For pilots, why is flying on IFR (“Instrument Flight Rating”) so difficult? Can’t a pilot just focus on their instruments and stay oriented and on course?

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(Edit: “Rules,” not “Rating.” Sorry.)

Obviously I don’t know beans about flying, but I see many stories about inexperienced pilots who get disoriented flying through clouds, sometimes even to the point of flying upside-down. Aren’t there instruments on your control panel which tell you your speed, altitude, and orientation? How can you be plummeting towards the ground and not notice?

I hope this question isn’t so ignorant as to be insulting. I know flying is difficult and complicated and it’s easy to criticize from here on the ground. I wish I was skilled enough to know how to fly a plane. I just see many stories about accidents where inexperienced pilots seem to be making apparently ridiculous mistakes.

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The difficulty part is ignoring the part of your brain that tells you how it feels like the plane is moving and putting 100% trust in what the instruments tell you the plane is doing. It is very easy to get in a situation where you feel like the plane is banking hard when you are actually perfectly level and vice versa. The problems happen when pilots correct for something the plane isn’t doing.

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