TIS
Wing, Nosewheel, Whatever
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2001
- Posts
- 366
And now, on a different but related subject...
Someone else wrote this:
"That turbo prop argument is a crock. Anyone that tells you a jet is any more difficult to fly that a T.P is just wrong. ANd any interviewer that views Roger Ramjet a better pilot just because he has CRJ time probably isn't worth a crap anyway."
Actually, it's not a crock. It depends on what you mean by "harder to fly." While I agree that the physical monkey-motion of manipulating the controls is the same in all airplanes, the finesse and judgment behind the control applications is potentially VERY different.
In this world there are people. Some of those people would like to learn to fly. Of those who would like to learn nearly all can be taught to be a private pilot. A certain percentage of those however, should NEVER attempt anything more.
The same is true of high performance flying. Some multi-engine pilots can learn to fly a Bandeirante or a King Air because they can learn to think faster as the aircraft requires. Some CANNOT! Of those that can however, only a fraction can move on to the performance level that a jet yields. Now, while that fraction i speak of might be large, it is still a FRACTION. The reason that not everyone can fly a jet safely is because not everyone can think at 10 miles a minute. Some should just STAY HOME! That's just a fact that I have have gleened from many years of experience training people to behave well in large aircraft.
So when an interviewer wants to know what kind of airplane you've been flying and the jet/truboprop thing matters, there's a reason for it. It doesn't matter whether you agree with it or not. That's not for you to decide. The fact is that someone, somewhere thinks it matters - based on their experience.
Personally, I wouldn't discount a person's ability to rise to the occasion based solely on the fact that they had no jet time but I'd be sure to put 'em in a jet simulator and see if the pieces are there. You can tell a lot in just a few minutes of watching a person adapt to a flying situation. Not everything, but a lot!
TIS
Someone else wrote this:
"That turbo prop argument is a crock. Anyone that tells you a jet is any more difficult to fly that a T.P is just wrong. ANd any interviewer that views Roger Ramjet a better pilot just because he has CRJ time probably isn't worth a crap anyway."
Actually, it's not a crock. It depends on what you mean by "harder to fly." While I agree that the physical monkey-motion of manipulating the controls is the same in all airplanes, the finesse and judgment behind the control applications is potentially VERY different.
In this world there are people. Some of those people would like to learn to fly. Of those who would like to learn nearly all can be taught to be a private pilot. A certain percentage of those however, should NEVER attempt anything more.
The same is true of high performance flying. Some multi-engine pilots can learn to fly a Bandeirante or a King Air because they can learn to think faster as the aircraft requires. Some CANNOT! Of those that can however, only a fraction can move on to the performance level that a jet yields. Now, while that fraction i speak of might be large, it is still a FRACTION. The reason that not everyone can fly a jet safely is because not everyone can think at 10 miles a minute. Some should just STAY HOME! That's just a fact that I have have gleened from many years of experience training people to behave well in large aircraft.
So when an interviewer wants to know what kind of airplane you've been flying and the jet/truboprop thing matters, there's a reason for it. It doesn't matter whether you agree with it or not. That's not for you to decide. The fact is that someone, somewhere thinks it matters - based on their experience.
Personally, I wouldn't discount a person's ability to rise to the occasion based solely on the fact that they had no jet time but I'd be sure to put 'em in a jet simulator and see if the pieces are there. You can tell a lot in just a few minutes of watching a person adapt to a flying situation. Not everything, but a lot!
TIS
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