GoldenRivet |
11-18-13 12:58 PM |
I used to teach about those in my ground school. not many of them to be found anymore i don't think. The old air mail days were a serious and often deadly business.
I recall reading about Charles Lindbergh telling of an encounter with instrument meteorological conditions during an airmail flight in an aircraft which had recently been equipped with a new artificial horizon instrument of sorts. An instrument with which he confessed only a vague familiarity.
In picking apart his description of the event - he was essentially losing control of the aircraft, then regaining control repeatedly until he learned - in a life and death scenario, how to fly by instruments.
lots of folks have bought the farm that way... even with tens of thousands of dollars worth of advanced instrumentation aboard.
Those were the days when we were still learning about how and why airplanes do the things they do and learning about various strange phenomenon of the sky - learning things which today are considered basic and most common knowledge among the pilot ranks.
thanks for sharing the article... brought back many memories of late fall and winter evenings with a class room full of student pilots.
EDIT: I remember during my first solo cross country i became disoriented and lost over northeast Texas many years ago. I was mistaking one lake for another and was considerably south of course. I recalled my instructor mentioning these old methods of navigation. So, i descended from cruise altitude to the nearest town i could see. I circled the little town at about 1,000 ft spotting a water tower i clearly read the black text "W I N N S B O R O". I corrected my course and landed at my destination about 15 minutes later. that was a fun flight
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