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#31
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Apologies for the double post.
Got an error saying post was rejected by server and it disappeared. When I re-composed and re-posted, the old one reappeared as posted okay... |
#32
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"Andrew Gideon" wrote in message
online.com... Why else not attend? I think there is a reasonable subset of pilots who frankly enjoy a bit of danger; these pilots may be hard to reach in a safety seminar. Have you ever asked around your airport to see the % of pilots who ride motorcycles? The percentage is astoundingly high. I think this gives a bit of perspective as to the risk management profile of some pilots -- not that motorcycle riders cannot also be safe pilot, but the huge % of pilots who ride motorcycles does suggest there is a certain subset of pilots who are risk-seekers. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#33
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"Snowbird" wrote in message
m... As a matter of fact, our CFI rides a motorcycle. He tries to "manage the risk" in the same manner he manages flight risks, and do so as safely as possible. To what extent is this possible? In aviation the vast majority of the risk can be managed by the pilot in choosing weather minimums and flight procedures. In motorcycle riding, there will always remain the major non-manageable risk that someone will hit the motorcyclist in a much larger vehicle even if the motorcyclist practices defensive driving. Even worse, a 60 mph collision while riding a motorcycle almost always results in a fatal or extremely serious injury, whereas there are lots of survival airplane accidents. But I do think you've got a fundamental point: if some pilots actually aren't *interested* in trying to fly as safely as possible, but would rather perceive flying as a daredevil, risky activity, they aren't likely to take much from a safety seminar even if they go. Correct... maybe the motorcycle comparison is a bad one... but in any event there is clearly a significant group of pilots not particularly interested in flying safety. Look at it this way -- Flight Safety used to say (maybe still says?) that no holder of their "Gold Card" had ever been involved in an airplane accident. Is that to Flight Safety's credit, or to a large extent does pilot self-selection play a role? -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#34
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![]() "smpharmanaut" wrote in message .51... It works in the medical professions. No, it doesn't "work" in the medical profession. Most doctors are self-motivated and attend CME courses out of their own interest. Those docs who are not interested in CME have lots of ways to go on a ski vacation and get credit for the CME course anyway. The same happens with CFI renewal courses right now and would happen with mandatory pilot CME -- those who would benefit don't need the mandate. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#35
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message .cable.rogers.com... Weather as a factor in about 360, but only about 120 or so "IMC", most others are wind, carb-icing, and density altitude. But fatal accidents disproportionately involve weather. And lots of "power related" accidents are truly fuel exhaustion. And most power-reltaed "accidents" are not fatals. Weather and pilot judgment remain the biggest potentially fixable issues. I also strongly suspect that lots of "power related" accidents are related to owners who are marginally able to afford to maintain their airplanes optimally. I wonder how much of supposed turbine engine reliability is related to the turbine engine itself vs. to open-checkbook by-the-book maintenance. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#36
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Andrew Gideon wrote
You exclude all those that recognize the risk, and accept the risk as payment for the various benefits, but that would be even happier to gain those benefits w/o the risk. I sometimes wonder how many of those there really are. Think about how you feel when you pull off a landing with a lot of gusty crosswind and squeak it on, right on target. Or when you make an approach to minimums with the needle(s) dead centered all the way and the runway is right there. Intellectually, you know that you just completed an increased-risk operation - and what made it an increased-risk operation was the increased degree of difficulty. But you still feel good - you were faced with a challenge and you were up to it. You wouldn't feel nearly as good making that approach/landing in calm winds/CAVU. How many pilots don't feel that way? "Comfort" does not imply "enjoyment". I wonder. In any case - whether they enjoy it or not (and I think most do, at some level) the fact that they are comfortable with a certain amount of risk means that most pilots are not too interested in reducing that risk if it means a reduction in capability. Just say no doesn't cut it. To have acceptance and value, a safety seminar has to show you how to reduce risk without reducing capability. That's much harder, and in my opinion few safety seminars accomplish this. I think that's why most people don't go. Most (if not all) pilots I know have been to at least one. They didn't come back because they were not impressed. I think the real solution is to have safety seminars that actually teach you to increase safety without decreasing capability. Then people will come and pay attention. However, you don't accomplish an increase in safety without a reduction in capability with rules - you accomplish it with skill and knowledge. That means we need a very different method for choosing the people who teach these safety seminars. Michael |
#37
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Michael wrote:
