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Flying a lear24 without autopliot and a fresh out of school co-pilot; quite a bit, and when you have one hand on the yoke, the second on the throttles, one eye on the instruments and the other on your co-pilot (so he doesn't touch any buttons..yet)
All in All VERY math-demanding, and actually all the co-pilots I have flown with are absolutely very poor at it, and I do not allow calculators in the cockpit, until you prove that you can do it with the grey mass.
if you are just there for the ride and log some time, i say don't sweat it, i'll do it by myself
dmspilot00 said:Pilots do not solve complex equations, calculate unknown angles with trig, or do Calculus.
FL530 said:How much math would an average airline pilot use in one day? Could all of this math be done a a simple calculator? How much and how hard is the math you use while flying? Thanks
If all of this is accurate, your lack of CRM, delegation and leadership skills are more likely to get you killed than your co-pilot's math skills. In your post, the last five words are worth about a thousand.Hawker rider said:Flying a lear24 without autopliot and a fresh out of school co-pilot>>> quite a bit, and when you have one hand on the yoke, the second on the throttles, one eye on the instruments and the other on your co-pilot ( so he doesn't touch any buttons..yet)
Did i mention the pressurization system that you have to cherry pick, or a controller that gives you a descent restriction..........
All in All VERY math-demanding, and actually all the co-pilots I have flown with are absolutely very poor at it, and I do not allow calculators in the cockpit, until you prove that you can do it with the grey mass.
It's really up to yourself what level of dedication you are willing to give to your career, if you are just there for the ride and log some time, i say don't sweat it, i'll do it by myself
First off, I am a math cripple; and second, yes you are ok for now. The replies have been great. The detail that seems to be missing is that you will often have to do multiple calculations very quickly, under pressure, while doing other things - like flying the airplane, running a checklist, making radio calls, not busting an altitude or airspeed, not overspeeding your flaps or gear, picking up the pen or corn dog you just dropped, while getting the anti-ice turned on and remembering the minimum power setting you must maintain for it to function. My point: The math will never be very complex unless you become involved in engineering or flight test; however, your brain must be conditioned to do basic math through division and VERY BASIC algebra in very stressful conditions. Classroom math does little to prepare you for this, but since the brain is a muscle, conditioning it with college level math will give you the best foundation you can get.adam_jorgensen said:...am I ok for now? What about things like English and history? Does a pilot have to know allot of that? (please say no.) What is this FL 530- Math? Is it some specific math book geared towards pilots? That would be great because I'm always looking for books that has to do with my career.
metrodriver said:I think English should be a must. Sometimes I have a very hard time reading some of the posts, like it's written in some foreign language.
pilotyip said:We give a mini SAT type of test in our pilot screening. The best predictor on a candidates success in making Captain, is their math score.