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New York Times
May 24, 2005 Jammed Radio Signal Cited in Capital Plane Incident By Matthew L. Wald WASHINGTON, May 23 - A Black Hawk helicopter dispatched to intercept a private plane that entered forbidden airspace here on May 11 directed the plane's pilots to tune to a frequency that was not usable at the time, the Department of Homeland Security acknowledged on Monday. A crewman on the helicopter, kneeling in the open doorway, held up a sign instructing the men on an errant Cessna to tune to an emergency frequency. But at the time the frequency was jammed by a device on an airplane on the ground, an emergency locator transmitter, which broadcasts on that frequency to alert rescuers in case of a crash. There was no crash, and officials are not certain why or from where the transmitter was broadcasting. The Cessna turned away from Washington after F-16's dropped warning flares. By that time, thousands of people had been ordered to flee government buildings. The Federal Aviation Administration on Monday revoked the license of one of the pilots, Hayden Sheaffer, 69, of Lititz, Pa., saying he lacked "the fundamental technical skills required of a pilot." Also on Monday, another Cessna, en route from Knoxville, Tenn., to Gaithersburg, Md., entered the area within which private planes are required to identify themselves, the F.A.A. said. That plane, which had no working radio, was intercepted by two F-16's. The agency said it was not taking action against the student pilot who was at the controls during the May 11 incident, Troy Martin, 36. Under federal regulations, Mr. Sheaffer was the "pilot in command" and thus responsible for the errors. Mr. Sheaffer does not have an instructor's rating. But letting Mr. Martin manipulate the controls would have been legal, F.A.A. officials said, except that Mr. Sheaffer's certification was not valid because he had not made at least three takeoffs and three landings in the preceding 90 days. The F.A.A.'s action can be appealed to the National Transportation Safety Board, and Mr. Sheaffer's lawyer, Mark McDermott, said he would appeal. Mr. McDermott said that the usual penalty for violating the airspace around Washington was a 30- to 90-day suspension, and that the agency was "grandstanding." On Saturday, government officials commissioned a new system that uses low-energy laser beam lights to warn pilots when they stray into forbidden airspace. "H.P." wrote in message . .. http://www.wnbc.com/print/4522068/detail.html F-16s Intercept Cessna In Restricted D.C. Airspace Authorities Question Pilot Of Small Plane POSTED: 6:45 pm EDT May 23, 2005 UPDATED: 7:26 pm EDT May 23, 2005 WASHINGTON -- Federal air defense officials say a Cessna plane violated airspace around Washington Monday evening. Two F-16s were deployed to the area to intercept the plane, which was diverted to Montgomery County, Md., where the pilot was being interviewed by local authorities. The pilot complied with the fighter jets. The plane was headed from Knoxville, Tenn., to Gaithersburg, Md. This was the first time fighter jets were scrambled since the new Visual Warning System was deployed. The system was not used Monday due to the weather. |
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Another case of an old pilot no longer capable of managing the flight
environment. These old guys need to get out of the air. "almostthere" wrote in message . .. New York Times May 24, 2005 Jammed Radio Signal Cited in Capital Plane Incident By Matthew L. Wald WASHINGTON, May 23 - A Black Hawk helicopter dispatched to intercept a private plane that entered forbidden airspace here on May 11 directed the plane's pilots to tune to a frequency that was not usable at the time, the Department of Homeland Security acknowledged on Monday. A crewman on the helicopter, kneeling in the open doorway, held up a sign instructing the men on an errant Cessna to tune to an emergency frequency. But at the time the frequency was jammed by a device on an airplane on the ground, an emergency locator transmitter, which broadcasts on that frequency to alert rescuers in case of a crash. There was no crash, and officials are not certain why or from where the transmitter was broadcasting. The Cessna turned away from Washington after F-16's dropped warning flares. By that time, thousands of people had been ordered to flee government buildings. The Federal Aviation Administration on Monday revoked the license of one of the pilots, Hayden Sheaffer, 69, of Lititz, Pa., saying he lacked "the fundamental technical skills required of a pilot." Also on