827
It's good to have a backup
(startrek.website)
Post memes here.
A meme is an idea, behavior, or style that spreads by means of imitation from person to person within a culture and often carries symbolic meaning representing a particular phenomenon or theme.
An Internet meme or meme, is a cultural item that is spread via the Internet, often through social media platforms. The name is by the concept of memes proposed by Richard Dawkins in 1972. Internet memes can take various forms, such as images, videos, GIFs, and various other viral sensations.
Laittakaa meemejä tänne.
If someone has 600 hrs of flying in a 1:1 representation of an aircraft type, they could be successful flying it in real life assuming the plane is 100% okay and it was only the pilots who were incapacitated somehow. After all, Every airline pilot gets certified to fly in a jet without ever actually setting foot on the real thing.
It would depend on the person, but having flying fundamentals is the most important knowledge in that situation, not knowing every little thing about a "737-700". The radio guidance can tell you where to find all the buttons you need for a landing where you will be guided step by step and going to a super long safe runway.
I should know, I have 100 hrs in Cessna 172s and 1 hour in 747-400s.
I worked for a training facility who had 747-4 sims when I was a student pilot and one of our instructors took me "up" in it. Never had been in the fuckin thing in my life, but I was hand flying a 747 400 in a 6 axis full motion simulator while possessing a current medical and accompanied by a current 747 instructor. So, that hour could go in my log book. (I wish I had him put it in there honestly)
I was easily able to fly the aircraft. The controls are the same as any aircraft, it's just bigger and heavier. Slow and steady, minor adjustments to learn and get a feel for how much input = how much output.
The way harder part for me was taxiing that monster around the airport. Iirc the cockpit was positioned 26ft off the ground, and you sit in front of the nose gear, so just imagine trying to eyeball when to turn when you sit in front of the wheels that do the turning.
The things we can't account for are the most dangerous. The weather on the day this happens will be the biggest factor in determining if the flight simmer is successful in saving the plane. Heavy winds, low visibility, runway conditions, etc are going to affect the outcome way more than anything else.
Bottom line is If my relative was on a plane where they needed a hero to land it safely, I would trust a 600 hr flight simmer's chances waayyyyyyy before most other people. Especially since they have radio pilot guiding them, they can declare an emergency, fly to a safe extra long runway, etc, all to maximize the ease of the landing.