The CAP guys in AZ who plowed headlong into the only mountain anywhere near their flight plan at night, probably should'a used the terrain avoidance map feature their T182T was equipped with.
'Course I was more than a little surprised that a number of the Garmin hand-helds would have hollered "Terrain!" but the G1000 stays silent on the topic.
It does, just as soon as you pay Garmin $10K for the TAWS upgrade.
I think there should be an SUV endorsement required. Where I live, huge SUV's like Suburbans plus the crew cab, long bed trucks are everywhere now and many people have no business driving them.
Amen. I've wanted this for a long time. I'd draw the line somewhere in between the baby SUV's (Rav4 type of thing) and minivans, and the large SUV's and full-size vans. Overall, SUV drivers do the stupidest things on the road, and I say that as someone with around a million miles of driving experience. Current rules allow you to drive nearly anything as long as it's 26,000 pounds or less.
Sort of. There is no law that mandates flying with insurance, and I know several guys who don't have it.
Yup. There was a guy who crashed a nice new Columbia 400 at Sauk or Dells a few years ago, no insurance, shrugged it off and just bought another one. I wish I had that kind of money.
That having been said, the high performance endorsement is bs, as is the complex endorsement. Just hold more right rudder and follow the checklist: there's your endorsement.
A really good CFI will give you MUCH more than that, though.
I think there should be an endorsement to pump self-serve fuel.
I know you were talking about cars, but this is one thing that I will be teaching my students when I get my CFI. There are several things like this that aren't on the PTS but are important. I think some of the fuel starvation accidents are at least partially a result of people who are unfamiliar with fueling airplanes themselves pushing on to the bigger airport with linemen and trucks and running out on the way. So, I'll be sure that my students are comfortable fueling anywhere.
That's the reason why people are required to get a pilot's certificate. The endorsements are really jokes.
Not really - If they didn't exist, we'd have to teach everyone who got their private pilot certificate about that stuff, and some of it, especially high altitude, is information that very few people will ever use. And then Nick will have more to rant about.
IMO, again, a good CFI can make the endorsements into excellent learning experiences, and make it really worthwhile for their student.
The pilot does require additional training prior to just hopping in a Stearman and flying it, though, at least if it's an insured plane.
That's just it, though... Insurance isn't required, and there's still a fair number of people who don't have it.
Exactly. And the tailwheel endorsement is also a joke - because most people who get it admit they need significantly more training prior to feeling comfortable soloing a tailwheel.
Again, the fault of the CFI providing incomplete training.