by Saratoga » Sat Feb 19, 2005 8:40 pm
Oh no, don't take me wrong, I love FS9, and provided I have planes with realistic flight profiles, it's invaluable as a training tool. I know quite a few fellow airline pilots who have FS9 installed on their computers and use it to practice things that we don't have time for in the full-motion sims or are too dangerous to do in the airliner. You get a plane with a perfect panel and decent sounds, and you can practice all day flying ILSs into the most complicated airport in the world, and never have to pay for gas or avoid flying through restricted airspace. It gives you a feel for what you will be doing in the cockpit, the speeds you will be at (to a certain extent), necessary flap and gear movements, etc.
Sure, you can do things like tell ATC to shove it and land your R-22 next to the White House in FS2004, but when it comes down to it, it's never as good as flying the real thing, from the strange movements planes randomly do, to the weird buzzing noise altimeters sometimes make, to the adrenaline rush of flying an approach in horrible weather conditions and hearing that squeak as the tires hit the runway and feeling the plane jostle from side to side. Those are just some of the minor things, not to mention graphics, that no simulator can reproduce, whether a desktop sim or a full blown FAA full motion simulator.
The beauty of flight is in flight, not in watching a computer screen.
Edit: Also, I forgot to reply about it, but the last post it was said that pilots get their ratings faster using a sim. Perfectly true, and I would let my copilots try and do things in FS9 that I would beat them for if they did in my cockpit. One thing FS doesn't simulate correctly is Manuvering Speed. Everyone remember the crash of AA587 in November of '01? The pilots were at manuvering speed and still, the wrong control input caused the entire vertical stabilizer to snap off the plane. So I parked all the FS planes at or above their manuvering speeds and slammed the rudder to one side, then the other, then pulled back all the way on the stick, then rolled one way or the other fully. Nothing, FS happily complied. Ok well we would have a nice little air force sitting at the bottom of the Atlantic where I was flying in reality, but no, not realistic enough to simulate something that governs the habits of everyday pilots. As a sim it is a great, but the point is, it's a SIMULATOR. It's never going to be as realistic as flying. But for a simulator, it's a damn good representation of the world. It's not perfect, but what are we to expect? We will be paying a lot more for the perfect sim. So let's just go with it and enjoy what we got.
Last edited by
Saratoga on Sat Feb 19, 2005 8:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Pilot for a major US airline certified in the: EMB-120, CRJ, 727, 737, 757, 767, and A-320 and military, T-38, C-130, C-141, and C-5 along with misc. other small airplanes. Any questions, I'm here for you.