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Do most pilots use autopilot to land?

What about takeoff and landing? During inclement weather, the autopilot is normally used. In cases of significant turbulence, a pilot may disengage the autopilot to help ease the vertical loads on the airplane by reducing the corrective control inputs. All takeoffs and most landing are done manually.



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Pilots mostly lead the aircraft in a controlled manner by autopilot except for departure and landing. Autopilot is mostly used on passenger aircrafts.

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Surprisingly, pilots rarely use autoland, only when the weather dictates that they must. Most pilots prefer to fly the landing manually and only use an autoland when the prevailing weather means they cannot see the runway.

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Yes, most pilots land flights manually——they of course use instrument aids,etc. That's what the “yoke”. pedals, throttles are for, and of course the wind screen to look forward. Yes, they do.

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Pilots typically fly the plane during take off and landing. The pilot manually controls the plane until it reaches the required height. This usually only takes about five minutes. After that the pilot will usually engage the auto-pilot.

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The autopilot does not steer the airplane on the ground or taxi the plane at the gate. Generally, the pilot will handle takeoff and then initiate the autopilot to take over for most of the flight. In some newer aircraft models, autopilot systems will even land the plane.

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Many pilots disconnect the autopilot as high as 1000 feet above touchdown if the weather is good and the runway is in sight. This so they can keep their hand flying skills sharpened.

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Usually the pilots will leave the autopilot engaged. In small airplanes with limited autopilots, it is better to fly manually, but with more sophisticated airplanes the autopilot is a valid option in turbulence. Severe turbulence is actually very rare.

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In some situations, such as during a landing on a contaminated runway, the firm touchdown may have been intentional. As stated in the definition above, a hard landing is classified as the exceedance of a manufacturer limitation, which will vary by the category and purpose of the aircraft.

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Most transport category aircraft and many others are equipped with a radar altimeter and other avionics required to make a 'Category III' approach. Most of them are able to fly an instrument approach and land themselves while the flight crew monitors the approach. Autopilots aren't used for takeoff.

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Fatigue is particularly prevalent among pilots because of unpredictable work hours, long duty periods, circadian disruption, and insufficient sleep. These factors can occur together to produce a combination of sleep deprivation, circadian rhythm effects, and 'time-on task' fatigue.

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Pilots are trained to handle all sorts of nerve-racking situations, but that doesn't mean that they don't get scared—especially in these real instances, told by the pilots who experienced them, of serious in-flight fear.

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(d) No pilot may fly more than 32 hours during any seven consecutive days, and each pilot must be relieved from all duty for at least 24 consecutive hours at least once during any seven consecutive days. (e) No pilot may fly as a member of a crew more than 100 hours during any one calendar month.

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MAXIMUM LANDINGS : Maximum number of landings on any one day i.e. 24 consecutive hours shall not exceed 60.

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Do pilots get to go home every night? For the most part… no. Based upon seniority and base equipment it is occasionally possible to spend your evenings at home but that is the rare exception and not the norm.

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Nearly all airlines have trips that do not get you back to your home every day. Pilots “lay over” in other cities and are provided per diem and a hotel for the time they are there. It is a great opportunity to see a place you may never have been, enjoy time with your crew, and rest for the next day of flying.

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