ZapBrannigan
If it ain’t a Boeing, I’m not going. No choice.
So I'm at recurrent. This is probably around my 30th recurrent, but my 15th at this company and my 6th in this airplane.
Been flying for 25 years. Been doing it for a living for 17. (and a few years as CFI before that)
Today was day 1 of a 4 day recurrent at FSI. Just had the WORST day I have ever had in a simulator. It wasn't for lack of preparation, I studied and felt well prepared. I just screwed up... then screwed up again... and after that it was like a snowball effect.
My partner flew first. After a break we got back in and I reprogrammed the FMS for the second leg. I failed, however, to remove the departure airport from the FIRST leg from the route. So we took off on an RNAV departure... and the FMS immediately commanded a turn in the wrong direction. There were easily 3 or 4 places I should have caught that before we pushed up the power for takeoff.
Ouch... ok, let's put it behind us and move on. During an unusual attitude recovery I typically scan all 3 instruments before I make any control inputs to recover. The instructor announced, "Your controls" and I glanced at all 3 instruments... and all three of them agreed!
Ok, so that tells me that my PFD is accurate right? I look at my PFD and recover from the nose low, left bank attitude. Nothing happens. Airspeed increasing, thrust at idle, spoilers extend... nothing. He freezes the sim. We rolled THREE times. He failed the AHRS on my side AFTER I had control of the airplane. ACK! Ok, so now I feel like a circus clown trying to earn a PPL. I am embarrassed and ashamed.
Not to belabor the point. Next I screwed up an LNAV approach to an MDA to a missed approach, followed by a passable raw data ILS.
I post this for two reasons. First, pilots don't like to admit mistakes. We love to tell stories about how we saved the day, but its pretty rare to hear a pilot say, "Hey, that was totally my fault, and I screwed up."
I want the low timers who read this forum to know that it doesn't matter how long you have been doing this, or how many hours you have, you can still have a bad day in the simulator. I'm no Lindbergh -- that much is for sure -- but I sure like to do the best I can and today I didn't do that. You can be darned sure I'll be better prepared tomorrow.
I hope... lol
Been flying for 25 years. Been doing it for a living for 17. (and a few years as CFI before that)
Today was day 1 of a 4 day recurrent at FSI. Just had the WORST day I have ever had in a simulator. It wasn't for lack of preparation, I studied and felt well prepared. I just screwed up... then screwed up again... and after that it was like a snowball effect.
My partner flew first. After a break we got back in and I reprogrammed the FMS for the second leg. I failed, however, to remove the departure airport from the FIRST leg from the route. So we took off on an RNAV departure... and the FMS immediately commanded a turn in the wrong direction. There were easily 3 or 4 places I should have caught that before we pushed up the power for takeoff.
Ouch... ok, let's put it behind us and move on. During an unusual attitude recovery I typically scan all 3 instruments before I make any control inputs to recover. The instructor announced, "Your controls" and I glanced at all 3 instruments... and all three of them agreed!
Ok, so that tells me that my PFD is accurate right? I look at my PFD and recover from the nose low, left bank attitude. Nothing happens. Airspeed increasing, thrust at idle, spoilers extend... nothing. He freezes the sim. We rolled THREE times. He failed the AHRS on my side AFTER I had control of the airplane. ACK! Ok, so now I feel like a circus clown trying to earn a PPL. I am embarrassed and ashamed.
Not to belabor the point. Next I screwed up an LNAV approach to an MDA to a missed approach, followed by a passable raw data ILS.
I post this for two reasons. First, pilots don't like to admit mistakes. We love to tell stories about how we saved the day, but its pretty rare to hear a pilot say, "Hey, that was totally my fault, and I screwed up."
I want the low timers who read this forum to know that it doesn't matter how long you have been doing this, or how many hours you have, you can still have a bad day in the simulator. I'm no Lindbergh -- that much is for sure -- but I sure like to do the best I can and today I didn't do that. You can be darned sure I'll be better prepared tomorrow.
I hope... lol