A150K
Well-Known Member
aimen to thatdo what you love and you will never work a day in your life....
aimen to thatdo what you love and you will never work a day in your life....
"Talk about REALLY accelerated courses though - like those guys in WW2..."
I think the difference is the acceptable loss rate during WWII and now. How many pilots got killed in training and how many airplanes just flew in to the side of a mountain IMC? It was war and a high level of loss of life was part of it. Today, we'd never allow such a high rate of attrition.
It's amazing looking at the old WWII movies footage. If a plane crashed on the runway they just took a dozer to it and didn't seem to think twice.
I know I would....I went to ATP and the first time I saw an NDB approach was in the sim as a new hire at OO...fortunately my sim partner knew how to do them well, and I got a lesson from him...then NAILED it LOL....no big deal with no wind...I imagine doing one for real in a stiff wind would be another thing altogether!
I bet part of the cost was the cost of the manpower to trian as well.
I learned to shoot NDB on a fixed card Skyhawk during my initial instrument training. After I graduated, I never touched and airplane that had an ADF for the next 4 years. And now, I'll probably be shooting them in Nebraska in our Metros. That training paid off!
In fact, I had a perfect outbound, PT, and inbound course on my checkride!
I learned to shoot NDB on a fixed card Skyhawk during my initial instrument training. After I graduated, I never touched and airplane that had an ADF for the next 4 years. And now, I'll probably be shooting them in Nebraska in our Metros. That training paid off!
In fact, I had a perfect outbound, PT, and inbound course on my checkride!
My thought is, why teach students an NDB (specially non career students) they will never use it. I was taught it, and spent a good 5 hours doing no gyro NDB holds!! Why?!?! I'm not sure!!
Heck the place I teach now parttime doesnt even have ADF that work anymore. Our Metro does not have an ADF in it. . .
My thougth is why teach a PVT instrument pilot NDB approaches. They will NEVER use them. Infact any airport that might have had on will have a GPS overlay on it. And I know you are going to say, "what happens when the GPS goes down in flight?" Well to that I say, and teach, go to your alt airport that has a VOR or ILS and call it a day!
Why waste your students time and money so that they can have a "right of passage". . . to me that is dumb!!
I guess if you have a student that says "I want to learn how to do it" then great. . . go teach it . . . (after I remember it myself) . . . lets see correction = deflection or something like that. . right?!?!
I do agree, teach them in something other than glass if you can. . at least one or two lessons in steam gagues. . .
Just my two cents!
I learned to shoot NDB on a fixed card Skyhawk during my initial instrument training. After I graduated, I never touched and airplane that had an ADF for the next 4 years. And now, I'll probably be shooting them in Nebraska in our Metros. That training paid off!
In fact, I had a perfect outbound, PT, and inbound course on my checkride!
[modhat]let's try not to get in another pissing match here mmmK? Some of the best pilots don't even fly instruments at all anymore, so get off your high horse. [/modhat]
SOOOO . .if anyone wants a job referral . . . .:dunno:
My thought is, why teach students an NDB (specially non career students) they will never use it. I was taught it, and spent a good 5 hours doing no gyro NDB holds!! Why?!?! I'm not sure!!
Heck the place I teach now parttime doesnt even have ADF that work anymore.
IM BUSTED!!!!!:dunno:As I recall the ground school you taught, the NDB part went something like this.
"Ooookay... next we've got... hmm. NDB. That stands for... something. I think it's 'No Damn Benefit'. Ha, see what I did there? Oh man. ...all right, let's move on to VORs."
(If you'll excuse the crass analogy)
I think he meant intrinsically....a "4" who's daddy owns a King Air might be a "6"
but a "4" who's daddy owns a Citation 10 might be an "8"
and a "4" who's daddy owns a G5 would magically become a "10"