Too many screens in the cockpit?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • How many screens is TOO many? I say you can never have too many :)
    ☁️ SeeYou Cloud 2 month discount off your first year's subscription to, use the coupon code: PUREGLIDE
    naviter.com/redeem/
    ✈️ Follow your club members and friends on PureTrack:
    puretrack.io/
    🌦 SkySight weather forecasting discount coupon code: PUREGLIDE for TWO months discount off your first year of subscription.
    skysight.io/?coupon=PUREGLIDE
    WeGlide and WeGlide CoPilot:
    www.weglide.org
    OLC, the original online contest:
    www.onlinecontest.org/olc-3.0...
    👕 Buy Hats, Yaw Strings, T-Shirts and Hoodies:
    pureglide.nz/
    📷 Equipment in this video:
    GoPro Hero 12 amzn.to/3rnWne2 (although I use an 8)
    Peak Design Phone Mounts amzn.to/3rpqFx1
    Snap Mounts amzn.to/44ZyLtY
    Sony ZV-1 II amzn.to/3PNyFkX
    iPhone 15 Pro Max amzn.to/3LvZcAs
    SmallRig Cage for ZV-1 amzn.to/2UiGGnK
    SPOT 3 Satellite Tracker amzn.to/307w8rB
    RAM Mounts amzn.to/3Puis2D
    Earthworks ETHOS Microphone amzn.to/497yw3o
    👕 Soaring XX Awesome Flying Clothing and Gear
    Coupon Code: "PUREGLIDE" for 5% off your order
    soaringxx.com
    😃 Follow PureGlide on Facebook:
    / pureglide
    ☕️ Buy me a coffee! Support the channel with a donation:
    pureglide.nz/products/pure-gl...
    00:00 How many screens?!
    01:47 Watching others doesn't work too well.
    02:50 Why looking up is way more important.
    03:56 Reducing the risk
    04:49 Tropical island!
  • СпортСпорт

Комментарии • 54

  • @maxfox3399
    @maxfox3399 27 дней назад +36

    Over the years I've lost 3 friends to mid-air collisions. Looking out .of the window and into your turns will keep you alive. Nice to have all the pretty screens, but in the end, the old MK1 eyeball can be your best friend.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  27 дней назад +3

      Sorry to hear that

    • @zodiacdriver3852
      @zodiacdriver3852 27 дней назад +1

      Eyeballs in the cockpit = Flying IFR without IFR-means!
      Deadly!

    • @gahazebrouck
      @gahazebrouck 24 дня назад

      @@zodiacdriver3852 Very very sad. That's what scares me the most.
      The flaw of FLARM is that it warns you when you already are in a difficult situation. Now, having a screen to see the traffic can help you a little bit playing the role of ATC and avoid getting too close to the others, but pilots usually use that function only to see where thermals are, putting everyone back on risk! So at the end I don't know 😕

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel 22 дня назад

      "Looking out .of the window and into your turns will keep you alive".....
      Right up to the point some aerial Lemming hits you from below
      It *ain't instead of - Its as well as* surely?

  • @stumackenzie8492
    @stumackenzie8492 27 дней назад +15

    YOU POOR BUGGER !!…. Thanks for interrupting your nirvana for the betterment of the rest of us …. I agree completely with what you’re saying .. Actually , probably , too much information is worse than not enough .. Especially if it’s not ACTUALLY RELEVANT .. You showed the Concord flight deck .. I spent my life peddling 747’s around .. A little over a thousand switches , knobs , dials and buttons plus circuit breakers .. The art of doing it really well was about looking at the right bit at the right time .. Which is what you were saying , of course

  • @MikhailSharpowicz
    @MikhailSharpowicz 26 дней назад +2

    I had a competition flight over ten years ago in a borrowed aircraft, where all the electronics slowly failed individually in very irritating and concentration-zapping ways, whilst getting pretty low in a nasty headwind.
    When I finally made the decision to just flick off the master switch completely and carry on with just steam instruments, map and Mk1 eyeball it became a blessed relief, and actually enjoyable again. I still came just over mid-way down the pack.
    I do love the ease of flying with all the info available on a well set-up and connected Oudie or 9000 size screen, but it is all very manageable without, using just feel, knowledge and use of traditional techniques, and only a little bit slower.

  • @steveasher9239
    @steveasher9239 27 дней назад +3

    I'm smiling right now as I remember the old people who used to talk about walking miles in the snow to get to a one room schoolhouse. And now I am one of those old folks (sometimes called "your Elders") remembering one flight when for some reason only my altimeter and ASI worked; no vario and NO screens (didn't even exist then). Very few clouds that day and yet I flew for three hours when the proverbial 'seat of your pants' and 'wingtip' varios still worked.

