TheTraveler
Line Up and Wait
After taking lessons in both steam gauge and G1000 equipped planes, I've figured out something.
While the G1000 is "cool" and certainly has a lot of great advantages (too many to list even, I suppose), I have found that I actually fly better with my instructor when I'm in a steam gauge plane. It seems that the G1000 is even a little overpowering in that it is COMMANDING my attention.
When we practice a maneuver and I need to hold an altitude, airspeed, pitch, etc, with steam gauges I'm doing pretty well. Turning, for example. Vertical speed is close to 0, altitude holds well, speed holds relatively well, turn is coordinated.
When I do a maneuver in the G1000 plane, those ribbons tick off in such small increments and are always moving that it is extremely difficult to not pay attention to it. Adding to this, the instructor sees it too. For example: "Let's make a turn to 270. Maintain 75 kias and 2500' in this turn." In the turn, as the speed ribbon ticks off 76, 77, 74, 73, 77, the altitude ribbon does the same, and the turn-coordinator arrow moves back and forth. I hear "Maintain 75 and 270...rudder control" over and over again while I'm trying to pay attention to everything, collectively. It's as-if he is watching it just as much as it wants me to watch it, although I'm really trying not to. But the "feeling" of the plane really isn't changing. I think I'm flying just as well as I would with steam gauges, it just seems that this thing is responding with such smaller and faster increments that it's effecting perception. Does that sound crazy?
Landing is similar. I've got 4 or 5 landings in, most of which are at least still a little bit assisted. It is extremely difficult taking my attention away from that screen in the G1000. But with the steam gauges, even though it's an older plane, I've got a lot more focus and control on what I and the plane are doing, and that screen is not commanding my attention. I by no means have "good" landings, but landing in the steam gauge is easier and less painful for everyone involved (lol).
It just starts to "feel" as if the G1000 is screaming "LOOK AT ME! LOOK AT ME!" while the steam gauges are like "Yo...you just do your thing. We're here when you need us.".
I'm at the point where I'm likely to take the steam gauge airplane more often when I can get it, and likely use it all the way up to my checkride. But, the complexity comes in that I still need to train on the G1000 because the plane I'm going to fly after I get this done is a G1000 plane.
My question really is regarding what everyone else has felt. Is this common, is it a student/new pilot thing, or is this just my interpretation?
Secondly, something that I just need to get used to, something I'm always going to have to fight a little bit with, or do I need to focus more on ignoring the screen and paying attention to other stuff (even though the CFI is focused on the screen also)?
While the G1000 is "cool" and certainly has a lot of great advantages (too many to list even, I suppose), I have found that I actually fly better with my instructor when I'm in a steam gauge plane. It seems that the G1000 is even a little overpowering in that it is COMMANDING my attention.
When we practice a maneuver and I need to hold an altitude, airspeed, pitch, etc, with steam gauges I'm doing pretty well. Turning, for example. Vertical speed is close to 0, altitude holds well, speed holds relatively well, turn is coordinated.
When I do a maneuver in the G1000 plane, those ribbons tick off in such small increments and are always moving that it is extremely difficult to not pay attention to it. Adding to this, the instructor sees it too. For example: "Let's make a turn to 270. Maintain 75 kias and 2500' in this turn." In the turn, as the speed ribbon ticks off 76, 77, 74, 73, 77, the altitude ribbon does the same, and the turn-coordinator arrow moves back and forth. I hear "Maintain 75 and 270...rudder control" over and over again while I'm trying to pay attention to everything, collectively. It's as-if he is watching it just as much as it wants me to watch it, although I'm really trying not to. But the "feeling" of the plane really isn't changing. I think I'm flying just as well as I would with steam gauges, it just seems that this thing is responding with such smaller and faster increments that it's effecting perception. Does that sound crazy?
Landing is similar. I've got 4 or 5 landings in, most of which are at least still a little bit assisted. It is extremely difficult taking my attention away from that screen in the G1000. But with the steam gauges, even though it's an older plane, I've got a lot more focus and control on what I and the plane are doing, and that screen is not commanding my attention. I by no means have "good" landings, but landing in the steam gauge is easier and less painful for everyone involved (lol).
It just starts to "feel" as if the G1000 is screaming "LOOK AT ME! LOOK AT ME!" while the steam gauges are like "Yo...you just do your thing. We're here when you need us.".
I'm at the point where I'm likely to take the steam gauge airplane more often when I can get it, and likely use it all the way up to my checkride. But, the complexity comes in that I still need to train on the G1000 because the plane I'm going to fly after I get this done is a G1000 plane.
My question really is regarding what everyone else has felt. Is this common, is it a student/new pilot thing, or is this just my interpretation?
Secondly, something that I just need to get used to, something I'm always going to have to fight a little bit with, or do I need to focus more on ignoring the screen and paying attention to other stuff (even though the CFI is focused on the screen also)?