I don't even know that I failed the sim portion of my Airnet interview I posted about in the OP (they never told me either way). I didn't make this thread to be about my Airnet interview, I just used it as a starting point for the discussion of sim portions in interviews being unfair.Are you for real, man? You probably didn't bust that sim ride for the reason you thought you did, so your analysis is also probably just plain wrong.
This whole thread, people have been telling you that, no, it isn't that one switch location, or that one checklist item, or that one power setting that is the magic key to passing a sim check.
But taking a long time to find a switch can lead to being behind the airplane, which can snowball into much worse things. Accidents are always chains of events that can start with something innocuous like taking a long time to find a switch.
Isn't that what a FAA certificate is for? Have you ever met a certificated pilot (with hours to get an interview) who has no basic airmanship skills?People -- some of whom have actually given simulator checks -- are telling you that they are looking at a pilot's overall, basic airmanship knowing fully well it is an airplane you've probably never flown before.
What about the guy that had the good fortune of having recent experience in the sim? What if I had 200 recent hours of Frasca time during my Airnet interview? I wouldn't have gotten behind the airplane, and the interviewer would not have been able to see how I act under stress. Does that mean I fail the interview? Under that scenario should I pretend I am behind the airplane by purposfully flying all over the place and acting like I can't find any of the switches?they expect to see you stumble and maybe even fall...but they're looking for you to use good, basic airmanship (at the experience level that it is being tested) and demonstrate that you get back up and learn and adapt to the situation. Having an "instructor" toss you bits of situational awareness would entirely defeat the purpose.
A large part of preparing to fly alone is making sure I'm familiar enough with the airplane to complete the flight safely. I never have, and never will launch off into hard IMC solo for my first flight in an airframe.They want to see you you apply your skills and handle the airmanship problem you are presented with all alone.
First off, my train did not wrecked. I just flew the approach in a manner that is not indicitive of how I normally fly approaches. In an airplane I'm familiar with, I never bust altitude, I never lose heading, and I never fumble checklists.If your entire train wrecked because you didn't know "the power setting", and didn't exercise the airmanship to adapt to what resulted from you not having that one bit of info you wished you had, that is telling the interviewer something important about you and your airmanship.
All it says is that I'm (logically) not willing to spend my own money to prepare for a interview when I might not get the job. The problem is that you have to pay hard earned money in order to get familiar with any sim. If every company that made candidates do a sim evaluation offered, say, 5 free hours of preperation then it would be less unfair. Its not my job to train myself to do the job, it is that of the company that hires that has that responsibility. Didn't "pay for training" used to be something this forum frowned upon?