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I thought civil aircraft couldn't have ejection seats?
I thought civil aircraft couldn't have ejection seats?
There was an IFS student that landed at Whiting after his coms failed on his solo cross country about two years ago. He became pretty widely known for it, but he eventually attrited out of primary.
I crashed in a C-310 @ an AFB ...![]()
Don't know. It wouldn't really surprise me if it was self induced. He said he saw runways, landed, and then shit himself when he saw orange and white airplanes and blue flashing lights coming at him.
If you can't keep enough SA to know where you are on the VFR sectional at a hundred knots just because your radio goes TU then aviation probably isn't for you.
It's will continue to be a problem, IMHO. With all the technology in GA cockpits flight schools are turning out airplane drivers, not pilots. I've flown with people that own Cirrus a/c that have traffic systems and they will stare at the glass saying a plane is two miles away at three o'clock, and never look outside on a VFR day. These planes are designed to be flown by autopilot from just after takeoff to just before touchdown. When something goes wrong they pull the aircraft parachute rather than fly the plane. Just because they have the money to buy their $600K airplane doens't mean they know how to fly...
Unbelievable. Part of the whole experience for me is making my log, spinning the wind, and hitting my waypoints within 30 to 45 seconds of the time I planned. To me it's like a sport. If anything you should do it because it's gratifying and makes you feel kinda smart. Pilotage and dead reckoning are the name of the game (in GA anyway). If you can't do that then you'll never be ready when it's time to shoot an NDB approach after your gps tanks.
Spot on. Which is why my private studs don't get to use a gps when I'm teaching them XC's. Sectional chart, whiz wheel, compass and watch are all you need on a VFR flight. Because the GPS will go tango uniform at some point...
Edit: I even teach spin entry and recovery to my private studs because I want them to know how to avoid the accidental spin. I'm a huge believer in stick and rudder skills.