Autothrust Blue
”…trusting ze process…”
Watch out, we've got a badass over here!So do mine![]()
Watch out, we've got a badass over here!So do mine![]()
Stick and rudder skills are important, no doubt. However, being a killer stick is only a fraction of the whole equation, IMO. There are plenty of outstanding stick and rudder pilots that I still wouldn't consider recommending for a job; good judgment, a professional attitude, and maturity are needed as well.
You're right. It's a balance - the best pilots are excellent stick and rudder pilots with outstanding judgment, and the discipline to not have to prove it to people.
... but what about trying to prove the point that stick and rudder skills and outstanding judgement are good to people...
... I don't think that'll ever stop. We're in danger of it going on forever. Yeah. We're dangerous.
Well, if I had my druthers, I'd work for a company where I made enough money to own an airplane, then I'd fly the hell out of that on my time off. If you own a Citabria, and fly aerobatics and land on gravel bars on the weekend occasionally for fun, or a Baron or Lance and fly your family on trips all the time, or use it to commute, you can keep checking the "hand flying" and "light plane judgment box" that keeps you out of harms way while doing something fun. Unfortunately, we don't pay pilots enough to really do that at most levels of the game, so you're somewhat on your own for maintaining currency in difficult situations.
FIFYMy comedic genius is obviously lost on ALL of us here.![]()
FIFYLOL
I used be a freight dawg... now I fly for an airline, what does that make me?![]()
No doubt true, at least in the stick and rudder sense.
Hell, I haven't actually landed the jet in 7 weeks...just got landing current again on my recurrent PC in the sim.
How many freight dogs does it take to change a light bulb?
Infinitely many, none of them will ever write it up.
How many airline pilots does it take to change a light bulb?
6, one to write up the bulb, and 5 to argue on the Internet about why their airline is better or worse than the other 4 guys arguing on the Internet.
How many Alaska pilots does it take to change a light bulb?
Only one if the weather is bad and he doesn't want to go out in it.
I dunno, I've flown with more people in freight that don't use exponential inputs. Not very smooth...
About the only things I give the edge to the freight world are ADM in dealing with weather, taxiing(if you've flown freight, you'll know why I say this), and perhaps they may handle the day when the crap hits the fan better in a glass, automated jet. The likely hood of that being pretty unlikely. That's only if they can instantly drop back on their experience of flying as a /U through a thunderstorm upside down single engine. I doubt most could. You've already addressed what makes a good pilot overall.
Sorry if I'm rambling...I'm enjoying a nice Argentinian red!![]()
romanatwood (youtube) proved that they don't cook with cat...That's it, them's fightin' words! I'm giving Tanker to a Chinese restaurant. A seedy one in eastern California.
ADM in dealing with weather, taxiing(if you've flown freight, you'll know why I say this), and perhaps they may handle the day when the crap hits the fan better in a glass, automated jet. The likely hood of that being pretty unlikely.
This is true. Lets be honest. If you can't deal with that day, and deal with it very well. What is the point of you being there to begin with? They can automate the pilot out of the normal procedures already.Yet again, I have to mention....this is THE REASON that pilots are sitting in the front of the jet.
yeah I think Tank Tank could take 'em... LOL he is HUGE!
romanatwood (youtube) proved that they don't cook with cat...
Yeah amen. We still fly just about the same routes that turbo-props to 737 fly....I fly them with brand new 600hr FOs next to me sometimes....with plenty of broken parts.....with a non-existent dispatcher sometimes.....with a radar good to 50-75miles.....I get to handle ground delay programs, every afternoon (and some mornings) going to EWR...I get to play in the snow in St John's Newfoundland, and then head down to Quextolcuatl, Mexico that night with a diversion thrown in for a Super Houston Storm that goes tops out near the moon. ;-)JC seems to light up regularly with people who seem to think that if you fly jets (particularly RJs) for a living, you're somehow less of a pilot. Those people are speaking from a very limited background, and I hope that other members realize that there are many ways to become a master of your craft (which I'm still working toward), not just the SPIFR way.