Bearfoot Posted August 28, 2019 Posted August 28, 2019 Is there a standard scan pattern? If so, what's the pattern -- (analog) VSI, speed, altitude, and then up to front, and then down again? Does the scan pattern change when in cruise vs landing? While landing, I find myself getting hung up on the digital VSI on the HUD instead of the analog VSI on the console. It's just so much more convenient to look at than the heads down gauge. Problem is that it throws off my scan, as I have to then switch down to get speed and altitude. What do you folks do? Stick to the analog gauges all the way?
bear.is.flying Posted August 28, 2019 Posted August 28, 2019 During the Case I: Attitude - AOA - Attitude - VSI - Attitude - AOA - Attitude - VSI - Attitude.. On final: BALL - AOA - LINEUP - BALL - AOA - LINEUP Intel Core i7-8700K @ 5.0 GHz // Nvidia GTX 1080Ti // 32 GB DDR4 RAM // 1 TB SSD
Bearfoot Posted August 28, 2019 Author Posted August 28, 2019 During the Case I: Attitude - AOA - Attitude - VSI - Attitude - AOA - Attitude - VSI - Attitude.. On final: BALL - AOA - LINEUP - BALL - AOA - LINEUP For "Attitude" is this the VDI or the spherical indicator? For the VSI is this the HUD or the analog dial?
AG-51_Sabot Posted August 28, 2019 Posted August 28, 2019 Dan Pedersen, author of "Topgun, An American Story" stated that his scan in the 14 was; Altitude Heading Airspeed Bank Velocity Vector He founded the Navy's Topgun Program, so he may know something. "There is an art … to flying. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." Douglas Adams, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy https://www.cag-51.org/contact
bear.is.flying Posted August 28, 2019 Posted August 28, 2019 For "Attitude" is this the VDI or the spherical indicator? For the VSI is this the HUD or the analog dial? VDI and Analog Dial. For the VSI don’t linger to read the numbers. You’re just glancing at the needle position. Intel Core i7-8700K @ 5.0 GHz // Nvidia GTX 1080Ti // 32 GB DDR4 RAM // 1 TB SSD
Victory205 Posted August 28, 2019 Posted August 28, 2019 Dan Pedersen, author of "Topgun, An American Story" stated that his scan in the 14 was; Altitude Heading Airspeed Bank Velocity Vector He founded the Navy's Topgun Program, so he may know something. Dan never flew the F-14, nor any aircraft that sported a velocity vector AFAIK. Fly Pretty, anyone can Fly Safe.
eatthis Posted August 28, 2019 Posted August 28, 2019 i cant see the damn ball! 7700k @5ghz, 32gb 3200mhz ram, 2080ti, nvme drives, valve index vr
VampireNZ Posted August 29, 2019 Posted August 29, 2019 i cant see the damn ball! It is pretty tricky in VR to see the ball turning into the groove - just make sure you have the ILS sorted and as you approach the groove you will pickup the glideslope bar and this will give you a good indication of your height until you can see the ball clearly. Personally I can't reliably use the ball until about 1/4 mile from the boat, and that is with the 'bigger meatball' mod...but I am pretty old and the old Mk I's aren't what they used to be. Vampire
Lightswitch Posted August 29, 2019 Posted August 29, 2019 Not sure about military flying but in RL commercial flying you just scan what makes sense to you and what you’re comfortable with. You always scan the same instruments but everyone develops their own method. Alienware M17x, Intel I7 4700MQ @2.4GHz, AMD R9 M290x, Win10 64x, 16GB ram, Saitek X-65, Saitek ProFlight pedals, Thrustmaster MFDs, Track ir 5
VF31_Subsonic Posted August 29, 2019 Posted August 29, 2019 Dan never flew the F-14, nor any aircraft that sported a velocity vector AFAIK. Interesting.... Love having legit guys from the Brownshoe Navy here. I'll add...there is often more than one "right"way to fly and airplane. Thanks for all you add to this community Victory. VF-31 Tomcatters http://www.csg-1.com/ | Discord
AG-51_Sabot Posted August 31, 2019 Posted August 31, 2019 (edited) Dan never flew the F-14, nor any aircraft that sported a velocity vector AFAIK. I'm just quoting what he stated. Re-edit - Victory is correct, he stated Vertical Velocity Gage Edited August 31, 2019 by AG-51_Sabot "There is an art … to flying. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." Douglas Adams, The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy https://www.cag-51.org/contact
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