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Posted

HEY yall. I was wondering if anyone has access or knows of any exam/ test like documents that I can take for fun to test my knowledge of the systems and the aircraft (with an answer key preferably). I would put one together myself for fun but I dont feel like im qualified or know enough to do that just yet LOL. If anyone has any ideas or pointers or links it would be truly appreciated!

Posted

1. How many hydraulic pumps are on the F-15?

 

2. Name the three hydraulic systems of the F-15

 

3. JFS accumulator press should be where prior to the first flight of the day?

 

4. Why is the right engine always started first on the F-15?

 

5. What must be worn during maintenance in the "white area"?

 

6. What is the "white area"?

 

7. The external battery switch for the A-10 is where?

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[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

Chris

Posted
1. How many hydraulic pumps are on the F-15?

 

2. Name the three hydraulic systems of the F-15

 

3. JFS accumulator press should be where prior to the first flight of the day?

 

4. Why is the right engine always started first on the F-15?

 

5. What must be worn during maintenance in the "white area"?

 

6. What is the "white area"?

 

7. The external battery switch for the A-10 is where?

 

F-15? Not of interest here...:P

Spec: i7 3.4GHz; 16GB; NVidia GTX 970, 4GB; win10; 24' 1080; TM Warthog, Saitek Pro Pedals, Track IR5

Posted

this is extreme man...

AWAITING ED NEW DAMAGE MODEL IMPLEMENTATION FOR WW2 BIRDS

 

Fat T is above, thin T is below. Long T is faster, Short T is slower. Open triangle is AWACS, closed triangle is your own sensors. Double dash is friendly, Single dash is enemy. Circle is friendly. Strobe is jammer. Strobe to dash is under 35 km. HDD is 7 times range key. Radar to 160 km, IRST to 10 km. Stay low, but never slow.

Posted

Test of knowledge.

 

Do what real pilots do. Sit in the aircraft with the checklist and name all the switches. Repeat until you know what each one does, and when to use it. My guess is that even some of the best DCS pilots do not know emergency procedures for the aircraft they fly. It is mostly "I'm hit, EJECT". There are proper procedures for engine out, loss of hydraulic power, loss of generator power, etc. You would be surprised at how realistic some of the aircraft are. But, of course system failures are not yet accurately modeled.

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Posted
Do what real pilots do. Sit in the aircraft with the checklist and name all the switches. Repeat until you know what each one does, and when to use it. My guess is that even some of the best DCS pilots do not know emergency procedures for the aircraft they fly. It is mostly "I'm hit, EJECT". There are proper procedures for engine out, loss of hydraulic power, loss of generator power, etc. You would be surprised at how realistic some of the aircraft are. But, of course system failures are not yet accurately modeled.

 

That isn't what we do. After going through ground school to learn all the systems and then going through training to learn flows, you will know what everything is. There was never a time that anyone sat down in a cockpit to look at buttons to memorize.

I9 9900k @ 5ghz water cooled, 32gb ram, GTX 2080ti, 1tb M.2, 2tb hdd, 1000 watt psu TrackIR 5, TM Warthog Stick and Throttle, CH Pedals

Posted
That isn't what we do. After going through ground school to learn all the systems and then going through training to learn flows, you will know what everything is. There was never a time that anyone sat down in a cockpit to look at buttons to memorize.

 

Are you a real pilot?

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