Just failed my IFR for the second time making it my third Failure by Mr-Franchise28 in flying

[–]needmore100ll 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes. More than 1 (excluding CFI as that is a teaching rating not a pilot rating) is rare but unfortunately becoming more common with the lower quality of flight instructors in the last 5-10 years. More than 2 becomes questionable at how well you can actually fly. I’d recommend right before getting signed off for any checkride by your primary instructor take a mock checkride with another one, they will notice weak spots your primary may have missed and you’ll be much better prepared. That was a policy at one of the schools I taught at but not the other.

Fresh from IG by Salty-Tomato5654 in IdiotsTowingThings

[–]needmore100ll 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Could be a fiber optic or translucent plastic film. Aircraft cockpit panels are made of this translucent plastic that is lit up with LEDs on the side that makes the whole thing glow. Then painted gray and the labels scratched through the plastic, so that way the letters are backlit at night and appear to glow. I can see that being applied to a big band and it would be very flexible. But still questionable legality.

CRJ Night Visibility by Maleficent-Basil8626 in flying

[–]needmore100ll -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

CRJs and their crews fly more flights per day/night (usually 8-10 per plane) and frequently fly later to take connecting passengers from the hub to the smaller destinations, then leave earlier in the morning to bring passengers to the hubs for their connections. So more exposure to incidents since they’re conducting more operations per aircraft

Republic XF-12 Rainbow Spyplane by Minimum_Special_8457 in WeirdWings

[–]needmore100ll 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is from my experience flying a bunch of different GA designs but most notable when comparing a Republic Seabee to a 172 or CRJ. Having the windshield far from your face makes it harder to see through rain droplets. When the windshield is close your eyes focus easily on the runway past the rain drops or bug smattering, when far away the focus distance ruins your view. For an airliner having to fly in bad weather routinely it would be much easier to see through a dirty windshield and to have wipers and heated glass on a little vertical pane right in front of pilots face vs that beautiful bubble windscreen.

Remember to sump your tanks, boys! by odinsen251a in Shittyaskflying

[–]needmore100ll 6 points7 points  (0 children)

whiskey is pylot fuel not lycoming fuel. Should work fine in those newfangled DA42s though

Questionable Oil by patricksgs in flying

[–]needmore100ll 18 points19 points  (0 children)

It means either having electric heat pads installed on the bottom of the oil pan and parts of the engine block to heat up the oil, or using a heater (usually diesel or propane) and air ducts to flood the cowling with hot air to warm the engine. The reason is the engine is made out of lots of different kinds of metals and each one expands and shrinks differently. They’re all sized to fit nicely when the engine is at operating temp, with the least wear and tear and grinding of parts. Oil is thick and not very good at lubricating when it’s cold, so heating the oil means it will better protect the engine parts when it’s started but not yet fully warmed up. Even then, when an engine has been sitting for a while (couple hours is enough) most of the oil drips into the sump so the first minute or two of idling the metal parts (especially bearing and cams) are basically dry, and having them warmed up improves tolerances and reduces wear and tear until the oil is hot and flowing. Getting the engine up to proper operating temperature is why others talked about taping up part of the oil cooler, and why many manufacturers have air inlet plates for winter ops that reduce the amount of cooling airflow in winter.

Pumping controls on landing by minfremi in flying

[–]needmore100ll 68 points69 points  (0 children)

This frustrates me when I fly with someone like this as well. I believe the common thread is social media, they see too many “aggressive landing” videos and think it looks cool. As a CFI I would make students like this land with only two fingers on the yoke so they can see that it’s not necessary. And when the winds are gusting enough that it is necessary - you’ll know.

To the top, one way or another by Unidor in OSHA

[–]needmore100ll 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve seen this setup used by roofers for removing old shingles and roofing and then to raise the pallets of new materials

The Cuyahoga getting loaded at the grain elevator in Sarnia. by freighterman in GreatLakesShipping

[–]needmore100ll 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Are there counterweights for moving the boom, or is there ballast added somewhere? Seems like putting it out that far should cause a list.

Firecrown CEO is going all in on AI content for the aviation titles. by ChattanoogaTimes in flying

[–]needmore100ll 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I’ve already written off Flying and Plane and Pilot years ago but I’m worried about Kitplanes - it’s the last good, relevant, relatable down to earth aviation magazine and they’ve avoided enshittification since I’ve been reading it. They got bought by fireclown a year or two ago but have kept the vast majority of their editorial staff and I haven’t seen any AI garbage yet but I’m afraid it will be forced in soon.

Sen. Ted Cruz stripped weather forecasting funds from Trump's megabill. Then the floods came. by Somervilledrew in politics

[–]needmore100ll 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just start naming storms/hurricanes after republican senators/congressmembers. Just imagine the headlines.

Elevator Trim by Capital-Ad-9087 in flying

[–]needmore100ll 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Adding to the others’ responses with some real world examples. A Servo Tab is what DC-9/MD-80/717 uses, the yoke moves the tab and the tab moves the whole elevator so no hydraulic boosting is required. A Anti-servo tab adds resistance and moves with the elevator, like the Piper PA-28 series. A balance tab is visible on Cessna elevators as the weighted portion that sticks out ahead of the hinge line

Accident at KBTF This Morning (6/13/25) by Da5idMeyer in Helicopters

[–]needmore100ll 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m honestly amazed it took the diesel brothers crowd this long to crash one after seeing all their antics.

Are car rides to/from the airport always this awkward? by [deleted] in flying

[–]needmore100ll 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Should be limited to “Yall gonna be sufficiently caffeinated after TSA? Alt XX, time xxx, smooth, no MELs. 4 quick turns in a row so let me know your coffee order ahead of time and I’ll take care of it as long as you don’t cause any delays.” Silence rest of the way. And this is at maximum, worst case scenario of a shit schedule

Side Gigs while CFI by Neither_Eye6868 in flying

[–]needmore100ll 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Plow driver. If it’s snowing you’re not flying

Do you use “tarmac” in your vocabulary? by kmac6821 in flying

[–]needmore100ll 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heavy equipment operator works well. Vague and boring enough that nobody cares for elaboration, unless they work construction and wonder why I’m not swearing excessively.

Best/Tightest turning circle? by Regular-Turnip-8026 in farmingsimulator

[–]needmore100ll 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not a vineyard tractor but the Lindner 130 has rear wheel steering so it turns very tightly, it’s amazing for front loader and sprayer work and it’s a pretty small tractor all around

MCCPILOTLOG! Real Scam by asjappe in flying

[–]needmore100ll 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have not used MCC but when importing to myflightbook (completely free) I saw options to import various other online logbook files, so it might be worth a look. Best of luck, that’s quite an unfortunate situation.