Awwwwww......that's too bad! You won't be able to participate in final jeprodyThe correct answer was experience and total time. Best, Alex.
Nope. The correct answer is "What is experience and total time".
Nope. The correct answer is "What is experience level and equipment?"Nope. The correct answer is "What is experience and total time".
Never confuse total time with experience, it's like confusing currency with proficiency. One has little to do with the other. There is a difference between 1000 hours of experience and one hour of experience repeated 1000 times.Nope, the correct QUESTION is "What is experience and total time?"![]()
Never confuse total time with experience, it's like confusing currency with proficiency. One has little to do with the other. There is a difference between 1000 hours of experience and one hour of experience repeated 1000 times.
It depends on a lot of things, but mainly the ambient temperature and the phase of the precip. Generally, snow won't stick when you're moving at 100+kts, but if it does and your airframe is above freezing, and then you move into a colder regime, you could get iced up, theoretically. And if the precip is liquid, and the temp is below freezing, well, you know where that leads to.I do have a question. I know I have been trained to stay out of the clouds in +2c to -20c. What is your take on this when below the clouds with precip falling from above?
Good plan until you learn a lot more about icing, say, from Scott Dennstaedt's "Ice Is Not Nice" course.I do have a question. I know I have been trained to stay out of the clouds in +2c to -20c.
What kind of precip? Liquid? Frozen? Freezing? What is the temp where you are? How much airspace below you, and what is the temperature profile from where you are down to the surface? Again, Scott's course will teach you a lot more about how to evaluate such a situation.What is your take on this when below the clouds with precip falling from above?