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 26 дней назад

      They still do.
      I’ve spent hours in a powered aircraft above its service ceiling because of my ability to find and quantify lift with only an ASI and VSI (if ASI is steady.. VSI behaves as a vario).

  • @CLdriver1960
    @CLdriver1960 27 дней назад +1

    Good day Tim!
    Great subject to discuss on a tropical island 🙂
    My limited experience in the cockpit of my sailplane confirmed what you said.
    I recently installed a SteFly Nav 70 and competed in a club contest earlier this Spring. I didn’t have a remote control stick at the time, but soon after, I ordered and installed one.
    As for XC Soar, I used Condor to experiment and was able to ‘flight test’ the configuration by pairing my Samsung S10 to Condor. When I was happy with the results, I then programmed the Nav 70.
    I have multiple pages of information, readily available at the push of a button on the stick. For the most part, my Cruise page has what I need.
    Another handy function is the automatic page changing, Auto MC, and Auto zoom functions of XC Soar, which really helps with the Situational Awareness, and helps prevent distraction.
    I also installed a FLARM LED at the top of my panel. It’s bright, loud, and provides an instantaneous, easy to read indication of where to look for traffic. In my humble opinion, having aural indication and warning is key to keeping one’s head out of the cockpit.
    Have a great vacation!

  • @grinner2916
    @grinner2916 26 дней назад +1

    Great video, Tim (and very jealous as I sit here watching biblical UK rain) and I completely agree with all your points. To have ALL the information YOU need to complete whatever task you are doing, immediately accessible, is the most important factor. So many near-misses such a tug upsets, are a result of folk fiddling with the electronics when they should be concentrating on the task in hand. I fly with an LX9000 and maybe one day I’ll get to grips with all it can do. I fly with it so infrequently as I do so much other gliding-related flying such as instructing and examining (not to mention my day job of being an airline pilot), I just don’t have the time or capacity to properly learn it. So I have it set up to give me what I NEED and maybe one day I’ll actually learn what it can actually do for me. Enjoy your holiday!

  • @gliderpilot8882
    @gliderpilot8882 26 дней назад +4

    Less is more, keep it simple. Look out the window!

    • @stuartferguson7947
      @stuartferguson7947 23 дня назад

      I agree Less or More; the only things that I have on the screen is information i’d be be using up brain space to calculate, if it’s on the screen it gives me more time to focus on the flying.

  • @glennwatson
    @glennwatson 27 дней назад +4

    Treat it more like a dashboard in a car. In the fixed land world (in Australia at least) we train with ALAP
    Attitude, look ahed make sure you're orientated out (using the mark 1 eyeball)
    Lookout, lookout in the direction of travel
    Atttitude, look ahead again
    Performance, glance down at your information/avionics, know what you are glancing at to get the performance data about the phase of flight that you care about at the time, eg plan information/travel information etc.
    With this type of scan it keeps you focused on the outside world, but also getting that valuable info that is most relevant to the phase of flight that you wouldn't get exclusively looking outside.

  • @Fidd88-mc4sz
    @Fidd88-mc4sz 27 дней назад +11

    An airliner cockpit is not relevant to the issue. They fly IFR with separation the responsibility of ATC. VFR flight it's the other way around. Obscuration of the forward-view (by screens) is a potential killer. A glider head on is very difficult to spot, and has a collision speed where it grows from the tiniest speck of minimal frontal area to terrifyingly large in seconds flat. The simple fact is that watching RUclips videos taken from behind of modern glider-pilots shews little or no head movement, which tells me (retired instructor on powered aircraft) their lookout is primarily forwards, and where obscuration of the forward view exists, they're not attempting to clear behind that by moving their head, or by manoeuvring. The proliferation of attached screens within the forward view, and all the additional information so conferred is all excellent - up until the point where two aircraft collide. Additional screens and their placement is not, as far as I'm aware, legislated for in air-law. It should be. Just as the size and placement of a GPS in your car, which obscures your forward view can be illegal. The legislation needs to catch-up with the use of such technology, and obscuration of the forward view be made illegal to fly with? Their placement must also not provide an obstacle to bailing out, nor, as you state, be a potential control-jamming risk, were it to dislodge.
    Flying a Pa28 30 years ago, I frightened myself on a cruise leg cross country, by clearing under the nose, and discovering an enormous hot-air balloon climbing out the haze beneath. If I hadn't manoeuvred to look, it's possible I'd have passed very close above or even hit him. If one can get that close to a collision risk with something as large and slow-moving as a hot-air balloon, then if you're not looking out *and* manoeuvring to clear blind-spots, then your survival becomes contingent on the other fellows lookout ALONE. Consequently, anything that obscures your view out is potentially VERY dangerous.
    The traffic density in New Zealand may be low enough that lookout is considered necessary but open to being briefly suspended for other tasks. Try that in Europe on a sunny Sunday afternoon, and you may have need of your parachute...

