eFirehawk Posted February 19, 2013 Posted February 19, 2013 Hello everyone, Whenever I watch a video or read something related to aviation, I always come across somebody saying "drive the plane" and also referring to the pilots as "drivers", for example: "We are Warthog drivers", and so on... but I was always used to saying "fly the plane" and also I never had the habit of referring to a pilot as a "driver". My question is, what are the correct ways of saying that you fly/drive a plane and is a fighter jet pilot/driver? Or are both correct? :) Thanks Pentium II 233Mhz | 16MB RAM | 14.4kb Modem | 1.44MB Floppy Disk Drive | Windows 3.1 with TM Warthog & TrackIR 5
159th_Viper Posted February 19, 2013 Posted February 19, 2013 If one has regard to the word 'drive' as both a transitive and intransitive verb, then it can be used in both an aviation and land-based-vehicle context. Common usage of the word however restricts it to land-based vehicles. That said, if one has to argue the finer details it would also be correct to say that you 'drive' the plane on the ground (ie taxiing) and 'fly' the aircraft the moment the wheels leave the ground. Both are accordingly correct :) Novice or Veteran looking for an alternative MP career? Click me to commence your Journey of Pillage and Plunder! [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] '....And when I get to Heaven, to St Peter I will tell.... One more Soldier reporting Sir, I've served my time in Hell......'
KLR Rico Posted February 19, 2013 Posted February 19, 2013 Driver is slang, almost making light of being a pilot. "Oh, I'm a viper driver.... No big deal." i5-4670K@4.5GHz / 16 GB RAM / SSD / GTX1080 Rift CV1 / G-seat / modded FFB HOTAS
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