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DANGERS of spatial DISORIENTATION! Explained by CAPTAIN JOE 

Captain Joe
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00:00 Intro,
00:35 What is spatial disorientation
01:35 Flight Instruments
02:50 How do you get spatial disorientated?
04:08 The spinning simulator
06:08 Flying the SIM
06:41 Entering Graveyard Spin
08:16 Spin Recovery
09:15 Visual Illusion (Runway Width/Slant)
10:45 Go-Around Pitch up Sensation
11:46 Feelings after SD
13:24 Recommendations
14:24 Outro
-----------------------------------
Dear friends and followers welcome back to my channel and to a video close to my heard, „Spatial disorientation“. A topic many pilots underestimate! Luckily with the help of AMST, I was able to experience SD first hand in their simulator.
But first off, what is Spatial Disorientation (SD):
Spatial disorientation of an aviator is the inability to determine the attitude of the aircraft, meaning whether the craft is turning, ascending or descending. It is most critical at night or in poor weather, when there is no visible horizon, since vision is the dominant sense for orientation. The auditory system, vestibular system (within the inner ear), and proprioceptive system (sensory receptors located in the skin, muscles, tendons and joints) collectively work to coordinate movement with balance, and can also create illusory nonvisual sensations, resulting in spatial disorientation in the absence of strong visual cues.
But see for yourself on how to recover from SD in this video!
Thank you very much for your time! I hope you enjoy this video!
Wishing you all the best!
Your "Captain" Joe
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Lounge - Ehrling: www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5ImN...
Outro Song:
Joakim Karud & Dyalla - Wish you were here www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXrxB...
ALL COPYRIGHTS TO THIS VIDEO ARE OWNED BY FLYWITHCAPTAINJOE.COM ANY COPYING OR ILLEGALLY DOWNLOADING AND PUBLISHING ON OTHER PLATFORMS WILL FOLLOW LEGAL CONSEQUENCES

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25 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 445   
@EveningOfficer
@EveningOfficer Год назад
These videos are starting to seem like an impressively high budget operation. Joe is not only a world class pilot, but he’s quickly becoming a world class cinematographer as well. 👍🏼
@flywithcaptainjoe
@flywithcaptainjoe Год назад
Thanks man! Means a lot!
@SpottingTLV
@SpottingTLV Год назад
Was just about to say the same. Joe has gone from using his whiteboard as the background with decent lighting and audio to this. What an improvement
@Blanco10
@Blanco10 Год назад
@@flywithcaptainjoe 🙌🏻🙌🏻😚
@TB-um1xz
@TB-um1xz Год назад
@@flywithcaptainjoe still waiting for a video about how you were wrong about the UPS tail stand in ICN. When will that come out?
@hilo2-est3-elev
@hilo2-est3-elev Год назад
@@flywithcaptainjoe What do the lights on the airplane next to the bathrooms and in the middle of the plane mean? The only colors I’ve seen are red, blue, and orange.
@LtColDaddy71
@LtColDaddy71 Год назад
Captain Joe, my grandfather flew for 50 years. I found out later, he never had a license. He didn’t know to check for water in the fuel until I showed him when I was a student pilot. His instrument was a bolt hanging from a string. I tried to explain to him that their is no way that can be effective. He swore it was. It was a different era. I wonder how many other old farmers like him were the same.
@bluedancelilly
@bluedancelilly 5 месяцев назад
That hanging bolt idea actually makes sense to me. It would show which direction is gravity - ie. the ground.
@FryChicken
@FryChicken 2 месяца назад
That's awesome
@igclapp
@igclapp 26 дней назад
It will not work. You could be flying in a steep turn and the bolt would still be pointing toward the floor of the plane.
@LtColDaddy71
@LtColDaddy71 26 дней назад
@@igclapp exactly. He never flew in bad weather or IFR, but he was more lucky than good.
@damonrobinson4294
@damonrobinson4294 7 дней назад
0😢😅0😢​@@bluedancelillyso
@28ebdh3udnav
@28ebdh3udnav Год назад
Not only as a pilots but also, when I was a passenger in a plane, I thought we were leveled and making a slight left turn, but my GPS was showing as making a right turn and the pilot was saying that were climbing out.
