This hit me while reading another thread regarding rudder pedals. It went as follows.....
Which begs the question..... your on a plane and the pilot and co-pilot are incapacitated. You have a choice among three gamers to take the controls. One experienced in AH, one in M$FS, and one in IL2...... which would you choose?
When I flew for Eastern, we didn’t have flight attendants , we had stewardesses. You would be hard pressed to find stewardesses older then 25 yo, they were all single, very tall, slim, very pretty. No Master’s or Doctorial thesis among their discussions.
There were a few tests conducted by Eastern Airlines back in the day when they made what seemed like daily trips to Cuba at the request of the passenger holding the gun.
There were several articles written in Flying and Plane and Pilot on the subject. I know that Eastern was very concerned and actually had for a while a number of pilots flying as passengers, not in uniform on a lot of the New York to Miami flights. They also did tests in the Phase III flight simulators that were available at the time. The aircraft was set up in a cruise flight level and the civilian was led to the cockpit door and told to take over . Most couldn’t figure out how to adjust the seat and while attempting to get seated disengaged the autopilot. Things went down hill from there. A few did figure it out , but had a really hard time figuring out where the radios were. And most were not able to make contact with ATC. This was in a time before inflight phones or Cell phones.
On my annual check ride I invited my now wife, then girl friend down to Miami for the week. Kathleen was a stewardess had been on a flight deck many times, but had no real flying experience. One of the check pilots put her in a 707 Phase III simulator in the typical hijack scenario. FL 280, Autopilot engaged, flying a normal route segment. The only difference was they put her in the seat, showed her how to adjust the seat, and put a head set on her and showed her the push to talk switch worked.
I was really surprised . After a few practice turns and a little basic airwork, she flew a pretty decent approach, they set the weather to 1000fl 5 miles, light rain, with gusts of 18, and night. She flew the ILS at KEWR for 22R . It was a little fast, a little long and far from the center line, but she got it down and stopped on the runway. So the lesson learned was if they could be communicated with and had some knowledge available of how the seat works and where the radio stack is and what button to push to talk. They had a chance. By the way , she landed it 3 out of 5 times. The 3rd and 5th approaches were not survivable.