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    Can a home computer teach you to fly a real plane?

    Can flight simulator training on a home computer teach you enough to fly a real plane?

    Sort of.

    Authorities say two teenagers in Utah planned to bomb their school, steal a plane and flee the country. They'd never flown a plane, but police said they'd spent hundreds of hours with a flight simulation program.

    Flight simulation software gives hobbyists a highly accurate idea of the layout of airplane cockpits and controls. Many enthusiasts attach control sticks and rudder pedals to their computers and spend hours flying to and from the programs' simulations of actual airports, complete with portrayals of real runways and airport buildings.

    The rub is that real aircraft are different from planes on the computer screen. A hobbyist used to smooth flying in the rec room can easily be thrown by the vibration, noise and wind effects in an actual light plane — not to mention the higher stakes of real flying.

    It wouldn't be impossible for a hobbyist to get a light aircraft off the ground on the first try, fly it some distance and land it. But the flight could be a rough affair and the landing hair-raising, even in good weather.

    "It can be done, but it's a bit of a long shot," said Nels Anderson of Framingham, Mass., founder of Flightsim.com, a website for simulation enthusiasts.

    Anderson also noted that "things vary from one plane to another." The instruments and startup procedures you learn in a simulator might not match those in a plane you suddenly find yourself in.

    To many enthusiasts, however, the difference in handling between a real plane and a simulation is of little importance. They are more interested in the simulators' detailed renderings of engine, navigation and autopilot systems, particularly in simulations of large jets. Some hobbyists have created entire "virtual airlines," with pilots flying the routes of actual passenger jets.

    The most common flight simulation programs for home computers are Microsoft Flight Simulator and X-Plane, produced by Laminar Research of Columbia, S.C. Prices vary from about $50 to $80. A small industry of programmers has created "add-on" software for these programs to simulate specific planes and systems.

    ___

    Thomas Kent flies Boeing 737 jets, often successfully, in Microsoft Flight Simulator.

     

    16 comments

    • v  •  22 days ago
      Oh great- now the feds are going to security checks on people who buy flight sims.
    • Feckless Leader  •  Breckenridge, Colorado  •  17 days ago
      I've simmed since the first SubLogic Apple 2e piece of garbage up through the FSX. I can land anything, anywhere at anytime in the sim.... I got my chance to put my mitts on a real Cessna 172 and it wasn't ANYTHING like the sim. Wind turbulence, pedal/rudder/stick coordination, yadda yadda yadda... the reality of crashing... forget it. I can see sims being fun for people who will never get a chance to pilot a real plane and for real pilots maybe wanting to look at and practice approaches of airports they're planning to visit.
    • M  •  26 days ago
      As a pilot I can attest that a simulator can train in procedures but it can't train for the actual feel and action of flying an airplane. There is so much sensory information from the seat-of-the-pants feel, the inner ear balance and motion sensation, and the feel of aerodynamic feedback on the controls that gets combined with the visual picture of flying to let the pilot know exactly what the plane is doing. Also, simulators teach people to fly pristine, perfect aircraft, not the countless variations of instruments, systems, and controls in the average airplane. In the simulator these kids probably trained for a fuel injected aircraft but they would be clueless when it comes to a carbureted airplane, especially in the event of carb ice which can make an engine sputter out and die if not recognized. In perfect conditions they may have been able to take off, and maybe have a very hard landing, but most likely with the imperfect conditions of reality they would crash.
    • Eddie  •  17 days ago
      Bush sucks!
    • HighYieldNuclearDevice  •  17 days ago
      After those kids in Utah the masses needed an article to say its almost impossible for an experienced flight sim pilot to take a plane and actually get it off the ground. The reality is many flight schools use the simulators in question and many, MANY people move from sim to real and the first flight goes off without a hitch. That just makes people nervous. No a sim is not the real thing but flying is not brain surgery. If you take lessons before 15 hours of instruction are up you fly SOLO! FIFTEEN HOURS. Its not rocket science. The 911 hijackers managed to hit very small targets at maximum speed first try with jumbo jets, first try.
    • M  •  Arvada, Colorado  •  22 days ago
      What a great idea for a TV documentary. Put a non-pilot flight computer-simmer in the left seat, an instructor pilot in the right, and a camera man in the back. Do this enough times to put this question to rest.
    • John R  •  Denver, Colorado  •  22 days ago
      As an avid flightsimmer, I find this article stupid and demeaning and without any real point as to its writing
    • SARCASTICLES  •  Fayetteville, North Carolina  •  22 days ago
      Everybody get their bloomers out of a wad......FSX is just plain 'ol fun. I recently started a program, using donated computers and software, to install PC's with FSX in retirement homes for the old pilots. It gives them something to do to keep their minds sharp, and they all say it beats the hell out of playing cards. Anybody out there with the resources, this is a good way to do something good for these old-timers who aren't as mobile as they used to be. The biggest reward for me is the smiles it puts on their faces....they really like the add-on war-birds, some of them actually flew some of these planes back in WWII. ;)
    • prefer a horse!  •  26 days ago
      I would point out that while they are MUCH more detailed, expensive, and "closer" to the real "feel," including vibrations and angle changes, the military DOES use simulators for BASIC pilot training AND some flight combat training; AND, IF you can't do well in the simulator, you NEVER graduate to REAL planes.
    • chuckbones  •  22 days ago
      Of course it can be done. There are many videos on online that show non-pilots as young as 8 years old who play flight simulators fly and land commercial simulators.
    • WeThePeople  •  Monterey, California  •  22 days ago
      No way. You would crash within the first few minutes. Micro computer flight simulators even cranked up to maximum realism are not as difficult to fly as a real airplane.
    • Gary H.  •  Houston, Texas  •  22 days ago
      The Radio control pilot would be the one to fly off in a large plane! Flying radio control is flying a real plane. What makes it harder to fly than the large full sized cousin is that radio control pilots must be able to control the aircraft from every visual aspect and have lightning quick reactions. You fly from one aspect in the full size version, which by the way is a lot easier!
    • David  •  Bakersfield, California  •  21 days ago
      Piloting a small aircraft is not at all difficult, especially these days because you don't have to set fuel/air mixtures manually...up until about a 1990 model plane you had to set the mix, but now it's done automatically. That is the most dangerous part of staying in the air, or misjudging a mountain..in an underpowered small plane you may have to do a couple circles to get altitude, and remembering to flare on landing, keep the nose down and it won't stall (wing stall that is, when you have the wrong angle of attack you will drop like a rock). to boil it down these guys could do it. It's easy if you pay attention. Now jets....never mind I get started on my favorite subject I will fill the page.
    • Jeffrey Mcgill  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  21 days ago
      The problem is there is no single procedure that is effective in all conditions,and the last thing a student or low-time pilot wants to hear is that it takes experience. Experience is a tardy teacher.
    • Michael O'connor  •  22 days ago
      I am a licensed pilot with over forty years experience. I simulator CAN NOT replicate g-forces, therefor you can not learn how a plane feels in a simulator.
    • Oneper Day  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  22 days ago
      Go to Flight Safety International and get into a REAL simulator.
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