@user-ct8my8rv9c
@user-ct8my8rv9c Год назад
Not a pilot but I had this while scuba diving. I was surfacing and 20 feet underwater and suddenly it felt like I was moving sideways going 10 mph..yet I was in a calm lake. My eyes didn't show this but I felt it 100 percent as certain as you're feeling gravity. It was spooky and eye opening.
@flywithcaptainjoe
@flywithcaptainjoe Год назад
Wow, didn’t expect that during scuba diving
@RogerLipscombe
@RogerLipscombe Год назад
Kinda similar, but in reverse: Snowboarding in whiteout conditions. I stopped and bent down to tighten my straps. Looked up to discover I was going sideways at an appreciable speed.
@Blanco10
@Blanco10 Год назад
@@flywithcaptainjoe ✈️✈️suerte 🍀
@HesderOleh
@HesderOleh Год назад
@@flywithcaptainjoe without instruments, in blackwater conditions always but also with good visibility you can be completely confused as to which way up is. At least for up and down you can look at which way air bubbles are going, but if you don't have visual landmarks you can be in an extremely strong current and not notice. This can happen when surfacing from a deep dive where you can't see the ship while ascending.
@gnarthdarkanen7464
@gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад
@@HesderOleh That's why (if you're interested in penetrating a hulk in even moderately deep water, you bring along an extra reel or two, and tie off to the anchor chain or rope to your dive-boat/charter. Cave Divers have unique "Cookies" but if I recall correctly, Shipwreck explorers use a pinging or thumping flasher clipped onto their individual guide lines. EVERYBODY should use "arrows" that clip into the guideline and point the way back out, just in case you do drop the line, you can refind it, but you can also get turned around easily in a wreck. Everything is sideways or upside down and every which a way... The point is never lose sight of your guideline, and if conditions get dark or silty, KEEP your hands on it, whether you're working a reel, or someone else works the reel and you're the "dive buddy" following, slipping the line through fingers 100% might be tedious, but it beats the hell out of getting lost and stuck in a silted-out space with no idea what the f*** went wrong. ;o)
@codingvio7383
@codingvio7383 Год назад
Wow, I didn't expect a simulator specially built to demonstrate SD. incredible.
@SoloRenegade
@SoloRenegade Год назад
I get students to experience this in the cockpit of any ordinary plane with ease (and without needing to put them in a spin). I have them fly into spatial disorientation themselves before having them then recover the moment they fly it into an unusual attitude. Works like a charm and really sinks home the fact they can't trust their feelings.
@LTVoyager
@LTVoyager Год назад
@@SoloRenegade Yes, very easy. Just have them close their eyes and keep flying for a few minutes … or less.
@SoloRenegade
@SoloRenegade Год назад
@@LTVoyager I have them close their eyes, then I have them fly a combination of 3 left/right standard rate turns (of 90 or 180deg each, of what they think/feel is a standard rate turn). Or, even easier, have them fly 1 left or right 180 standard rate turn followed by a 90deg standard rate turn in the opposite direction. Takes 30sec to 1min for the fluid to neutralize in the ear. after that, there is nothing they can do and they will fly into an unusual attitude, at which point I have them open their eyes and recover. I have another method as well, but a sharp student will catch on if not done right, and it doesn't teach teh right lesson (it does teach a different lesson though). best to just let them fly into it as described above. I did avoid flying into unusual attitudes when a DPE did the above to me during my Helicopter CFI checkride. but I used a sneaky trick to avoid losing control that is hard to do and describe (but not cheating at all). After many requested changes in direction and altitude he finally took over and flew me into an unusual attitude. He never asked and I never told him how I was doing it (and no, I was not peaking).
@LTVoyager
@LTVoyager Год назад
@@SoloRenegade Most days you don’t even have to maneuver, especially if there is a little turbulence. Just trying to fly straight and level will end up in an unusual attitude quickly enough.
@SoloRenegade
@SoloRenegade Год назад
@@LTVoyager yes, but I can't rely upon having turbulent weather on the day we do unusual attitudes. and it also doesn't sink the lesson home as effectively either.
