n57flyguy
Well-Known Member
When a pilot fly's a certain aircraft, flying specific profile's, missions, etc, they do become very good at what they do. However, they may not be very good at other aspects of flying but can probably pick it up quickly given the chance. For example, the pilots that fly BFM down here in Kingsville do it day in and day out. Matter of fact, 95% of what they fly is BFM. Then they go do a NATOPS check and suck at certain things, like PA's, aero, etc. Given a few flights, I'm sure they could master it. What I do 90% of the time is formation flying, most of it as a lead in section and division. I went out and did a NATOPS flight not so long ago and for example, performing the the squirrel cage, I was just awful. Again, this is a small part of flying but it shows how an experienced pilot can be less than par depending.
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Edited for brevity....
I think you also touch on the issue of proficiency in the cockpit, as well as confidence. Different aspects and types of flying seem to require different levels of proficiency, but they always require confidence in the ability to fly the airplane. When SHTF, you have your prior experience, training, and confidence to make the right decisions to get yourself back to the ground safely. When that rug gets pulled from under, which it has for me, I realized in after thought that the only thing getting me to the ground was awareness that I needed to get there fast. Flying the airplane, as I think it should be, was second nature to accomplish that new goal of the flight. That then became an experience to put in my bag.
Proficiency is needed to gain experience, experience breeds confidence, confidence allows one to learn.