The Growler, like the Prowler, will be getting ILS.
Does the Super Hornet have it?
The Growler, like the Prowler, will be getting ILS.
"If you think that referencing cockpit instruments to fly/navigate precludes the ability to see and avoid.......,"
This statement shows the complete disconnect between military and civilian. With whatever respect is due, I'd ask you to consider that the FAA does NOT allow the ability to see and avoid while referencing cockpit instruments.
Does the Super Hornet have it?
I don't think any were ever added, but haven't kept up.Does the Super Hornet have it?
Its a difference in wordplay here. The composite crosscheck is an outside/inside thing. It's a crosscheck, not staring at any one thing for a given period of time, but a division of time. Even when VFR, when there is a responsibility to see and avoid, people still look inside and reference instruments as part of an overall crosscheck, otherwise radio freqs would never get changed, VORs would never get tuned/tracked, GPS would never be referenced, etc. Alll stuff donein VFR flight. Which is no different in this case, the only difference being that the instrument being crosschecked, happens to be tuned to a a Navaid thats part of an approach. You're still referencing outside, while glancing occasionally inside...its no different than that. One's head isn't buried inside. That again, is why it cannot be logged as sim instrument.....because its not an instrument crosscheck, as in foggles or heads down stuff; it's a composite crosscheck.
That's splitting hairs. In the civ world, instrument approach practice is a huge heads-down activity. Simply instrument crosscheck while looking outside is a visual approach. A fighter jet collided with a civilian aircraft and killed two people so it needs to raise questions and demand a full and thorough investigation. Us civvies don't have the convenience of pulling an eject handle and living at the end of something terrible.
In the civ world, instrument approach practice is a huge heads-down activity.
Do it in a MOA. Create one if it's that busy an area. There's no excuse for this.
What is the difference between a F16 flying a visual approach, practicing IFR procedures, and an airliner flying a visual approach, practicing IFR procedures ? Does the PF of the Airbus not scan his instruments too? Sans Heads up display?
Seems the same to me.
This is what CC can't understand.
How does a single person practice an instrument approach? By definition that is a heads down maneuver. In IMC is one thing but in VFR condition us GA guys need a safety pilot while the practice guy is under foggles/hood. How does it work for the military?
How does a single person practice an instrument approach? By definition that is a heads down maneuver. In IMC is one thing but in VFR condition us GA guys need a safety pilot while the practice guy is under foggles/hood. How does it work for the military?
That's splitting hairs. In the civ world, instrument approach practice is a huge heads-down activity. Simply instrument crosscheck while looking outside is a visual approach. A fighter jet collided with a civilian aircraft and killed two people so it needs to raise questions and demand a full and thorough investigation. Us civvies don't have the convenience of pulling an eject handle and living at the end of something terrible.
Mike, what your saying is a military pilot doing instrument training splits his time between see and avoid and instrument flying cockpit duties. The division of attention makes for a less safe environment than the way it's done in the civilian world. The FAA won't allow this with civilian instrument training. Flippen drones need a safety pilot escort if they are big enough to cause damage if they hit an aircraft.
