T/O w/FSII
Well-Known Member
I can NOT believe what I am reading here. Wow. ATN has reached a whole new level. It's like his brain is on AP and the disconnect switch is broke.
I do turn the auto throttles off quite a bit, they annoy me because they are no where near smooth.
Back to the original topic at hand, if we're on an RNAV 1 SID, autopilot on above 100' (required to be on by 500', per company policy). Sadly, more and more airports are going to these types of departures, so that's becoming the norm. I hate doing 4-days where I have to fly every leg out of CLT.
If it's not an RNAV 1 SID, I'll hand fly to about 7000' or so.
Does your company have any data that hand-flying RNAV SIDs was causing a lot of lateral deviations or something?
I've been doing safety work for the past several years where I am and I cannot recall a single instance of hand-flying an RNAV being a problem. We can fly them any way we want.
If someone wanted to change our procedure, I'd ask them to present some data as to why it should be done -- otherwise, it'd be pretty obvious that they made the whole thing up.
Not a single ASAP event involving RNAV and hand-flying.
I can NOT believe what I am reading here. Wow. ATN has reached a whole new level. It's like his brain is on AP and the disconnect switch is broke.
I haven't landed with those things on since 2008.
Gee, that's proficiency.![]()
That being said, the primary reason that pilots exist in that room in the front of the airplane is for when things go wrong
Other pilots see a different priority. They believe that malfunctions and emergencies are so rare, and that the skills "maintained" by hand flying portions of normal operational flights are of negligible relevance to handling those one-in-a-million catastrophic emergencies, that it does not warrant turning off the autopilot any more than absolutely necessary.
@ATN_Pilot, you really think we hand fly because we have big egos, or just to impress ourselves?
When the A/P comes off, performance improves if the throttles also come off at that time.
Well, I'm sure glad you're so enlightened.Yes. And no, I don't expect you to admit it (or possibly even realize it on a conscious level).
Care to address the rest of my post as it relates to your outlook?
Not picking a side, but your type of flying is more of an exception.@ATN_Pilot, you really think we hand fly because we have big egos, or just to impress ourselves?
In the last 12 months, I have 28 landings (an average of just over 2 landings a month). In 4 years on the 767, I have a grand total of 106 landings.
So, if I did what you're saying I should, turning on the automation at the first opportunity, then turning it off low to the ground, I'd have less than 1 hour of hand-flying experience per year. How on earth am I supposed to maintain proficiency with that? Is that even safe? If I found myself in an undesirable state in the middle of the night over the ocean (ref. AF447), would I be able to handle it with less than an hour of hand-flying experience per year?
Thankfully, the vast majority of professional pilots believe that maintaining proficiency in hand-flying (yes, practice) is necessary beyond the bare minimum level, and are encouraged to do so by our companies, the FAA, and the NTSB. They know, and we know, that proficiency is more important than saving every nickel (though, if you're hand-flying the profile, the difference is negligible even in a heavy jet). It's also more important than passenger comfort, though I still shake my head that you really think a smooth, low-gain, proficient pilot doing some hand-flying provides an uncomfortable ride (hint: it only does if the guy flying isn't very good).
How's that?Not picking a side, but your type of flying is more of an exception.
Not picking a side, but your type of flying is more of an exception.
Not really... most widebody guys have the same situation. That's why the widebody fleets have the highest amount of minutes handflown per flight at my airline.
This is also the reason that the larger the aircraft, the greater the percentage of passengers and cabin crew that are vomiting uncontrollably all over themselves and all over each other, due to the G-forces they're experiencing as the ham-fisted ego-maniac up front attempts to simultaneously guide the aluminum beast to cruise altitude and track course without the use of autopilot.