PDA

View Full Version : Atpl Inst & Navaids


flying ginge
16th Mar 2005, 21:37
Hello,

straight to the point, what a **** exam this subject is. I just don't see the relevance of most of the syllabus. Who gives a f... which gimbal the latitude nut is attached to. What difference does it make to me as a pilot? I believe this subject needs to be modernised taking into account things like TCAS EGWPS etc. The paper I sat had one question on each. Anyway thats what I think. By the way I did pass.

flying ginge

empacher48
16th Mar 2005, 23:37
Well Done Flying Ginge!

I have yet to sit that exam, but have Flight Nav General next week - then Flight Planning two weeks after that.

I hope to sit Navaids some time next month! Any further tips you can provide?

;)

mattathm
17th Mar 2005, 05:22
Horah horah...... Ginge.

I hope the exam writers are reading this!!!!

The whole PPL CPL ATPL IFR and BGT exam sylabis is F%$#*ed !

They get you to learn and read up on so much irelevant crap that is just a severe waste of time.

Pilots exams should be on the stuff you need to know in regards to a pilots aspect, not an engineering one or a astrologers one, or an acreditted met observers one or a avionic technicians one or a ............

BGT for example, you are the pilot of something PT6 powered, you walk up to your machine, give the prop a spin around, kick the tyres and close the door, now you are sitting in the cockpit looking at the engine instruments ready to start.

Oh the engine instruments...... thats the 30% i got wrong in the exam but still passed by getting 70.

Just as well i know all about blade creep and divergent ducts, in case i have to make a turbine engine sometime............

what a load of crap, come on ASL and whoever makes these exams, cut out the bull****, it doesnt weed out anyone, it just mind ^$^^&$% them.


:ugh:

haughtney1
17th Mar 2005, 20:47
Having done UK JAR (14 Exams!) and the ASL (NZ) ATPL's......trust me when I say..thank your lucky stars....the ASL exams although a bit irrelavant..dont have a patch on JAR's ideas!or lack of.....plus its 75% to pass here:uhoh:

I Fly
18th Mar 2005, 02:02
It always makes me wonder when someone at the beginning of their career know exactly what the need to know throughout their career and survive it into old age. If there are some hard lumps in it, chew them up and swallow them down, it will make you a better pilot. Or do you just want to be an aeroplane driver? If you always want the cheapest, quickest, easiest way, you might get a licence but you will not keep a job.

flying ginge
20th Mar 2005, 21:33
to survive into old age will require a sexy wife to come home to from my "aeroplane driver" job...:rolleyes:

Sqwark2000
24th Mar 2005, 02:47
Can't agree more Ginge,

Did the exam myself recently and like you wonder when I will get to use my new skillset in calculating East or West Drift.

you have to wonder if ANY PILOT knows what latitude the lat nut is set to so that you can do the calculation in the first place?

S2K

Sqwark2004
25th Mar 2005, 17:33
Hey Ginge,

I hear you got a bit sick of waiting for the call and got a new job.

Be careful with that one, I saw your Chief Pilot jump outta the plane and light up a ciggy whilst off loading the bags, in front of a turbo-prop being re-fueled.

Anyway. Good luck with it, hope your two year bond can be cut when you finally get the call from one of the Gods.

S2K4eva

flying ginge
28th Mar 2005, 20:38
Sqwark2004,

alas my friend you have me confused with another member of the ginger brethern. However I believe I know this man and got seriously on the piss with him in NS in December.

Flying ginge

PS He loves tequila slammers, as we all do:}

The Messiah
31st Mar 2005, 07:42
Yeah they'll read this forum and modernise the exam and then they'll accept that Bernoullis theorem is a load of crap too.....dream on.

Sqwark2004
28th Apr 2005, 10:47
I sat this exam a couple of days ago and found several questions in it that I did not have any reference to in my PPSC notes.
Also had a question where half of two answers were correct but the other halfs were not i.e. the last half of A and the first half of B.

Is this common in the ATPL exams?
If ASL are allowed to make mistakes, and expect us to understand what they are aiming at, are we allowed to do the same with our answers?

Or is this just another hair brained scheme that makes the rich (ASL & CAA) get richer and the very very poor (G.A. drivers and most turbo-prop F/O's) go broke?

And then to charge us the full fee if we have to re-sit the exam....


:{ :mad: :{ :confused: :{

Somebody Help us all!!!!:sad:

S2K4eva

mattyj
29th Apr 2005, 00:58
"It always makes me wonder when someone at the beginning of their career know exactly what the need to know throughout their career and survive it into old age"

Good one IFly..if you remember anything 10 days after finishing the exam you're a better man than me!!

The afternoon after in the pub usually wipes my slate clean