Cat Driver wrote:It was not my intention to sound negative.
I was only relating how it was when I learned to fly and my questions regarding why the time to get a license today averages more than twice as long was a genuine question.
And we've been through the discussion before. The assumption being that its purely because instructors are of worse quality. Did you have anything else to add to that? If you feel it needs to be discussed further I would suggest starting another thrread on the topic, or reviving one of the many previous ones. Personally I don't think there's much point in arguing it anymore, no one is to be swayed either way. Certainly sounds like a negatively loaded question to me, but then what do I know, I'm only one of those poor quality instructors.
warbirdpilot7 wrote:Ahhhhhhh the deHavilland Chipmunk. A nice, cute, slender lovely little flying aeroplane. It's the closest 99% of us will get to flying a spitfire.
It really was a shame that they didn't try to somehow continue with the
Chipmunk's lineage to keep producing suitable military trainers. An updated engine and new instruments/avionics would seem like a slam-dunk for even today's standards. The airframe really seemed to fit the bill, especially since its
successor in Canada for its role didn't seem nearly as tough for the role (don't get me wrong, the musketeer is a fun little GA airplane and good for what it was designed for, but apparently not as tough of a bird for what the military asked of it).
hedley wrote:It wasn't all better. We didn't have a lot of stuff we take for granted today:
True, I was talking more in just a general attitude towards general aviation back then. It seemed more positive. You're right that we didn't have all the toys we have today, and you're right, even the "new" planes then seem crude by today's standard. The new feeling was that all these toys that we enjoy today was on the horizon at the time, very exciting to see them all coming. Warbirds and such were much more plentiful, and not as much relegated to museum status. New models of airplane always around the corner - keep in mind this was when Ol' Sideburns would have been in his heyday shaking it up, aviation as a whole was in the middle of a big leap ahead almost as big of a leap as the very close pre-war days. Very exciting stuff.
On the toys side of things I'll say that I rarely use most of them - though I will concede that the intercomm and headset are a godsend, especially for teaching. I still mostly navigate by map and compass, and most times I long to be able to ditch the radio and just wear earplugs and go do my thing. I despise cel phones, I think that everytime one rings in a small plane it might as well be Satan laughing, and if I wasn't certain there would be a huge backlash about it I've been tempted to put up a large PHONES OFF signs around the airport's lounge area.
The internet has certainly been a double edged sword - I can appreciate getting current updated weather and arguing with you fellows, but I certainly miss talking with people in person. Less people are inclined to get together to get their aviation fix - the local flying clubs do a fair ammount of organization through the expedient of e-mail rather than getting together to talk and I miss being able to always walk into the FSS to chat with the meteorologist, and usually run into other pilots.
Scrolling ahead to the 2000s and we're still living under the spectre of the Arabs doing something to hinder aviation. In that respect some things haven't really changed.
I don't think I'd go back there, but it would have been nice if we could have brought a few things with us along the way.
Pilots these days have extremely narrow skill sets, IMHO. They only fly one (at most two) different types, and two is a real mental stretch. To be trained to fly a new type requires that they fly to some exotic locale to the type gurus who administer weeks of ground and flight training on the new and mysterious type with hitherto-unknown characteristics and systems.
Contrary to popular belief, its always been this way, or at least in 1975 it was. That old mag had some of the same articles as we see in ones today regarding the same pilots, same skill issues. Note Cliff's problem selling Grummans because the rest of the pilot community thinking they're a "hot ship". Funnier when one considers that there would be a higher percentage of pilots flying taildraggers at the time, many learning on them, but considering the little Grumman hard to land. People put up obstacles in their minds and fear differences and change. Same old, same old.
Prarie Chicken wrote:
Less regulation; less Big Brother.
Its not as much Big Brother sometimes as it is little brother. Thre was much more room for aviation those days. The general populace had a much more positive view of GA those days, if only because it was largely out of sight, out of mind. Aviation almost had a mythical quality in Canada - which also as a downside contributed to the populace's general apathy about it to affect it today - but gave it a positive influence at the time.