Monday, another Cessna, en route from Knoxville, Tenn., to Gaithersburg, Md., entered the area within which private planes are required to identify themselves, the F.A.A. said. That plane, which had no working radio, was intercepted by two F-16's. The agency said it was not taking action against the student pilot who was at the controls during the May 11 incident, Troy Martin, 36. Under federal regulations, Mr. Sheaffer was the "pilot in command" and thus responsible for the errors. Mr. Sheaffer does not have an instructor's rating. But letting Mr. Martin manipulate the controls would have been legal, F.A.A. officials said, except that Mr. Sheaffer's certification was not valid because he had not made at least three takeoffs and three landings in the preceding 90 days. The F.A.A.'s action can be appealed to the National Transportation Safety Board, and Mr. Sheaffer's lawyer, Mark McDermott, said he would appeal. Mr. McDermott said that the usual penalty for violating the airspace around Washington was a 30- to 90-day suspension, and that the agency was "grandstanding." On Saturday, government officials commissioned a new system that uses low-energy laser beam lights to warn pilots when they stray into forbidden airspace. "H.P." wrote in message . .. http://www.wnbc.com/print/4522068/detail.html F-16s Intercept Cessna In Restricted D.C. Airspace Authorities Question Pilot Of Small Plane POSTED: 6:45 pm EDT May 23, 2005 UPDATED: 7:26 pm EDT May 23, 2005 WASHINGTON -- Federal air defense officials say a Cessna plane violated airspace around Washington Monday evening. Two F-16s were deployed to the area to intercept the plane, which was diverted to Montgomery County, Md., where the pilot was being interviewed by local authorities. The pilot complied with the fighter jets. The plane was headed from Knoxville, Tenn., to Gaithersburg, Md. This was the first time fighter jets were scrambled since the new Visual Warning System was deployed. The system was not used Monday due to the weather. |
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You troll, you... :-)
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On Tue, 24 May 2005 12:17:24 GMT, "OtisWinslow"
wrote in :: Another case of an old pilot no longer capable of managing the flight environment. Perhaps. Do you have a link to news of that incident? These old guys need to get out of the air. That may or may not be true, but the fact that the emergency frequency was already in use in the Hayden L. Sheaffer case, and the aircraft was not radio equipped in the second case, point to unforgivable negligence by those responsible for the design of the shoot-down security system currently in place over the nation's capitol. |
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In article , OtisWinslow wrote:
Another case of an old pilot no longer capable of managing the flight environment. These old guys need to get out of the air. At the risk of feeding the trolls... Huh? [Declaration: I'm at the rather younger end of the pilot age spectrum] Statements like this really need to be supported by fact. For each old pilot 'no longer capable of managing the flight environment', there is a young pilot who hasn't yet become capable of managing the flight environment (like the young man who went for a last swim in Lake Michigan, or the countless young men who have crashed after buzzing their girlfriend's house etc. Or middle aged pilots who run out of fuel, get caught in downdrafts in the mountains, fly through thunderstorms or fail to put the wheels down). I know many fine pilots who have retired and then some. If an old pilot still has their mental faculties and can get a medical, there's no reason why they shouldn't fly. I don't think age has anything to do with this pilot's transgressions: the lack of currency and the lack of preparation had probably a LOT more to do with it. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
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Larry, I fly a 1945 Champ.
I have no electrical system, therefore, no radio. A handheld is not reliable because the batteries can (and do) go dead when you need them (I had it happen on final after being cleared to land at a towered field). Larry Dighera wrote: That may or may not be true, but the fact that the emergency frequency was already in use in the Hayden L. Sheaffer case, and the aircraft was not radio equipped in the second case, point to unforgivable negligence by those responsible for the design of the shoot-down security system currently in place over the nation's capitol. |
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