@Chainsaw-ASMR
@Chainsaw-ASMR Год назад
As a non-pilot, ground dweller I didn’t understand how pilots could get disoriented in the air until I started watching aviation RU-vidrs. This is the best explanation I have seen so far. You really did a great job of demonstrating the effect for us “passengers”. 👍🏼 Question: when I’m riding in a 737 and it feels like the plane is climbing or descending, is that what’s actually happening or is my brain tricking me?
@kilianortmann9979
@kilianortmann9979 Год назад
Not a pilot: in some situations probably (turbulence during otherwise straight and level flight). I feel this most commonly with a change in flaps setting, where it is AFAIK not the case. We humans have no way to feel speed, our vestibular system (inner ear) can only feel acceleration. So after a while a continuous and constant speed climb feels like straight and level, if the flaps come up, the vertical velocity decreases without a change in aircraft attitude. Our inner ear can only tell that there is a negative vertical acceleration, even though the net vertical velocity is still very much positive. Similar during the approach, when the flaps come out the vertical velocity decreases (felt positive acceleration).
@niksmith314
@niksmith314 Год назад
I went to a place in Lake Wanaka, New Zealand called “Puzzle world”. Basically it was a museum where you could experience optical illusions In an interesting or fun way. The attraction that period my mind was a room that was tilted on a slope, 30 or 40° ,Yet all the furniture and elements in it were Built as though they were on a level horizon. This meant that inside the room you could watch water running ‘Uphill’ And into a fountain. You could play snooker where the balls rolled Upill and stayed there, And you could Watch yourself in a mirror lean over With The soles of your feet flush with the floor Everyone in the room was enjoying themselves and seemed in awe As they looked around but the whole time my head felt obscenely uncomfortable and swelling and heavy and like nothing I’ve ever experienced before. I had to get out almost straight away. I walked down the slope to the exit Which was an open doorway at the end of the room (You entered at the top of the slope via stairs). As I went to leave I saw that I would have to Step through that door frame and walk up a slope to get to the next area. I leaned my body weight into the slope and stepped out on the balls of my feet… It was, of course, Flat floor and I went for a nice face plant. On the plus side it didn’t take long for my head to pipe down again.
@flywithgeo1
@flywithgeo1 Год назад
Thank you for posting this video! Great explanation and a lot of dedication for it! Appreciate the hard work you put in every video!🤙🏻🙏
@SomedayTooPulling
@SomedayTooPulling Год назад
This was great, that look up at the cabin roof was great moment, excellent training, this would be excellent to experience as I work through Commercial License.
@KiyokaMakibi
@KiyokaMakibi Год назад
What exactly did that do when he looked up? Make everything look like it was spinning?
@SomedayTooPulling
@SomedayTooPulling Год назад
@@KiyokaMakibi most likely a sence of tumbling, very disoriented feeling. Once he acknowledged that he no longer felt the spinning, that was key to the instructor that the fluid in his inner ear had stabilized, a quick head movement would then cause the fluid to move. Had an instructor do similar with me. I closed my eyes, head down, he flew airplane and did different maneuvers then had me tilt head back, and side to side, then said recover, I was physically disoriented and felt like I was free falling and tumbling yet the airplane was back in level flight, no “recovery” necessary. If I had listened to my body instead of trusting instruments, I’d had pulled up and stalled. The fight to trust and interpret what my eyes saw was a struggle. After 20-30 seconds my brain stabilized its feeling and my senses returns to normal.
@skimmer8774
@skimmer8774 Год назад
As I was instructed to do from the beginning and even now " Trust your instruments ". Great video , thank you
@dianericciardistewart2224
@dianericciardistewart2224 Год назад
Captain Joe, this was fantastic!! I understand what spatial disorientation is, and it is amazing that you now have an actual simulator to train for these situations. This was very interesting and educational! Thoroughly enjoyed your presentation of this danger to not just pilots (although it IS the focus of your channel), but can be applied to many different things. Thanks for this awesome presentation!! Looking forward to the next one!! Stay safe out/up there!! Cheers!! 💕✈✈💕
@flightsimexplain5026
@flightsimexplain5026 Год назад
Outstanding video as always Joe!
@pandaroll2323
@pandaroll2323 Год назад
Great video as always Joe! Some of your obs on landing went a bit over my head, but my takeaway was to realise that despite the huge technological capabilities of modern aircraft, there still has to be attention paid to the physiological quirks and natural responses of the human body. However, awareness of the various types of SD, and the applications of training in what to expect - and how to respond, can only be a good thing, and of great benefit to all pilots. Thank you for another super video!