  • @ronaldglider
    @ronaldglider 27 дней назад +5

    I am confused how the crab is helping me out in blue thermal conditions..

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  26 дней назад +4

      The crab is a metaphor for our deep yearning to fly

    • @ronaldgadget
      @ronaldgadget 26 дней назад +2

      @@PureGlide OK, I did not see that one coming!

    • @bokusimondesu
      @bokusimondesu 25 дней назад

      Oh crab! ​@@PureGlide

  • @RoamingAdhocrat
    @RoamingAdhocrat 27 дней назад +2

    0:30 excuse me sir. that Concorde has two screens - the replacement vertical speed indicator that include a TCAS display. ok maybe also the radar screens

  • @GlideYNRG
    @GlideYNRG 27 дней назад +2

    I've only flown with my Oudie a few times. It's been handy, logged my " important" flights and I have been interested in what's to learn with it. But you still can't beat a pair of Mk1 eyeballs out of the cockpit. I know things will change up a gear when I finally get my backside into a cross country machine. Something I need to keep a check on.

  • @mikevermey
    @mikevermey 27 дней назад +6

    Interesting topic, thanks Tim! I started gliding, precisely for that unique 'flying feeling' where you can feel one with the machine. A slight bump on one wing and you know that's where the bell is! The brain and your body are busy flying instead of the countless screens that are available today. Searching for thermals also makes gliding very dynamic in my opinion...we also sometimes look down instead of at the clouds. A large parking lot or the roof of the local large supermarket... it's often a hit on a warm day! Instruments that increase safety such as the FLARM are of course welcome, all other screens... I can do without. I would also be in favor of students first proving that they can fly well without all the 'extra's'. Anyone who then wants to turn their cockpit into a command center can go ahead. But I'm glad that my cockpit is one of the few where the senses can work. Keeps old men awake;-)) Enjoy your holiday!

  • @a350fsx7
    @a350fsx7 25 дней назад +1

    Every pilot needs to find out how much information he needs for himself. It's also dependent on how much experience one has. A fresh pilot is best off just having a small glide computer (LX8080 or something), when you become more experienced, the flying doesn't use up as much mental capacity as before, so you have time to look at information on an LX9000 and your phone/glide computer for example. I personally fly with Weglide Copilot on my phone and have an LX9000 in the gliders I fly. I have all the information I need while still looking outside most of the time!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  24 дня назад +1

      Awesome! Although I’d definitely suggest PureTrack over copilot :P

  • @thaddiushelicon534
    @thaddiushelicon534 27 дней назад +1

    Wise words as always. Electronic devices are tools to aid the pilot and are not meant to be a substitute for good piloting skills. What's the most important instrument in the cockpit? The human brain. Use it effectively and you'll never go wrong.

  • @bokusimondesu
    @bokusimondesu 25 дней назад +2

    Thanks for skweeezing in the time to make this video in your otherwise fully booked schedule. After all, that hammock does not keep a stable movement in the air, by it self. 👍

  • @steffanjansenvanvuuren3257
    @steffanjansenvanvuuren3257 22 дня назад

    Enjoy!

  • @braincraven
    @braincraven 27 дней назад

    Great summary. Here is my preferred list: audio vario, gps location with ads-b or other airplanes, course, and AHORs to cross reference traditional gauges.

  • @soaruk3697
    @soaruk3697 14 дней назад

    There was a HUD system in the 80's for sailplanes, far better than looking down into a cockpit for info.................. don't know why it wasn't developed or caught on............

  • @audigga4396
    @audigga4396 27 дней назад +2

    Aitutaki is the place to be at this time of year!!!!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  26 дней назад +1

      It wasn't too bad at all! back in cold, wet, New Zealand now...

  • @charlieirvin5898
    @charlieirvin5898 27 дней назад +1

    Yay the tropics! But my god if only you’d wiped the top of the camera lens…….😂

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  27 дней назад +1

      tell me about it! And if only I took a microphone to avoid the wind noise...

