Originally Posted by DC-ATE
One of the problems I see nowadays, is that "pilots" don't get a chance to be pilots with all the automation thrown at them. They don't get the chance to find out what "piloting" really is.
That said, economic reality is that newly-qualified pilots by-and-large need to convert that training into a way of making a living as quickly and effectively as possible - they don't really get to choose. Commercial aviation is about getting freight and passengers from one place to another as effectively as possible. Automation aids that goal and has empirically improved safety as a side-effect. If a pilot really feels the need to enjoy the rush of feeling a direct connection between themselves and their machine, would joining a flying club and batting a high-performance single-engined fireball around the sky not be a more appropriate outlet? |
DC-ATE - One of the problems I see nowadays, is that "pilots" don't get a chance to be pilots with all the automation thrown at them. They don't get the chance to find out what "piloting" really is. It's just a sign of the times unfortunately. Just another example of "change" that is not, IMHO, better.
----------------------------------------------------------------------- Guys choose not to learn. The airplane, or FMC, doesn't prevent them from learning. The key is learning when automation is your friend, and when it isn't. I don't put any generation on a pedestal, there have been amazingly good, and bad, pilots from each generation. And then there are guys that have to be dragging into the future - FO flying raw data on a 767 across the U.S. because he thought the FMC/map would cost him situation awareness. :{ |
Well.....I'm not on here to argue. If you're [DozyWannabe, misd-agin and others] happy with the way things are going in aviation, fine. I'm not and that's why I choose not to fly any more. No need. Enjoy your career. Glad mine's over.:)
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PJ2
"and not "psychologically" sitting in an airplane with a mountain ahead of them."
I think that is correct. The bothersome question is why. I think that automation has nothing to do with it. There is no characteristic of metal or silicon circuits (that I know of anyway) that speaks to a pilot's mind and says, "pay attention to me even unto death." The flaw is in the pilot's mind. :uhoh: |
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