@warshipsdd-2142
@warshipsdd-2142 Год назад
It's when your inner ear overcomes your gut feeling that the trouble really begins. Excellent job!
@ScottSmith7964
@ScottSmith7964 Год назад
Keep up the great work! These videos are so well done!
@tim3less._tae486
@tim3less._tae486 Год назад
Im so glad he covered this cuz this is one of the few things that terrifiy me when it comes to flying a plane
@yinkyt
@yinkyt Год назад
Just want to say how well done this video is!! Really feels like I'm watching a Netflix / Nat Geo series. Keep it up Joe!
@autom7134
@autom7134 Год назад
Great choice of videos. Very, very cool to see you going through the Sim training and to see what's available to supplement in aircraft IFR training.
@pilotmomes6953
@pilotmomes6953 Год назад
Your Videos and book are truly a blessing to the society-especially the aviation community. God bless you!
@PilotUlli
@PilotUlli Год назад
Thanks Joe for this very good explanation of how important it is not to underestimate spatial disorientation. 👍
@theflyingadventures
@theflyingadventures Год назад
Valuable video about important stuff, thanks for sharing Joe. You are right, it is so easy to get disoriented, unfortunately lots pilots lost their lives flying into IMC conditions.
@lioneldsouza7251
@lioneldsouza7251 Год назад
This was such a great video. Absolutely loved the concept. It is a great experience for you and for many learning Pilots to know their limits and always trust their instruments.
@wmw6485
@wmw6485 Год назад
Ich liebe alle Videos von Captain Joe. Sympatisch, kompetent und grandios präsentiert! Weiter so
@LemonLadyRecords
@LemonLadyRecords Год назад
Best sponsored video ever! Not a pilot, although have been surprised and disoriented going to the flight deck (in old days!) and seeing the horizon all pitched over when I thought we were flying straight and level. There is a ground situation like this, called whiteout (also less severe thing called flat light) that you can get on snow. The ground totally blends into the the sky and it's very frightening. You lose all spatial orientation, and can even get sick. I had it when I was downhill snow skiing, foggy and snowing pretty well, low visibility. Luckily I was just off the lift, so not going fast yet. I was pretty much trapped at the top of the mountain, in a white envelope of weirdness, until conditions improved. I needed tinted goggles to give more contrast b/t ground and sky, but that day, I doubt anything would have worked. I've also had it while driving in a snowstorm, esp if no other cars or references.
@corinalaptaru-ej2mj
@corinalaptaru-ej2mj 11 месяцев назад
Ești extraordinar, foarte frumos prezinti ,esti un geniu,si te felicit pentru tot🎉❤Mult succes mai departe 😊
@TenantRepGuru
@TenantRepGuru Год назад
What a terrific video. This was enlightening. Thx
@mirkocirillo736
@mirkocirillo736 Год назад
Thanks, Joe, I have passed my interview assessment also with the aid of your holding videos! All the best! Mirko
@Altenholz
@Altenholz Год назад
Superbly done. Without having seen this post, this was also always my opinion (that the instruments do not lie). I have been doing flight simulation for 2 decades, and have shared this opinion with my father, who was a real flight instructor for sport aircraft / VFR. He always told me that there was a so-called "Vertigo effect", where you would lose complete control of the state in space in the clouds. I just said- "look at your instruments!!!
@maldohh7451
@maldohh7451 Год назад
Great to see the IWC!
@pauls5440
@pauls5440 Год назад
Excellent! Such an impressive report! I am in envy feeling 😊
@missyd0g2
@missyd0g2 Год назад
I was twenty taking flight lessons had about 15 hours. I left the airport solo to practice some basic flight time. When I took off the weather was clear and VFR. Then quickly the smog from Detroit factories rolled in quickly. I couldn’t see the ground or much of anything. The Cessna 150 had basic instruments only. Then I remembered my flight instructor words he always said. Trust the planes instruments. Radioed for help. Tower gave me directions until they found me on radar. Then followed a twin engine plane back to the airport. The weather turn IFR and the pilot I was following guided me back. Follow your instruments. Great video
@flywithcaptainjoe
@flywithcaptainjoe Год назад
Wow! Lucky you!
