They are. Bridgee (sorry Michael Bridge) the Air North CEO said on the local ABC news tonight (in a read statement) that this was the last time they had scheduled the training as their approval for the use of the simulator was about to come through...
Air North also operate two Embraer jets.
Cheers, Dale
PIC - It comes with the Territory
'The D3' - 2006 TDV6 HSE
2008 Kimberley Kamper Sports RV
Previously Enjoyed:
2002 Adventure Offroad Campers 'Cape York'
2000 D2 Td5 - plus!
1997 Defender 110 Wagon - fully carpeted
It's not broken. It's "Carbon Neutral".
gone
1993 Defender 110 ute "Doris"
1994 Range Rover Vogue LSE "The Luxo-Barge"
1994 Defender 130 HCPU "Rolly"
1996 Discovery 1
current
1995 Defender 130 HCPU and Suzuki GSX1400
The basic problem is that to be sufficiently close to the real thing to be useful, the simulator cost is fairly independent of the type of plane involved. It only becomes economic to replace an aircraft being used for training with a simulator when the cost of running the simulator (mostly capital cost) is less than the cost of running the plane. As the cost of the simulator per pilot to be "refreshed" or trained decreases with the number of pilots, up to the capacity of the time available on the simulator, and the cost of running a plane for training is pretty much dependent on the size of plane, it is clear that below a certain size of plane, and below a certain number of the same type, it is not going to happen. It would seem that the airline in question is just about at that breakpoint!
The argument that the simulator is "safer" is hardly relevant - none of the prescribed exercises are considered too risky - and they are not, but this particular exercise can, as demonstrated have catastrophic results if bungled, as appears to have happened (might still turn out to be something else!). And the statistics bear the safety of it out - you rarely read in the papers of this sort of accident, and this particular exercise is routinely carried out every day, all over Australia by any commercial organisation running small(ish) twin engined planes - and there are a lot of them.
In other parts of the world, such as the USA where there is much more aviation, it might be possible to have an independent business running simulators, but this is clearly not feasible in a low population country as geographically dispersed and with so many different aircraft types in use as Australia.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
It is the flight simulator dedicated to a few type of planes or with software and some hardware can be used for any plane?
I think that in Mascot is one but for the big Boeing.
Simulators are good but nothing beats the real thing. Pilots need to able to practice engine failure and do so everywhere. This includes practising engine failure on take-off and on missed approach. They even practice it with the big stuff. - sit on the side of a the Geelong Freeway and you'll see lots of different aircraft from Be76 to B747 doing asymmetric training at Avalon airport.
Anyway, as mentioned earlier, it is all speculation until we know the facts.
ATSB - report
Keep your eye on the above site for the preliminary report which should appear in a week (month?) or so.
Cheers, Dale
PIC - It comes with the Territory
'The D3' - 2006 TDV6 HSE
2008 Kimberley Kamper Sports RV
Previously Enjoyed:
2002 Adventure Offroad Campers 'Cape York'
2000 D2 Td5 - plus!
1997 Defender 110 Wagon - fully carpeted
Yes, tanks, after I placed the post I have done some research and found THIS in Melbourne.
Nice gear
That's confirmed in the local media too.
Crash pilots were flying 'dangerous' manoeuvre | Northern Territory News | Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia | ntnews.com.au
Cheers, Dale
PIC - It comes with the Territory
'The D3' - 2006 TDV6 HSE
2008 Kimberley Kamper Sports RV
Previously Enjoyed:
2002 Adventure Offroad Campers 'Cape York'
2000 D2 Td5 - plus!
1997 Defender 110 Wagon - fully carpeted
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! | Search All the Web! | 
|---|
|  |  | 
Bookmarks