• 4 Posts
  • 14 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 29th, 2023

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  • Kinda, I’m a part of nomadic virtual but only fly flights for them occasionally. It’s a aircraft ferry va so the routes and aircraft are unique and you get flights personally dispatched for you to make it realistic. You even get a reason (eg. Repositioning flight for a freighter conversion, etc.) and MEL items in the dispatch.

    A decade or so ago I flew virtual united and it was fun but found after a year or so I wanted to explore more parts of the world and more airlines so I left to have more freedom.




  • StableSystem@lemmy.worldtoStocks@lemmy.worlddel
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    1 year ago

    The locked cases are such a pain in the ass. My local target has all hair care and soap products locked up. Not just expensive ones, literally everything. I needed a bottle of body soap and had to wait for an employee to come and unlock it, wait for me to smell then to figure out which one I wanted, and then lock it back up when I was done. All got a $12 bottle of soap…











  • Copied from a comment I made on Reddit a while back (first time opening Reddit in a month!)

    I’ve been simming 15 years and got my PPL last year so have gone through this recently. Simming absolutely helped me in my PPL, I had a good understanding for how the aircraft handled and felt things came quickly in most regards. As far as stick and rudder skills, I obviously had to learn the muscle memory, which came fairly quickly but took practice. Sight picture was actually a bigger thing to learn, along with localized weather, things like thermals on a hot day or mini rotors when landing in a heavily wooded area, etc. Those are things which don’t exist in the sim so had to be learned from scratch. The actual aircraft handling made sense in my head so it just required the stick and rudder learning. Crosswind landings actually came really easily having already learned and practiced the coordination in sim for years.

    A few things I noticed in my training

    let your CFI teach you. Don’t assume you know anything, let them teach you everything as if it’s new. Some stuff you’ll say to yourself “yeah I already knew that”, but with a lot more stuff than I expected I actually learned I was doing it wrong or learned a better way to do it. I found this helped me overcome bad habits more easily because they were identified from the get go and then never practiced the bad habits in the real plane.

    dont bother using the sim to practice any stick and rudder stuff, but do still use it. I found it helpful to practice my SRM skills, visual navigation, and just familiarizing myself with the area and landmarks. It can be helpful to do stuff in the sim to practice the things you learn for the written, like VOR stuff, magnetic compass turning/accel tendencies, etc.

    look out the window! learn your sight picture and keep your head out of the cockpit

    reset your bar. Don’t assume you can do anything irl that you do in the sim. You need to prove everything to yourself IRL before you can be confident doing it.

    use VATSIM, even for VFR. Just having lots of voice comms and being comfortable talking and flying, and just with how radio comms flow is very useful and made learning the radios super easy. I learned to fly under the seattle bravo shelf and was always talking to someone and it was really not too bad given how much I’ve used VATSIM.