@Georgeruning
@Georgeruning Год назад
I just wanted to thank you for helping me as a very nervous passenger to have a mostly bearable flight
@bmwguy22
@bmwguy22 Год назад
Once again another great video Joe, very educational! Especially when I want to be a pilot one day 🤞 I will. I’m even going on a flying lesson in a Cessna 172 and practice flying the A320 in Microsoft Flight Simulator. I suppose getting my pilots licence in Spain or Portugal would be easier then battling the rainy stormy Ireland.
@jamesgeldenhuys2700
@jamesgeldenhuys2700 Год назад
Hey Captain Joe, can you please make a video explaining the origin and, more importantly, how the three essential flight instruments and their physical mechanisms work when the aircraft experiences the same forces as the pilot flying.
@user-fv9fe6vi9c
@user-fv9fe6vi9c Год назад
감사합니다 폴 당신의 신비한 비행은 보아도 신비하네요 나 ⚘️⚘️⚘️
@setharnold9764
@setharnold9764 Год назад
What an incredible machine. Great video, thanks!
@MarcusStumpf
@MarcusStumpf Год назад
What an amazing video, congrats and Thanks !
@tailwheel
@tailwheel Год назад
Great safety material. Thanks a lot.
@pataudi8025
@pataudi8025 Год назад
Hey I recently did the SD test captain. And I did the same mistake of yours of leaning back. It's a great video and a good insight for lot's of young cadets like us. 🙏
@angierobinson5570
@angierobinson5570 Год назад
Love Captain Joe he’s truly an amazing pilot 👏🏻 thankyou for all your very informative videos 👍🏻❤️
@johningram9081
@johningram9081 Год назад
Very good instructional video. Keep up the good work.
@martinsp90
@martinsp90 Год назад
Quality video!! Thanks cap!
@HerkulesPierewoj
@HerkulesPierewoj Год назад
Although I’m not a pilot, I can say one thing - you are a great teacher, Joe! Greetings from 🇵🇱!
@coriscotupi
@coriscotupi Год назад
Great training device. ...Also known as the vomit sim. Wonderful video, as always.
@fly.dy1
@fly.dy1 Год назад
Its amazing what technology can do. Amazing video, Captain Joe!
@kainpwnsu
@kainpwnsu Год назад
That simulator is beautiful! I like how they solved the problem is connecting pneumatics by simply attaching air cylinders to the exterior. These engineers must be very pleased with their product! :)
@mirchshake50
@mirchshake50 Год назад
Watching these incredibly informative videos are a delight for flying enthusiasts like myself. Thanks Captain Joe
@Quisqueyax
@Quisqueyax Год назад
Thanks. Priceless info.
@philipbyrnes7501
@philipbyrnes7501 Год назад
As always Joe, an exceptional, professional and excellent presentation. What a brilliant new sim, I hope they spread like wildfire around the world and become a standard for pilot training. Wouldn’t that be brilliant, thanks for sharing this wonderful machine. Not sure if there are any down here in Australia yet but we can only hope and pray there are a lot soon and affordable so. Take care Joe, still wish you’d been my flight instructor but you were only a pup back then and I’m as old as my hound dog but I still learn from you every day mate, thank you 😎👍
@Khemani_RL
@Khemani_RL Год назад
Superb video Joe!
@009raptor
@009raptor Год назад
Beautiful just beautiful experience video Joe! You are going places with your flight channel, and thanks for this wonderful effort. That feeling of being in a simulator or an actual plane is unparalleled. I am just an intermediate guy using microsoft flight simulator, but I could relate to most of the illusions especially runway widths! Always trust your instruments.
@Backtrack
@Backtrack Год назад
Thankyou for posting! Did a research with the earlier DISO model from AMST Systemtechnik, it was the PC6, and, that same (virtual)airport in Greece too! They sold the DISO, but, the research company did get hold of the DESDEMONA, hope to go back to them, and, have a go in that one, however, some people do get very sick in that version. Anyway, training in spatial disorientation should be made complementary in any flight training, it's just so important to undergo this basic type of training, the experience. The difference in real aviation is that one can walk away from it, the real spatial disorientation often leads to the worst possible outcome.