Andrew Gideon wrote You exclude all those that recognize the risk, and accept the risk as payment for the various benefits, but that would be even happier to gain those benefits w/o the risk. I sometimes wonder how many of those there really are. Think about how you feel when you pull off a landing with a lot of gusty crosswind and squeak it on, right on target. Or when you make an approach to minimums with the needle(s) dead centered all the way and the runway is right there. Intellectually, you know that you just completed an increased-risk operation - and what made it an increased-risk operation was the increased degree of difficulty. But you still feel good - you were faced with a challenge and you were up to it. You wouldn't feel nearly as good making that approach/landing in calm winds/CAVU. In fact, I do feel pretty damned good making an excellent approach under the hood too. There's less risk, which I like, and there's also the same satisfaction of having met well the challenge. I enjoy when I nail a simulated power failure landing too...but I don't long for real opportunities to test my skills. How many pilots don't feel that way? "Comfort" does not imply "enjoyment". I wonder. In any case - whether they enjoy it or not (and I think most do, at some level) the fact that they are comfortable with a certain amount of risk means that most pilots are not too interested in reducing that risk if it means a reduction in capability. Ah, now here we're in complete agreement. I see the risk as payment for the capability, and the current trade-off is fine for me. Of course, my risk profile is different from some random other pilot's, but that's each of us making our own individual choices. Just say no doesn't cut it. To have acceptance and value, a safety seminar has to show you how to reduce risk without reducing capability. That's much harder, and in my opinion few safety seminars accomplish this. I think that's why most people don't go. I think that many don't "spoon feed" this, true. For example, I attended one seminar which was a dissection of a midair. There was no conclusion with a set of rules that would reduce risk, but I think that the presentation and discussion provided useful information. Seeing what occurred offers us the chance to catch the same pattern, and "break the chain". I think a fair number of seminars fall into this category. [...] I think the real solution is to have safety seminars that actually teach you to increase safety without decreasing capability. Then people will come and pay attention. However, you don't accomplish an increase in safety without a reduction in capability with rules - you accomplish it with skill and knowledge. That means we need a very different method for choosing the people who teach these safety seminars. I think I'm seeing what you mean. In your experience, seminars often present rules of the form "thou shall not". I've been to some, but I've also been to some which draw no such simple conclusions, and that simply do provide knowledge (perhaps from the mistakes of others). Still, I'm going to take this perspective to the next few seminars, and see if I note more of what you're describing. - Andrew |
#38
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Andrew Gideon wrote
You wouldn't feel nearly as good making that approach/landing in calm winds/CAVU. In fact, I do feel pretty damned good making an excellent approach under the hood too. There's less risk, which I like, and there's also the same satisfaction of having met well the challenge. Ah - but do you feel AS good? Is it really the same? Sure, it's still a challenge - but I don't think you can compare the feeling you get after you land out of an ILS in 200 and 2000 RVR, where you roll out and still can't see the far end of the runway, and doing it under the hood - even to 100 ft. I enjoy when I nail a simulated power failure landing too...but I don't long for real opportunities to test my skills. I doubt anyone does - but when it happened to me, I did feel really good about having nailed it - much more so than when I do a practice one. Of course I also felt like a real idiot for having put myself in that situation too, since I had no options. The approach to mins didn't bother me at all because I knew I had plenty of fuel to reach much better conditions. Here's the difference - an engine failure is a genuine emergency, and nobody I know wants one of those. A real approach to minimums? We all know it's an increased-risk operation, but I know more than a few people who seek it out, for "training value" and we think nothing of it. In fact, we consider it good training. When I intentionally choose the lowest local ceilings and visibilities for instrument training, is that about enjoying a bit of danger or providing the best, most challenging training available? And how do you separate the two? I think that many don't "spoon feed" this, true. For example, I attended one seminar which was a dissection of a midair. There was no conclusion with a set of rules that would reduce risk, but I think that the presentation and discussion provided useful information. Did it? Did it even provide correct information? I once went to a seminar that dissected a crash. I knew the pilot, and I knew how it happened. The seminar was very interesting, in the sense that a work of fiction can be interesting. It had nothing at all to do with what really happened. That's almost beside the point, though. Assuming the information presented was accurate, there is clearly value in examining past accidents. But is a safety seminar the best venue for this? I would suggest that it is not - that the optimal venue is hangar flying. I think I'm seeing what you mean. In your experience, seminars often present rules of the form "thou shall not". Either that or quite obviously imply them. I've been to some, but I've also been to some which draw no such simple conclusions, and that simply do provide knowledge (perhaps from the mistakes of others). I've been to a couple like that. There was one on flying over the Gulf and the Caribbean by a guy who does it every year. I learned a lot. But flying over the Gulf has inherent risks, and while I suppose if you're going to go anyway you're better off going to the seminar than doing it cold, I can honestly say that all his seminar did was encourage me to cut across the Gulf when the opportunity presented itself. Turned out that there were things he didn't cover and there were a few tense moments there. I suppose he did a good enough job, since I'm still here and would go again (doing it a bit differently this time) but I can't in good conscience call it a safety seminar. Michael |
#39
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"Richard Kaplan" wrote
Weather and pilot judgment remain the biggest potentially fixable issues. Frankly, I think that's only true if we accept that the aircraft are not going to improve. Highway fatality rates have improved dramatically in the last few decades, and it is generally accepted that the improvements are almost wholly due to the cars, not the drivers. Michael |
#40
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![]() "Michael" wrote in message om... accomplish it with skill and knowledge. That means we need a very different method for choosing the people who teach these safety seminars. Or choose what seminars you go to. For example the Forums at Oshkosh often serve this purpose. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
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