Fly Me Friendly

Can’t keep my eyes from the circling skies
  • rss
  • Blog
  • Ballooning
    • Safety Through Information
  • Why Falcon124?
  • Flying Articles
    • Albury Airshow – 2002
    • Simulator Run
  • Links
  • Photo Gallery
  • Logbook
  • Contact

Gear Up please, FO

Falcon124 | August 31, 2008 | 2:15 am
It’s been over a year since I was last with my friend Carlo in his B737-800 simulator. Back then it was out at the QANTAS sim center near Essendon airport where it was being evaluated by QF for procedures training. Since then they’ve opened up a store in the CBD and set it all up there as part of Flight Experience here in Melbourne. Simulator Cockpit
Sim interior
I got the call this evening from Carlo suggesting a bit of fun after dinner, so we zipped into the city and set up the sim for some fun. First up was a flight from London Gatwick airport over to Naples in Italy. I was to be Captain and pilot flying while Carlo would be First Office and pilot not flying.
Me in the Sim Cockpit
Captain Falcon
We got the APU on and kicked in the systems, then programmed in the way points from EGKK to LIRN. After that it was push back from the gate, taxi out to 26R and take off. I flew manually although I kept the flight director on and was basically following the pink lines. Makes it MUCH easier, especially when you’ve not flown for over a year :)
Once we were on our way and were set on a few way points, we engaged the autopilot and ran a few checks and evaluations of our situation. We then set the sim to run at 4x speed while we stepped out of the sim to have some drinks and nibbles.
Back in the sim and back to normal speed about 20 to 30 minutes out from Naples, we double checked the programmed course and approach. Carlo had added a STAR that had us flying a circuit around & across the airport so we played around with the waypoints and changed over to an approach with less mucking about.
As we cleared 10,000′ I took over flying and continued our descent with a wide right hand turn to align with the runway. We were at 7,000′ over BENTO and continued our descent to 1,800′ over POM and then it was in for landing. Nice one :) Throttles and Engine Info
Love those throttles
We then reset the sim to be at old Kai Tak airport in Hong Kong (VHHX) where I did a take off and then followed Carlo’s directions on a scenic tour of the bay before coming back around and landing at Chek Lap Kok (VHHH). The plan was to do a touch-n-go then Carlo would take over as pilot flying as we touched down. Sadly, my approach was a complete disaster and I was all over the place. We slammed on and Carlo took over – good thing crash mode was turned off…
So now we left VHHH and headed back to Kai Tak with Carlo flying and me setting the systems. We followed an A340 in and landed right behind it (Minimum safe distance? What’s that?) then taxied to a parking bay, shut down and turned everything off. A340 landed ahead of us
The A340 that landed ahead of us
It was a great evening of freeing our imaginations and flying around the world. The sim is so much fun and an amazing replica inside. Lack of motion isn’t such a big deal and the price difference to purchase, operate & maintain a fixed base unit compared to full motion is enormous (about 20 times more for a full motion system). We both enjoyed it and I’m definitely looking forward to our next session. Waiting for the A340 to taxi past
Waiting for the A340 to taxi past
Comments
4 Comments »
Categories
Simulator Sessions
Tags
B737, EGKK, Flight Experience, LIRN, Simulator, VHHH, VHHX
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

Fly me to the moon

Falcon124 | July 26, 2007 | 2:27 am

I’ve just returned home from about 5 hours spent flying a 737-800 around Australia and NZ. It was, of course, a flight simulator – this time a fixed-base simulator that’s built around a collection of computers running MS Flight Simulator but with the “real thing” 737-800 cockpit with seats, controls, panels, the works. Three projectors drive the screens you watch from the inside and, aside from the lack of movement, it’s amazingly realistic.

Having been in a number of full motion sims, including the latest A330 sim that’s worth over $30 million, this one was extremely good and costs considerably less than that :)

The simulator belongs to Flight Experience here in Melbourne which is run by my friend Carlo. They’ve got the sim out at the QANTAS sim center near Essendon airport where it’s being tested and verified by the techs. Very soon now it will be relocating to its operational quarters somewhere in the CBD.

As a fixed base simulator it’s sufficient for procedures training and some level of official 737 training, thus it can be used by commercial pilots seeking their 737 endorsements to at least get a large part of the way there. This type of work represents about 5% of the market for Flight Experience as they’re targeting the general public, who can come in and see what it’s like to fly a jet airliner in and out of airports here in Australia. People can finally see what goes on behind that closed door up front, where they might get the odd tantalising glimpse of the “pointy end” :)

For tonight, Carlo and I were checking the unit out and having a lot of fun in the process, flying around Coolangatta & Brisbane, Christchurch, Melbourne and including some insane landings & take-off’s at Moorabbin. Fortunately, crashes were turned off, so we didn’t wind up splattered all over the virtual landscape as we probably should have (Moorabbin’s longest runways are somewhat smaller than those at Melbourne :)

All up it was great fun and I’d totally recommend having a session with Flight Experience when they’re up and running. I know I’ll be spending a few more hours in the unit when funds permit.

