Raskal
big member, little pay
- Joined
- Aug 22, 2002
- Posts
- 926
For those of you familiar with the mesaba training dept, I'm starting with the capt class on the 19th. There are 9 of us. After reading a bunch of posts over the past week (fbo sitting induced boredom) I'm curious about a couple of things:
In a 121 program like this, are sim partners taken from within the same class?
I guess my concern is this: I've read a lot of cases where people are having a ton of trouble with basic things like flight directors and so on. For example, here is a post from another board:
The other night I was so lost that I started to wonder if I had completely missed the boat during training. I was asked to turn the auto pilot off and hand fly a non-precision. My instrutor said I flew well for raw data but he wanted the flight guidance on, lol. This is where my problems started. I found out that I was totally cluless about the flight guidance system. I understood the theory but it was the application that I struggled with.
Summary of my awesome flight, The flight guidance scramble:
Selecting a new altitude before I had captured the previous, not good. Focusing so much on how to work the flight guidance panal that my attitude and airspeed went to poo. Then there was the missed that inolved a turn to capture a radial. I set the initial altitude instead of the final missed altitude. Therefore I scrambled with the callouts while creating an unnecesary struggle trying to set the next altitude/heading, all while trying to sink the VOR frequency and radial. In the depature, when to go from pink to green needles
I'm really beginning to understand the training dept's struggle with low-time pilots, and I'm getting concerned because this is all very basic knowledge and technique (raw data for a non-precision??? wtf??...). So my questions is, are there guys making it to checkrides without being taught this stuff? Is it the training dept not teaching, or guys not learning and still getting through?
Obviously someone that doesn't have a good understanding of the basic avionics/usage in turbine aircraft could really screw up a type ride for the other employee. Is it the sim partner's responsibility to teach and bring the other guy up to speed? I certainly have no problem helping anyone out and actually look forward to it, but the idea of dumping a ride because the right-seater doesn't know enough to be there yet concerns me a great deal, I've never failed a type check or recurrent checkride and have no plans to.
So, bottom line, any suggestions about how best to make sure the other guy is keeping up ok? Is it ok to offer to help them get up to speed?
In a 121 program like this, are sim partners taken from within the same class?
I guess my concern is this: I've read a lot of cases where people are having a ton of trouble with basic things like flight directors and so on. For example, here is a post from another board:
The other night I was so lost that I started to wonder if I had completely missed the boat during training. I was asked to turn the auto pilot off and hand fly a non-precision. My instrutor said I flew well for raw data but he wanted the flight guidance on, lol. This is where my problems started. I found out that I was totally cluless about the flight guidance system. I understood the theory but it was the application that I struggled with.
Summary of my awesome flight, The flight guidance scramble:
Selecting a new altitude before I had captured the previous, not good. Focusing so much on how to work the flight guidance panal that my attitude and airspeed went to poo. Then there was the missed that inolved a turn to capture a radial. I set the initial altitude instead of the final missed altitude. Therefore I scrambled with the callouts while creating an unnecesary struggle trying to set the next altitude/heading, all while trying to sink the VOR frequency and radial. In the depature, when to go from pink to green needles
I'm really beginning to understand the training dept's struggle with low-time pilots, and I'm getting concerned because this is all very basic knowledge and technique (raw data for a non-precision??? wtf??...). So my questions is, are there guys making it to checkrides without being taught this stuff? Is it the training dept not teaching, or guys not learning and still getting through?
Obviously someone that doesn't have a good understanding of the basic avionics/usage in turbine aircraft could really screw up a type ride for the other employee. Is it the sim partner's responsibility to teach and bring the other guy up to speed? I certainly have no problem helping anyone out and actually look forward to it, but the idea of dumping a ride because the right-seater doesn't know enough to be there yet concerns me a great deal, I've never failed a type check or recurrent checkride and have no plans to.
So, bottom line, any suggestions about how best to make sure the other guy is keeping up ok? Is it ok to offer to help them get up to speed?