    • @charlieirvin5898
      @charlieirvin5898 27 дней назад +1

      @@PureGlide couldn’t fit the ethos in your luggage could you 😢

  • @bartoszskowronski
    @bartoszskowronski 27 дней назад

    the same philosophy as Mike Patty with Scrappy plane. Search and rescue mission require looking outside as much as possile. And as many screens as possible allow to have everything on one of the screens. quick check something is quivker than look to aionics change what is displayed and then check some parameters.
    He put 5 garmin G3x displays into carbon cub. (one for passenger behind)

  • @imsoaring
    @imsoaring 27 дней назад +1

    There is a large contingent that believes that things went downhill once we replaced the Cosim Varios with the fancy mechanical stuff! 😄😄😄

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 26 дней назад

      What’s a vario?
      All I’ve ever needed is an ASI, VSI, and seat of my pants to find and _quantify_ lift.

  • @airwarorg
    @airwarorg 16 дней назад

    If I were targeting a plane on the ground for destruction, would it take more effort to repair the aircraft if I deto nated abo mb inside the cockpit, or inside an engine.
    The cockpit would be a nightmare to repair and rewire, but if you took out an engine, it's not going anywhere. On the other hand, I assume ground crews take off engines all the time to service and rebuild them, and aren't so outfitted to totally retrofit a destroyed to a crispy critter cockpit...

  • @andersstegen4013
    @andersstegen4013 19 дней назад

    Not related to this video.
    But a request: it would be fun to have you do a walkaround your own 18 m glider. Showing all the bells and whistles explaining why you selected them and giving advice. 😊

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  18 дней назад +1

      That is a great idea, not sure I ever did a complete tour!

    • @soaruk3697
      @soaruk3697 14 дней назад

      When he gets an 18m glider maybe he will..............

    • @andersstegen4013
      @andersstegen4013 10 дней назад

      Ok. Whatever wondermachine he is flying, then. 😊

  • @electronwave4551
    @electronwave4551 2 дня назад

    Hobbies can become obsessive and make you miserable. 😁

  • @rrrseajay
    @rrrseajay 26 дней назад +2

    Need some kind of tablet rolodex or lazy susan. 😎

  • @feynthefallen
    @feynthefallen 27 дней назад

    There's two basic kinds of people in the world: Those who ask: "Do we need it?" and those who ask "Can we use it?" If there were only the first kind, we wouldn't even have aeroplanes, heck, we wouldn't even have fire, because gnawing raw meat off the bone always worked well enough. If there were only the second kind, we's all have our own helipad on the roof and a mechanical spare heart implanted just in case. The key, like always in life, is in finding a sensible balance between the two extremes. Enough with some to spare, but not so much you get overwhelmed and swamped by your own tech.

  • @steffanjansenvanvuuren3257
    @steffanjansenvanvuuren3257 15 дней назад

    too many screams in the cockpit.

  • @raypayne1979
    @raypayne1979 27 дней назад +1

    You only need Asi,alt,elec vario,map,, radio. All the rest is nice but not essential.

    • @StudentGoose
      @StudentGoose 27 дней назад

      Flying with a paper aviation chart will lead to more time looking inside than flying with a simple moving map GPS which shows your location at all times.
      Navigating around airspace on a paper chart leads to a higher cognitive workload than a moving map with airspace.
      Showing other traffic on that moving map combined with lookout will give better situational awareness than just lookout.
      And doing final glide calculations of the top of your head, guesstimating the wind is again a much higher workload than having the flight computer so it for you.
      So which alternative is safer: a paper chart and compass, or a digital moving map with FLARM, airspace and glide computer?

    • @gahazebrouck
      @gahazebrouck 24 дня назад

      @@StudentGoose I totally agree with that... however, there is a downside with the screens and it is that you might spend too much time looking at them. Also, there is no guarantee whatsoever that the traffic on the screen will be complete (most probably, it wont).
      Commercial aviation is so much safer only due to ATC. What we do with gliding is trying to manage everything by our own with only incomplete information. I am afraid this will never be bulletproof...

  • @MrTiti
    @MrTiti 27 дней назад +1

    man, when i was a pupil and age 17 it got serious (we go to school till 20 here), i really wouldnt have made such a sloppy presentation. "well the more screens you have, the more info you have. surely, we must all break taht down, but somehow: the preservation of common sense in society is lost, by repeating all basic and ever true facts.
    just my thoughts.