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My friend Lee and I sat along runway 18 on Sunday as the arrivals come
into Oshkosh. Many pilots did a great job, but there were some notable exceptions: Chills: A Pitts snuck in under a Cessna on 18R, and the Cessna almost lost its tail to the prop of the Pitts. The controller kept telling the Cessna pilot to go around, and he finally responded in the nick of time. Spills: A low wing homebuilt stalled 20 feet above 18R and plopped to the ground resulting in the right landing gear collapsing, apparent damage to the right wind spar, and the plane slid off into the grass where the pilot and passenger climbed out. The crash trucks kept the scene busy for while afterward. Bozos: Some fool tried to land on 36L while traffic was landing on 18R. Two RV-6's landing in formattion were going around to avoid another plane landing on 18R, and they kept to the right to avoid the incoming Cessna going the wrong way. The controller told the errant pilot to turn right IMMEDIATELY and he eventually resonded. He was then instructed to excecute a left 270 to land on 18R, but instead he executed a left 180 and landed on 27. dyslexia or stupidia? |
#2
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Welcome to OSH! You get enough pilots together and you inevitably will have
some on the fringes of ability. Mike MU-2 wrote in message oups.com... My friend Lee and I sat along runway 18 on Sunday as the arrivals come into Oshkosh. Many pilots did a great job, but there were some notable exceptions: Chills: A Pitts snuck in under a Cessna on 18R, and the Cessna almost lost its tail to the prop of the Pitts. The controller kept telling the Cessna pilot to go around, and he finally responded in the nick of time. Spills: A low wing homebuilt stalled 20 feet above 18R and plopped to the ground resulting in the right landing gear collapsing, apparent damage to the right wind spar, and the plane slid off into the grass where the pilot and passenger climbed out. The crash trucks kept the scene busy for while afterward. Bozos: Some fool tried to land on 36L while traffic was landing on 18R. Two RV-6's landing in formattion were going around to avoid another plane landing on 18R, and they kept to the right to avoid the incoming Cessna going the wrong way. The controller told the errant pilot to turn right IMMEDIATELY and he eventually resonded. He was then instructed to excecute a left 270 to land on 18R, but instead he executed a left 180 and landed on 27. dyslexia or stupidia? |
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The asshole in the Debonair ahead of me decided that 70 knots was safer than
90 knots all the way from Ripon to the runway, and then decided that a crosswind leg for 18 all the way out over Lake Winnebago was safer yet. Jerk. Jim wrote in message oups.com... My friend Lee and I sat along runway 18 on Sunday as the arrivals come into Oshkosh. Many pilots did a great job, but there were some notable exceptions: |
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RST Engineering wrote:
The asshole in the Debonair ahead of me decided that 70 knots was safer than 90 knots all the way from Ripon to the runway, and then decided that a crosswind leg for 18 all the way out over Lake Winnebago was safer yet. Jerk. Yes, but at last your 182 can fly safely at 70! :-) Matt |
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Hi Jim,
Nice to have met you this year, I have read your posts on here for some time. We met at the MyAirplane.com booth. Dean |
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dyslexia or stupidia?
Incompetencia. Whenever we discuss safety of flying here, someone always pops up to say that flying feels much safer to him - because on the road there are all sorts of idiots who might kill him, but in the sky he's mostly alone and thus in control of his destiny. Despite this (quite significant) factor, flying is still not safer than driving (not even close) for all sorts of reasons, mostly having to do with the unforgiving nature of high speeds and aircraft that are designed with the latest in 1950's technology and thus not remotely up to modern safety standards. But Oshkosh is special - it combines the worst of flying and driving. Not only do you have the unforgiving nature of high speeds and obsolete equipment, buy you ALSO have tons of idiots around you. Oh, they're not ALL, idiots, not even most, but the sheer numbers pretty much guarantee that if you arrive at a busy time, some idiot will try to kill you. On top of that, the sequencing system is ALSO the latest in 1950's (or is it 1930's)technology - controllers with binoculars, one way radio, and rock your wings. One of the things that makes Oshkosh (and Sun&Fun) bad is the huge number of pilots who fly twice a year - once to Oshkosh, and once to Sun&Fun. I shudder when I see an antique next to me in the arrival, because I have a friend who annuals a lot of antiques and he says they rack up about 15 hours between annuals on average. Again - they're not the majority, but just the sheer numbers in the air with you nearly guarantee that one of them will be close to you. So take a bunch of pilots who don't fly much and thus have to work hard just to fly the plane in the pattern, put them into a fast-paced and demanding environment, and you can about guarantee that some of them won't be up to the task. They won't hold airspeed and altitude, they won't follow directions, and they sure won't respond quickly. I have to wonder why we tell some people it's OK for them to fly into Oshkosh when we would tell the same people not to even think about flying into a major international during the evening push. Michael |
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[snip] Chills: A Pitts snuck in under a Cessna on 18R, and the Cessna almost lost its tail to the prop of the Pitts. The controller kept telling the Cessna pilot to go around, and he finally responded in the nick of time. Final Saturday evening: Adam A-500 plane (twin booms, push-pull engines) was behind something that wasn't bugging out soon enough. A-500 was debating the go around, you could tell in the way (s)he was dancing around on final. At the last second slower plane pulls out (couple hundred feet above the runway?) leaving the Adam to decides whether to grab the open runway or not. Pilot went for it, but (s)he was dancing all the way down. That one got a little close. Montblack |
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Montblack wrote:
Final Saturday evening: Adam A-500 plane (twin booms, push-pull engines) was behind something that wasn't bugging out soon enough. A-500 was debating the go around, you could tell in the way (s)he was dancing around on final. At the last second slower plane pulls out (couple hundred feet above the runway?) leaving the Adam to decides whether to grab the open runway or not. Pilot went for it, but (s)he was dancing all the way down. That one got a little close. Unless it happened twice, it was Friday about noon. I was finishing up loading the plane to depart and looked up in time to see the A500 dancing from side to side to increase spacing from a Cherokee. I had just packed the radio away a couple minutes earlier, so I didn't hear the exchange with the tower. Somebody didn't follow directions and/or the tower didn't follow the situation closely enough. The Cherokee leveled off and banked left over our campsite while the A500 continued to land long. The A500 was south of the Rwy09 centerline when he started to initiate a go-around before the town issued corrections. It was interesting to observe. |
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I had the enjoyable experience two years ago of being in sequence in my
Extra (typical pattern speed of 120K) behind a DC-3. I was stuck doing a lot of S-turns to avoid getting low and slow (the cause of a fatal accident in another Extra a few years prior, with an associated stall spin). At 90K I had the nose way up in slow flight (now unable to see), knowing that I was still eating up the distance rapidly. Luckily, the DC-3 pilots were pros, and landed and turned off quickly. My impression was that things were not going well, and I was becoming uncomfortable getting so slow, and not being able to see much. After landing, a volunteer came up to my plane, and as he backed away he walked right into a sight gauge, cracking it. He just shrugged his shoulders and walked away without saying a word. This was the last time I flew into OSH, since the drive is only a little over an hour. |
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