@russn4933
@russn4933 Год назад
Fantastic video. Important content.
@pokemonguy6579
@pokemonguy6579 Год назад
Great vid! So informative.
@brad4057
@brad4057 Год назад
Fantastic video top work
@oireachtas100
@oireachtas100 Год назад
Very informative vid, well presented as per usual.
@volvodadfast
@volvodadfast Год назад
Fantastic video. Thank you for not puking.
@ujd2930
@ujd2930 Год назад
Excellent video , learned so much !
@alpharanger0190
@alpharanger0190 Год назад
Thank you for your video.this really help me as I am a studying for commercial license training
@dmorga1
@dmorga1 Год назад
I really appreciate your content. I can tell you put a lot into it. As a non-pilot psychologist, I"m always interested in human factors, particularly where they intersect with command judgment. Training like this keeps us all humble and more aware of limitations for sure.
@karinschmied468
@karinschmied468 Год назад
Wo ist Captain Joe ich chatte seit Dez 2ü21 mit ihm es ist doch wohl ein Fake die Bilder von Joe sind echt was soll ich nur tun
@christianrocescanoligo23
@christianrocescanoligo23 Год назад
I've bees subscribed for almost 2-3 years since 2020 I guess. He's very impressive. Although I'm not a pilot and still a college student from different course. I still have a feeling that one day, this informations will help me a lot. Besides I'm an enthusiast. Hoping one day I can use it. Fly safe our captain.
@mark46ification
@mark46ification Год назад
Great job Joe...I just came back from Zakynthos and I think this airport is a great challenge for every pilot
@MED31MED
@MED31MED Год назад
Brilliant video! 👍👍
@prophecyAU
@prophecyAU Год назад
You’ll ever be my life’s guru. Thank you!
@moiraatkinson
@moiraatkinson Год назад
Amazing and very interesting video!
@RickSjoerds
@RickSjoerds Год назад
People are smart, so they create helpful tools. People are stupid when they think they’re supreme in a way. Great video! Hope you will get there again soon to create more of the parts we now missed 😉
@In_memory_of_Dad
@In_memory_of_Dad Год назад
Wow Joe what an amazing video, thank you very much and well done...👍🙂👍
@mholden020
@mholden020 Год назад
Such a great video!!!
@ninatn6160
@ninatn6160 Год назад
Thank you for this amazing video 😊
@HamidKhan-ke7ke
@HamidKhan-ke7ke Год назад
Always interested n informative...nice captain. Plz keep it continues
@HotTakeHQ
@HotTakeHQ Год назад
I NEED a new captain Joe remove before flight key chain. Mines browned with wear 😅 gotta support the ch and buy a new one 🥂
@LaCorvette
@LaCorvette Год назад
It must be the most shaking sensation to experience this disconnect between your own perception and the actual attitude of the aircraft. Like guts trust issues. When I played in the sim on my PC I always found getting into situations where there’s no way of having visual orientation quite thrilling. Also thanks for this video. The sbeeen was good.
@willj2198
@willj2198 Год назад
Very educative! Thank u captain Joe.
@yutahestifirmani7684
@yutahestifirmani7684 Год назад
Really cool captain joe videos the explanations are very detailed and there is always knowledge to be gained in every captain joe video. Thanks Captain Joe. ✈️🔥
@sabiralizada8175
@sabiralizada8175 Год назад
Joe, I thought I was on the training myself. You are a very talented instructor.
@seanhiscock
@seanhiscock Год назад
Very interesting topic & demonstration. Thank you.
@courtlandblake48
@courtlandblake48 Год назад
Awesome video. Such important information. 40 years plus flying and God Bless those instruments tell me I am feeling something different from what is actually happening.
@wesellanybiz
@wesellanybiz Год назад
Excellent informative video!!
@rohrichoak9740
@rohrichoak9740 Год назад
SD is so amazing that even not being a real pilot, flying into clouds in my home simulator feels like everything is swirling outside the airplane. The movement of the could shades is enough to get you lost. Since I don't have a baseball bat let alone a golf club, I'll keep using my sim for that purpose.
@milk-it
@milk-it Год назад
Great video. This should be part of the instrument flight rating. Danke euch!
