Not me, bro. I hit the AP as soon as the wheels leave the ground and let it fly until short final. I want to own a Cirrus some day.Probably some truth to it for foreign pilots jumping in the right seat with 400 hours.
For our little planes, the A/P isn't landing it for us, so we get plenty of manual flying in every flight.
Also was that opinion of the same FAA that removed real stall training from like everything, and eliminated instrument training from their new sport licenses? Lol, ahh FAA, you do you boo
NOT using it at times is as bad as using it at other times.
Folks just don’t get the autopilot, this is very noticeable in low time folk.
NOT using it at times is as bad as using it at other times.
It’s a tool, simple as that, I’ve seen people task saturate themselves vs kicking the AP on because “I’d rather hand fly”, Ive seen people become enthralled with the AP vs hitting the button and flying the plane NOW, NOT using the autopilot thinking you’re building skills, that’s about the same as trying to take a Phillips screw out with a flat head because it’s more old school.
What’s impressive is knowing when to kick it on and when to kick it off.
What is this autopilot of which you speak?
Some kind of Tesla doohickey
Not really. The autopilot exited early in that sequence. The problem came from the Airbus's inane logic and lack of feedback that the pilots were inputting drastically different control inputs and not doing anything sensible to resolve it.And Air France 447.
Not really. The autopilot exited early in that sequence. The problem came from the Airbus's inane logic and lack of feedback that the pilots were inputting drastically different control inputs and not doing anything sensible to resolve it.
So Cal Approach will hammer you on V186 back in the day when that was primary routing through the basin to VNY. They were quick to give you the admonishment of 'vectors' to correct course. VOR needle would be dead center and within toleranceI was flying from North WI to an airport in SE WI a few months ago, longer leg, direct, with FF. My autopilot is more of a temporary wing-leveler, hardly use it.
About 70 miles out the controller asked if my Nav is okay, asked something about a vector? I was hardly off, just a temporary few degrees while I was doing something, NOT using the onboard facilities. I later looked at my track line on flightaware, straight.
Anyway, ATC seems to be getting used to lines like an arrow, unlike the ‘old days’ when you had a few miles between friends.
It was that the pilots only knew how to program the FMS and not how to fly the plane. The stalled it into the ocean, or close enough that they couldn’t recover once the captain was woken up and brought to the cockpit.
Not really. The autopilot exited early in that sequence. The problem came from the Airbus's inane logic and lack of feedback that the pilots were inputting drastically different control inputs and not doing anything sensible to resolve it.
So Cal Approach will hammer you on V186 back in the day when that was primary routing through the basin to VNY. They were quick to give you the admonishment of 'vectors' to correct course. VOR needle would be dead center and within tolerance
That’s trim is for.For what Otto cost I use him as much as possible. Hand flying long cross countries are over.
It was that the pilots only knew how to program the FMS and not how to fly the plane. The stalled it into the ocean, or close enough that they couldn’t recover once the captain was woken up and brought to the cockpit.
I’m fortunate to have most of my actual Instrument time flying planes without A/P. Use it or lose it.
Yep, use it or lose it like I said. The run of mill Cessna, or Piper trainers in the 90's lacked autopilot as that was considered a luxury. Now days, its not uncommon to see the 60's era Cherokee, Cessna's etc with the A/P added at some point.And the FAA removes full stall training from all certs lolz
Bad recurrent training program?
We fly single pilot IFR, lots of AP, but we demo raw data no AP stuff, if you cant handfly the plane raw data you’re going to be busting checkrides and looking for a new job with a now dirty PRIA.
AP, no AP, VFR, IFR, all different skills, ALL need to be kept up and used at the right time and not at the wrong time.
I can say by reading this thread most of you would not want a flight review with me.
Yeah button pusher do nothingers struggle with my flight reviews.Well that's a no brainer!
I can hear it now..... I need you to fly me the VOR xx into PodunkYeah button pusher do nothingers struggle with my flight reviews.
Yep, use it or lose it like I said. The run of mill Cessna, or Piper trainers in the 90's lacked autopilot as that was considered a luxury. Now days, its not uncommon to see the 60's era Cherokee, Cessna's etc with the A/P added at some point.
Same with advanced avionics, if you are a great stick but are slow on your avionics or let yourself get task saturated, you lost the other half.
Again, it’s as impressive as using a flathead to install a Phillips screw.