UAL747400 said:I hate the taxiing blind at night crap they make us do up here. When there's no planes in front of you, who the hell cares?
Landing light getting too hot. Pfft
There's my anti-authority coming out in me.![]()
I disagree. There are portions of the airport that are unlit and additional lighting is desirable. It might be worth considering to use the recogs as those aren't as bright, but I need additional lighting at times, and if such is the case, then one should feel more than welcome to use their resources as necessary.brschmid said:why do you need it? it is easy enough to see where you are going
This isn't me wanting to taxi at 50 knots down the taxiway here.(although I would like to start a new fad called "airplane drifting"desertdog71 said:You are going to be MADE to do things that you don't want to the rest of your life.
Boy you're right...what was I thinking when I wrote my reply...:buck:UAL747400 said:Yes Jason and Angel, I know there's no such thing as common sense. :buck:
UAL747400 said:Hey, you know I can still see where Im going driving my car with the parking lights on. Does that mean its a good idea?
Im not trying to sound like a smartass there at all, but why not have the light on? If anything, when you're carrying passengers Im sure they'd feel better knowing you can see.
desertdog71 said:You are going to be MADE to do things that you don't want to the rest of your life.
JaceTheAce said:To an extent. You will be made to do more things that you don't want to do at UND compared to flying in the real world.
UAL747400 said:Which is pretty understandable I guess considering all the strange accidents UND has had.
Just wait until you get into the "real world". UND will seem laid back. As far as UND having accidents, you need to put the blame where it should lie. Emergency descent because of an Alt. failure? Falling asleep in the airplane, gear up landings and then flying back to GFK? Those aren't UND's fault, you cannot teach common sense.JaceTheAce said:To an extent. You will be made to do more things that you don't want to do at UND compared to flying in the real world.
Dugie8 said:The old warriors, pre bendix and garmin, did have a landing light that would get very hot, and burn out fairly quickly if left on all the time. The new ones, leave the damn thing on if you feel the need for it. Be considerate and don't blind people, but if you want to taxi out to 35R using the landing light, go for it. You are sitting in the left seat making the decisions.
Dugie8 said:Just wait until you get into the "real world". UND will seem laid back. As far as UND having accidents, you need to put the blame where it should lie. Emergency descent because of an Alt. failure? Falling asleep in the airplane, gear up landings and then flying back to GFK? Those aren't UND's fault, you cannot teach common sense.
Yes, correct. The real world is NOT more laid back than UND, but the "real world" people make it seem more laid back since they're NORMAL people. :buck:Dj To Rule said:The real world seems more laid back to me than UND, perhapsthe real world is not laid back, but the people who operate in the real world make it seem to be laid back. I think some people at UND freak out too much about little things and over emphasis omitting some other thoughts (maybe that pertain saftey).
Dj To Rule said:ABSOLUTLEY this is what instructors should say instead, not freak out about burning the lights off, I'm sorry the plane must be engineered, if not Cars are engineered Hella better, (go BMW Jace)
Ok and coming to HIDs, I can go forever about the metal halide lamps that sit in there, and the ballast that is on the firewall in your plane. I wanted HIDs on my car, so I did quite the research about them. ONE thing that they should advise is flicking the switch on and off in short time IS NOT GOOD FOR HID. The ballast regulates a voltage, but at start up it runs a tremendous amount of power to the bulb to help it ionize, thats why when you flick them on you see them flash brighter, this time the bulb heats and ionizes from the high voltage and current so it can run, but immediatley the ballast reduces this power to a regulated voltage or the bulb will be damaged (or might even blow). So its not the end of the world if you blow out one of these really expensive lights. Just a consideration so you can enjoy it's extended hours of operation. And plus flicking them on and off looks like you are signalling something and is more distracting, and you know what I might be staring off that direction and BAM OW MY EYES YOU B@ST@RDS! So leave em on so I know where you are, or off, and make the decision. You are the pilot. I prefer them on for better visibility and safety.
IS SAFTEY TOO EXPENSIVE, TRY AND ACCIDENT!
http://www.halcyon.net/lights/hid-faq.shtml
http://www.universalballast.com/techSupport/trouble_shooting/HID_tech_guide.html (ballast)
For more info on the ballast
Automotive
http://members.misty.com/don/d2.html
Want more websites go to google and type HID
http://www.howitworks.net/how-light-bulbs-work.html
to show that filament bulbs run at 2200 C to 2500 vs HID at 300C
My 2 cents of prophead