nosehair
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2003
- Posts
- 1,238
Rip my hair out!!
"If it's not in the PTS why do it?" One such person said exactly that, and many others imply it. THAT kind of thinking, my fellow pilots and instructors, is the bottom line reason why we have preventable pilot-error accidents.
Is there anyone of you guys who carry that thought that believes that the Checkride PTS maneuvers is all you need to know about flying to be safe and proficient?
I was around in the early 60's when Cessna was promoting the "new 152" as the "family plane". They even had a small back seat with 2 sets of seat-belts for the kids. Non-Aviation Magazines carried full page photo ads with smiling Dads and Moms in the front seat and happy kids in the back seemed to usher in a new era of everyone owning his/her own airplane and going for the "Sunday Ride" as a family.
At the same time, certain aircraft manufacturers downplayed the importance of spin training, since that might "scare off" those "family types" who otherwise might take up flying.
Political pressure - not statistical evidence - is the reason the FAA stopped requiring actual spin training.
Besides, statistics don't tell the whole story.
Confidence, and the ability to have command and control of the airplane no matter which side is up is an absolute requirement for me and anybody who learns to fly from me. Period.
"If it's not in the PTS why do it?" One such person said exactly that, and many others imply it. THAT kind of thinking, my fellow pilots and instructors, is the bottom line reason why we have preventable pilot-error accidents.
Is there anyone of you guys who carry that thought that believes that the Checkride PTS maneuvers is all you need to know about flying to be safe and proficient?
I was around in the early 60's when Cessna was promoting the "new 152" as the "family plane". They even had a small back seat with 2 sets of seat-belts for the kids. Non-Aviation Magazines carried full page photo ads with smiling Dads and Moms in the front seat and happy kids in the back seemed to usher in a new era of everyone owning his/her own airplane and going for the "Sunday Ride" as a family.
At the same time, certain aircraft manufacturers downplayed the importance of spin training, since that might "scare off" those "family types" who otherwise might take up flying.
Political pressure - not statistical evidence - is the reason the FAA stopped requiring actual spin training.
Besides, statistics don't tell the whole story.
Confidence, and the ability to have command and control of the airplane no matter which side is up is an absolute requirement for me and anybody who learns to fly from me. Period.