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Seems to suggest a "well, we know that's never going to happen" mindset.
Where did you see that simulators can't emulate a stall?
QuoteSeems to suggest a "well, we know that's never going to happen" mindset.Well, maybe. To do live training they'd presumably have to genuinely stall a genuine plane. Probably repeatedly. The risk of accidental stalling is clearly a real one, and a stall of a loaded passanger plane which leads to a crash will likely lead to the death of several hundred people... but that doesn't necessarily mean that live training is the right thing to do. If stalls in modern, highly automated planes are very rare, if for example there is a reasonable expectation that most pilots wouldn't encounter a stall in their career otherwise (and I have no idea what the stats are, but it must be something for which stats exist), more live training would not necessarily be expected to save more lives in the long run.. because if stall training killed a significant number of crews that would add up! (Leaving aside the fact that if pilots dropped several planes out of the sky in training, it might obviate the need for training entirely.. because it would put the public right off those models, I'd think!)
Quote from: graham.d on 09/08/2011 17:47:19Where did you see that simulators can't emulate a stall? I thought it was on that site, but I can't find now it either! I'll try to retrace my steps and dig it up. I was quite surprised when I read it too.I'm pretty sure it's easy enough to simulate the stall. I got the impression that what was lacking was the simulators' ability to handle the recovery accurately.
Quick question, alancalverd. How can you handle a deep stall if the elevators are effectively non functioning?
f you have a big plane, with big control surfaces and big forces, then it's impossible for muscle power to move them (usefully).Some level of automation becomes inevitable.
I heard of an air force fighter pilot who retired to become a commercial airline pilot. He described his new role as "hours of pure boredom, interspersed with seconds of sheer terror...".
How can you handle a deep stall?