Comments
1 Comment »
Categories
Simulator Sessions
Tags
a330, B737, Flight Experience, Simulator
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

Avalon Airshow 2007 – The aftermath

Falcon124 | March 28, 2007 | 5:45 pm

Well, it’s been a couple of days now and I’m pretty much recovered from the Avalon Airshow (although my feet are still a bit sore now & then :)

The big thing about this airshow was that it all just worked (aside from the traffic jam on Monday :). This was the first time that we had an AGO rep in the box with the “Ring Master,” allowing them to discuss the impacts of changes to plans, placement of aircraft and so on. In the past, this had happened via relaying between multiple people over radios and so on. Now that an experienced ground control person was involved from early planning through to execution, good decisions were made, people knew what was going on and bottlenecks were, on the whole, avoided.

This was reflected in comments from pilots saying how well it worked and that it was the best organised airshow they’d been to. It was also reflected in my general feeling that a lot of the chaos, madness & stress I’d experienced in past shows wasn’t present in this year’s show. Sure, we were running about and busy at times, there were occasional stuff ups but, on the whole, it just flowed.

A couple of negatives were the lack of radios for the ground staff (it’s frustrating trying to sort things out when there’s not enough people around with a good picture of what’s going on – doubt they can ever fix this one) and (the biggest annoyance of all) serving tuna sandwiches for the lunch. Not all the sandwiches were tuna on a given day, but if you were a bit late getting back to the Green Room for lunch, the “real food” would have already have been eaten. Bad luck if you hate fish, eh?

Another interesting item from this airshow included a friend of mine launching a new flight simulator based company, Flight Experience. They have a fixed-base 737-800 simulator and are offering flights to people – you can come in and see what it’s like on the cockpit of a new jet. You can also get type endorsement training and so on. Their big market though is people who just want the experience.

Once again I was able to bring Kitt and Nykolai down to have fun at the show on the Sunday, although they weren’t really impressed with the traffic hassles. Perhaps next time we can look at getting them in & out via train to Lara and the shuttle bus over. At least they had a great time and I got Nykolai into the cockpit of the Kittyhawk thanks to Steve Death (the pilot).

All up, I enjoyed it immensely and will definitely volunteer again (if I’m in Melbourne, etc :)

Comments
No Comments »
Categories
Air shows
Tags
Avalon, Avalon Airshow, B737, Flight Experience, p40, Simulator, ymav
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

Avalon Airshow 2007 – Day 7

Falcon124 | March 25, 2007 | 11:36 pm

The last official day of the Airshow and I left home early to arrive at 7am. I would have been on time, except I forgot to set my clocks back 1 hour before I went to bed (daylight savings ended last night). So, I wound up opening up the Green Room tent at 6:10am – no wonder there weren’t any other people on around. Oh well – the sunrise was great and the peace & quiet on the airfield was wonderful.

Soon enough the warbirds started to arrive and I put a few of them in on my own until some of the others arrived to help. A QANTAS 737 (painted in aboriginal designs) and 747 arrived and were squeezed into the keyhole. Not long after a BAe 146 from National Jet arrived and I wound up batting it into a tight space at Green-5. Lots of fun.

By now the whole team was on site and we were gearing up for another day much like yesterday. There were some slight changes to the schedule and a few additional shows, but otherwise it ran very well and everyone was happy. Early in the day we moved the majority of the light aircraft who wanted to leave at the end of the show down to modified holding areas near the Bravo holding point.

Kitt and Nykolai came down with UK Balloon Pilot Chris and his family in time to see the Super Hornet, B-52, RAAF F-18, F-111, USAF F-15 and the RAAF formation F-18s. They were all very happy to come on down and hang out – I even managed to get some time to join them when we had some quiet moments on the warbird tarmac.

All too soon the show was over and we had a mass exodus of lighties crossing over 18-Center to 18-Right, all the while charters were taking off from further down the runway (at Charlie or Foxtrot intersections). We slotted a number of warbirds in that were leaving and then just worked through the remaining lighties. It all went very well.

At the end of the day, Chuck Yeager came out to meet the F-15 and F-16 pilots so I managed to get some photos of him during these sessions. After this it was off to AGO for a couple of beers (light, unfortunately) then ASDU for dinner and home.

I’m back tomorrow to help remaining aircraft leave, then it’s all over for me.

Comments
No Comments »
Categories
Air shows
Tags
Avalon, Avalon Airshow, b52, B737, B747, bae146, f111, f15, f18, ymav
Comments rss Comments rss
Trackback Trackback

Next Entries »

Latest Tweets

Fetching latest tweets...

Tags

a321 accident airlines Airshow Avalon Avalon Airshow b52 b707 B737 B747 balloons blog C17 connie ct4 dc3 dhc4 F1 Racer f15 f18 f111 Flight Experience General Information grand prix L5B LFLY Lilydale LIML LOWG LOWI Mildura nykolai pby PCDU Plane Crazy Down Under QANTAS roulettes rvac safety Simulator VH-BLQ YLIL ymav ymmb ymml

License

Creative Commons License
The contents of this blog are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.5 Australia License.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available by contacting the author (see "Contact" above)


rss Comments rss valid xhtml 1.1 design by jide powered by Wordpress get firefox