
This is the first part of this lesson series, and as such it is imperative to warn you: If you are not EXTREMELY confident in your basic flying skills, advanced techniques, are not instrument and multi-engine rated, you are NOT ready to begin flying these planes. They are the largest, most complex aircraft existing today, they do not handle like your normal piston-engined four-seater Piper Cherokee or Cessna Skyhawk, they require you to learn how to fly all over again. Everything about flying a jet, including the ground-spent planning time, requires precision far greater than in your standard propeller-driven leisure aircraft. As such, I have decided to begin the lessons talking about the old jets and how to fly them. Why, you might ask? Because: as I would answer, to fly the 747-200, for example, you actually need to know how everything works. Modern jets have computerized the flight engineer, and as such, less and less pilots are actually learning how an air conditioning pack works, or why the pitot tube is such a vital probe. This is what I am here to teach, and hopefully you are here to learn.
As I said before, jets are not flown the same way as your Cessna. There are many reasons for this:
A: The plane is A LOT larger than your Cessna, you are dealing with many tons of aluminum and plexiglass, fuel, and humanity. This, along with the engine being completely different (and a lot more complex), means you will ALWAYS be flying at least twice as fast as your Cessna Skyhawk can.
B: Air Traffic Control plays a vital part in both types of plane, but there are certain other rules a jet must follow, everything from takeoff to landing requires a lot more interaction with the controller in the tower, and as air travel is now such a popular travel method these days, you will need to cooperate with the hundreds of other airline jets with the same aims as you.
C: Despite the popular belief I have noticed on this forum, flying one of these requires an extremely involved pilot, you will find, once you've broken the barrier of the "lazy-boy autopilot," that without this system, flying your jet would become incredibly stressful, and I am not talking about the 3+ hours you will spend tweaking away at your yoke. The autopilot is the saving grace that allows you to perform everything else you need to do, (managing speed and altitude and letting the autopilot actually fly you there, managing fuel, navigation, communication, and keeping the lunches of the 8 tons of humanity behind you in their stomaches.) A jet requires dedication not because they are boring to fly, but because of how much you must manage at a given time.
There is more, but I'll talk more about differences in the actual lessons. In the meantime, you should now know what to expect.