
Originally Posted by
nwafan20
I believe that I could based on the fact that I basically know a commercial cockpit inside and out. At least enough to safely land it and fly it. I also have memorized most of the Vspeeds of various aircraft, and I have flown several different general aviation aircraft on my quest to a private pilots license.
I realize it says for those who are not pilots, but I have to speak up. Knowing a cockpit is great but you still have to be able to fly it. That autopilot has to come off at sometime and believe me, when it does, let the games begin! Also, you don't have to memorize items like V-speeds, they are in the FMS. Not to be mean, but it is starting to pile high and deep in this thread. For 99 out of 100 people, not a chance. For those who have flown in the flight sims but not the real airplane, great, but let me tell you the sim is wonderful, but it still feels completely different from the airplane. I have done many, many sim training events now. Its not the movies. Yes, I know they make miracles happen there but lets snap back to reality. Autoland is not always an option either, some airplanes don't have it or it is not maintained to certification, it could kill you rather than save you, and you still have to have some knowledge of how to set it up and monitor it, there is not just a magic button that reads "land me" that you push. The FMS and the airplane only can do what you tell it to do and if you can't tell it what to do, it cannot do it, autoland being one. MS Flight Sim is great for procedures, but for flying a real airplane, absolutely not. Unless ATC brings in someone who knows that airplane to help talk you down , thats not happening either. ATC are great people, but most are not pilots, just the same if something happened in TRACON and you had to step in and bring these airplanes in, not happening. I would not know where to start in that environment.
A Cessna 172, maybe, a B757 or other airliner or corporate jet, I don't think so. There is a HUGE difference in flying jets and soooo many things that can get you into trouble. I have several thousand hours now and have flown and I am typed in the Lear 45, G-100/Astra, Kingair 350 and a couple of other Gulfstreams(not typed) and I am heading to the airlines here shortly. True, the bigger the airplane, the easier they seem to get for me, but that is because of the skills acquired along the way. Could I land a 757? No doubt about it. Would it be pretty? Probably not. Landing is always that variable that no matter how much experience you have, you are always trying to improve that skill, much less if you have never landed something like that before. That is why it takes 1 month to get a type rating in an airliner! Sorry guys, I had to chime in. No offense.
Bookmarks