This video, as I have found your other tutorials, is excellent. I enjoy your conversational approach and appreciate your well thought out instruction which is delivered without irrelevant comments or anecdotes.
10:58 ABSOLUTELY!! Flying VFR in VR is soo much easier and more enjoyable in my opinion. You can quickly look around you at any time without any hastle and on final you get a very good perception of altitude and distance which makes landing the airplane way easier than on a 2D screen. And from a VR perspective is flight simming the coolest thing to do in VR.
Thank you for these videos. I appreciate the pacing and explanations. I do have two questions because landing paths/approaches aren’t covered as much on Reddit and msfs forums from what I can see. 1. I know which runway strip and which direction I need to approach it from, but how do I know where and when to turn to hit the runway straight on? Is the rule of thumb to fly over like you did here and then follow a left traffic pattern? 2. Why did you turn clockwise first after flying over the airport before following the traffic pattern? Thanks again. I have learned a lot this year, but landing paths, traffic patterns, proper directional approaches don’t get covered enough. It’s nice to see you do it.
It’s a topic I’ve tried to address a few times in a couple different ways because it’s a common question. Yes, the easiest way is to just overfly the field before joining the pattern, which in most situations will be left hand (although some field do right hand or special entry). The best practice is to join the traffic pattern at 45 degrees, which is why I first did a clockwise turn, so that I come back around and join on downwind at 45 degrees. I hope that helps!
My flight instructor would've slapped me if I crossed an airfield so low and approached just above the trees :D Having said that, I like to do things in the sim that'd get me in jail in reallife haha
Not really, it's mostly there for instrument approaches. You can load up a visual approach, but it'll bring you straight in rather than with a traffic pattern
The way you don't pronounce an "H" after a "T" making the "T" sound more like a "D" is hilarious. Like "udder" instead of "other" and "da" for "the"...."dough" for "though". Oddly enough, you did pronounce "threshold" correctly so dat was unexpected by da end of da video....😂
This video, as I have found your other tutorials, is excellent. I enjoy your conversational approach and appreciate your well thought out instruction which is delivered without irrelevant comments or anecdotes.
Yet another useful and educational video. I've always wondered about this. Great stuff, thanks!!!
10:58 ABSOLUTELY!! Flying VFR in VR is soo much easier and more enjoyable in my opinion. You can quickly look around you at any time without any hastle and on final you get a very good perception of altitude and distance which makes landing the airplane way easier than on a 2D screen. And from a VR perspective is flight simming the coolest thing to do in VR.
Ok, but not everyone has that privilege of being a rich white boi, homie
Very good tutorial. Looking forward to many more.
Great tip on using MFD zoomed in to keep track of the runway. I'm always losing it visually and have a heck of a time finding it again.
Thank you for these videos. I appreciate the pacing and explanations. I do have two questions because landing paths/approaches aren’t covered as much on Reddit and msfs forums from what I can see.
1. I know which runway strip and which direction I need to approach it from, but how do I know where and when to turn to hit the runway straight on? Is the rule of thumb to fly over like you did here and then follow a left traffic pattern?
2. Why did you turn clockwise first after flying over the airport before following the traffic pattern?
Thanks again. I have learned a lot this year, but landing paths, traffic patterns, proper directional approaches don’t get covered enough. It’s nice to see you do it.
It’s a topic I’ve tried to address a few times in a couple different ways because it’s a common question.
Yes, the easiest way is to just overfly the field before joining the pattern, which in most situations will be left hand (although some field do right hand or special entry). The best practice is to join the traffic pattern at 45 degrees, which is why I first did a clockwise turn, so that I come back around and join on downwind at 45 degrees.
I hope that helps!
@@FlightSimSchool Yes, your reply helps a lot. Your videos are great for both gamers and those wanting to supplement aviation/simulation learning.
My flight instructor would've slapped me if I crossed an airfield so low and approached just above the trees :D Having said that, I like to do things in the sim that'd get me in jail in reallife haha
Always keen to see my local airport (YSHL - formerly YWOL) in youtube vids! Nice tutorial, FSS!
It’s a beautifully hand crafted airport
14:25 uhm that ground traffic isn't quite organised as the flight traffic...
The airport is actually a museum, I’ve been to it in real life, it’s pretty cool
is it possible to have the traffic pattern show up on the gps?
Not really, it's mostly there for instrument approaches. You can load up a visual approach, but it'll bring you straight in rather than with a traffic pattern
when you are descending are you using auto pilot or doing it by hand?
I’m using the autopilot in this video. It’s a bit easier to make a clear presentation this way.
👍🏻👍🏻
The way you don't pronounce an "H" after a "T" making the "T" sound more like a "D" is hilarious. Like "udder" instead of "other" and "da" for "the"...."dough" for "though". Oddly enough, you did pronounce "threshold" correctly so dat was unexpected by da end of da video....😂
It’s because I was raised speaking French and English at the same time. If it kept your attention throughout the video, I’ll take it ;)