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Why would we allow pilots in an aircraft if they could not make a minimums approach with no autopilot?????? I know some foreign carriers have 250 hr guys that are considered qualified but in the US we should not let this happen. Autopilot failure should never constitute an emergency. We in the past have been dispatched many times with autopilot inop. Now we need to change the rules because we are hiring underqualified pilots?
I can hand fly just fine and my backround has nothing to do with it Lear. I am talking about risk managment. IMC into a busy hub is not the best time to "practice". That is all I was saying. I agree that an airline pilot should be proficient at hand flying, it's part of our job.
I brought that up because background has EVERYTHING to do with it.I can hand fly just fine and my backround has nothing to do with it Lear. I am talking about risk managment. IMC into a busy hub is not the best time to "practice". That is all I was saying. I agree that an airline pilot should be proficient at hand flying, it's part of our job.
bingo!it shouldn't be practice - it ought to be comfortable. Easy. That takes doing it. And right now there are too many carriers that don't encourage clicking everything off and many captains that will forbid it. That's not okay
it's not about chest thumping and definitely not about showing off. We need to create cockpit environments that encourage those who really need te practice the freedom to do it- w/o ego, but with pride in the work
If you cant hand fly in IMC you dont belong in the cockpit of an airplane. Its basic airmanship.
I can hand fly just fine and my backround has nothing to do with it Lear. I am talking about risk managment. IMC into a busy hub is not the best time to "practice". That is all I was saying. I agree that an airline pilot should be proficient at hand flying, it's part of our job.
I can hand fly just fine and my backround has nothing to do with it Lear. I am talking about risk managment. IMC into a busy hub is not the best time to "practice". That is all I was saying. I agree that an airline pilot should be proficient at hand flying, it's part of our job.
I guess we don't need checkrides every year, either, because it should be "natural at this point"...Most of us "practiced" when we were learning....it should be natural at this point.
Military straight into SWA?
Lear, it seemed to me you were disparaging pilots who come from a military background. I am tired of the civ/mil arguments. We are all civilians now. Maybe that is not what you intended. I have read a lot of your posts and you seem like a good guy, so I'll leave it at that.
I did not explain my opinion very well in my first post of this thread because I was on my phone and it is hard to type.
We all agree that we should be proficient at hand flying the airplane. I just think it is better to gain that proficiency by hand flying in a lower workload environment. To me it is a risk management decision, not a "can I do it" decision. Each airline has a different view of automation, some strongly discourage or in certain conditions forbid hand flying, some require it in those same conditions. You guys write as if I am stupid to have the opinion I do. We can respectfully agree to disagree. In any case I do not think a lack of ability caused the incidents that started this thread. It could happen to any of us.
I guess we don't need checkrides every year, either, because it should be "natural at this point"...
Just playing devil's advocate with your post because, fact is, people fail recurrent checks all the time because they're NOT proficient. Proficiency has to be maintained, and we do that with "practice".