also seen countless instances of people who self-studied (before and during formal training) who came out ahead of the national average.
A student using a sim at home for primary instruction isn’t learning anything deeply significant. Maybe how to tune a radio or buttonology of a particular GPS model. Which is way down the initial training syllabus.
They also are fairly likely to learn something wrong and then have to break a bad habit.
But that really applies mostly to instrument.
You’re not learning much about aircraft control or basic airmanship from a desktop sim and that’s the vast majority of the Private certificate.
There’s certainly worth in self study. All sorts of students don’t do enough of it.
I don’t know a single instructor who is against sim training when used to meet a specific requirement or goal.
You never answered the question. What specific tasks in the ACS are helped by an instructor using a sim and how exactly would they use it?
I’m asking because I know which ones would.
You haven’t answered yet because you haven’t thought about how teaching is actually accomplished.
Are we teaching concepts? Motor skills? Integration of concepts and motor skills?
Which of those does a sim actually help with? Which does it teach the wrong way?
Think hard. Then answer. Make the answer fit the ACS tasks. There’re the minimum standard.
Wasting someone’s time and money teaching them something the wrong way, isn’t appreciated by students paying in cash. A sim at the primary level can waste a lot of time and money. They’re paying for instruction by the hour.
Now if you’re saying a student wants to spend a bunch of money on a sim as a play toy at home with no syllabus or written goals and it’ll keep them entertained when they should be cracking the books for the written and oral... sure.
It’ll easily be a great video game and aviation toy.
Are you talking about training to a plan, or just farting around with a sim?
I love farting around with sims. It’s not what my customers would be paying me to accomplish, however.
An example. Someone might say showing a student the instrument panel is possible on a nice sim. Sure. No argument. But if you’re paying me by the hour I can just as easily do that in a real airplane, sitting on the ramp or in a hangar, engine off, no rental cost... and why wouldn’t I? You didn’t hire me to teach you to fly a sim.
Benefits include a more immersive real world experience, knobs and levers that actually are connected to real mechanisms and in the correct locations, a chance to start building your walk around and inspection habits and senses, etc.
And you didn’t have to buy a sim. Or pay to rent one.
Just a simple example. But either you’re learning to fly airplanes or you’re learning to fly a desktop computer.
Since you hired me to teach you to do the former...
There’s great uses for a sim at the instrument rating. Not so much in primary instruction.
A little. But not worth you buying one unless you just wanted one for entertainment value.