Pilot shares common question he has to Google answer to | Travel News | Travel
A pilot has offered a glimpse into the realities of flying an aircraft and how it contrasts with driving a car. For many of us, flying can be a delightful experience.
We board a plane, have some refreshments and touch down in a new location ready for enjoyment. However, for pilots, each trip carries immense responsibility.
Becoming a pilot demands years of commitment, robust spatial awareness and the capacity to manage high-stress situations.
A former US army veteran who transitioned into a commercial pilot has been divulging his cockpit experiences on TikTok and responding to passengers’ queries.
An intrigued follower enquired if aeroplanes possess gas pedals similar to cars. So the aviation expert was quick to clear things up.
The pilot, known as @PerchPoint on the platform, clarified: “We do have pedals on both the captain and officer side. We have two pedals – right and left foot. But they control the rudder which is for directional control.
“And they [the pedals] also kind of pivot forward a little bit so we can control the brakes. We can step on the left pedal for left brakes or the right pedal for right brakes. That’s for like directional control or using both pedals to slow down when we land.
“There’s lots of switches and buttons but no gas pedals.”
The pilot explained how they manually operate two or four thrust levers to propel the aircraft forward.
“We take them both and push them forward – one for the left engine and one for the right,” he clarified.
If the plane has three or four engines, it has a corresponding number of levers. The pilot also highlighted that airplane windshields are not like those in cars.
He detailed that the windscreens are split in half, allowing the pilot and co-pilot to use their own window side and independently operate the windscreen wipers for each windscreen.
He further noted that the only difference between a captain and first officer pilot is that the captain has the final say on decisions, but they both control the aircraft together.
In another video, the pilot revealed that passengers at the airport often ask him about flight information – even if he isn’t piloting their plane.
The pilot confesses that he frequently has to resort to Google to find information about flights.
He stated: “The general population overestimates what pilots and aircrew actually know. If anyone stops and asks me for directions to their gate or maybe just information about their flight, I am more than happy to help because obviously we are more familiar with the system.
“But, in the grand scheme of it all, we don’t have special access or necessarily more information about someone else’s flight other than our own than anyone else would have about their flight.”