This has been the subject of many threads here: can a novice land a jet plane based only on instructions from the tower? Well, the Mythbusters are testing it out with NASA’s top of the line flight simulator.
It’s on the Discovery Channel as I post this, and will be repeated at 1 am ET, 10 pm PT, and several other times during the week. Check your local listings.
I just watched it and the answer was no with zero help and yes with an experienced air traffic controller/pilot to talk them down. They used a multi-million dollar, full-motion simulator that qualifies as equal training time as a real airliner for actual pilots. You can’t get more definitive than that without risking a real airliner. Both people testing the idea that a novice could land an airliner made a fine landing with radio help from ATC. I guess it can be done consistently. At the end, they pointed out the autoland system on the autopilot and how that would have been even easier.
"Hey!! I’ve got a gun in my pocket. You HAVE to go read all of those MF-ing thread about the plane/treadmill. And you can’t stop reading them until I say you can! "
Any yutz can land a commercial jet if they’re able to get into the cockpit by grabbing the radio and calling Mayday mayday mayday! This is Cecil Air Flight 17. The flight crew is incapacitated. I need assistance to engage autopilot and approach.
But, unless the crew was incapacitated while taxiing to the runway for takeoff, the autopilot is probably already set with the destination, so you’d just need to know when to press the APR (approach) button. Or, click your heels three times and say I wish I had an older version of Microsoft Flight Simulator (MSFS) where I could just press “X” for the Land Me control!
I’m curious though… The generally held thought was that no matter how many hours of time someone has logged with MSFS on their home PC, they’d still be unable to successfully land the big bird on their first attempt. I don’t know if that’s because a home computer game is not quite up to reality, or because it’s still unable to simulate the actual motion and behavior of a real airplane. I’m guessing the latter as MSFS is used as training aid for student pilots before they get to the “real” full-motion simulators.