@adrianpeters2413
@adrianpeters2413 Год назад
Capt.Joe just great videos ...thank you ....
@jxshua7187
@jxshua7187 Год назад
Everything was great, but Joe spinning around the pole was HILARIOUS!!!
@Jesus.Is.My.Captain
@Jesus.Is.My.Captain Год назад
That was a really good video. It is amazing how much you can learn from one video. I would be interested in reading that book you mentioned in this video, do you know where I can purchase one from? I really enjoy watching your videos.
@Chikyel
@Chikyel Год назад
Thank you for the video
@southwest737gaming9
@southwest737gaming9 Год назад
The very start of the video is just amazing, it really feels like it's a 8k video!
@flywithcaptainjoe
@flywithcaptainjoe Год назад
Sunlight made the difference 😉
@janformolo7132
@janformolo7132 Год назад
Thank you for intersting video and the effects.
@richie7l
@richie7l Год назад
Great watch, thanks!
@gabor-toth
@gabor-toth Год назад
Very good and useful video, thank you!
@TomLeg
@TomLeg Год назад
Excellent Educational!
@AV8R_Surge
@AV8R_Surge Год назад
Great video!
@philipbyrnes7501
@philipbyrnes7501 Год назад
Ps hey Joe, thanks, I love your book. Insightful, concise and easy to follow, great job mate, thank you 😎👍
@user-jh5fm7ci6o
@user-jh5fm7ci6o 10 месяцев назад
I wish you had more content on this. It's great to watch - I am a student pilot and going to start my night flying. Will be interesting figuring out how to land.
@Winter_Sportster
@Winter_Sportster Год назад
Another Excellent Video, Captain Joe!!!! Many years ago, United Airlines (I believe) sponsored a ride at Disney World that was a simple cart, being drawn through a series of dark rooms. Turning a corner into a totally darkened room, the occupants were faced with a spot light, pointing at them from behind a rotating, slotted disk. The disk created rotating beams of light, like spokes in a wheel, and gave the strong sensation that the cart was on the verge of tipping over. Then, the cart turned another corner, coming into a lighted room, with everybody gripping its hand rails for fear of falling out! The cart was still happily rolling along, flat/level on its tracks, just as it had from the beginning I often wished I could make a treat of this simple, powerful experience for my friends to help explain just how strongly spatial disorientation can influence a pilot. Thank You Again for Your Great Series of Videos!!!
@francesca4966
@francesca4966 Год назад
Fascinant. Merci Joe pour tes vidéos super intéressantes. Peux-tu continuer à l’avenir de les sous-titrer en français stp 🙏🏻. Ta diction est parfaite mais certains mots m’échappent.
@flywithcaptainjoe
@flywithcaptainjoe Год назад
I need to check out that ride😉
@JupiterTechnology12.000
@JupiterTechnology12.000 Год назад
A Helpful & Thrilling Video Thanks Allot Joe Very True Though Spatial Disorientation does still lead to some Air Disasters🛩🛩🛩🛩🛩.
@KiyokaMakibi
@KiyokaMakibi Год назад
Fascinating!
@rpavlik1
@rpavlik1 Год назад
Fascinating. The simulator looks nauseating! (Yet very impressive and probably very useful for training - really cool to see the control the operator has over the simulation in real time) Also now I have that Madonna song stuck in my head 🤣
@LaczPro
@LaczPro Год назад
Crazy! I want to try it, even if I'm not a pilot, just to see the scary part of that and try to understand it. It's too easy to blame a pilot that becomes spatially disoriented (especially when an accident occurs), but the feeling shouldn't be as simple as that.
@CaptainJadenAR
@CaptainJadenAR Год назад
Looks like I need to train in this simulator. Thanks for the video, Captain 😃
@hegarciarivas
@hegarciarivas Год назад
Great video! Top quality! Getting SD because of a spin is easy to visually explain and understand. But most times pilots (specially less experienced ones) will get SD by just getting into clouds, losing visual reference of the horizon. About 3 minutes into that situation SD shows up and if not handled, loss of control may occur.
@Suburp212
@Suburp212 Год назад
Another video from you, yay.
@santino2681
@santino2681 Год назад
Thank you for this great material!!! Can you make a material about Instrument Ration program?
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