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#11
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"Peter R." wrote in message
... Cockpit Colin wrote: People sometimes ask why I go to the trouble of wearing nomex Tee shirt / Longjohns and a nomex flight suit (others don't ask - they just smirk). This is the reason. "Chance favours only the well prepared" Do you make all your passengers wear Nomex undergarments? You need those just to post here. I just wear cotton. Er, to fly and to post here. Paul |
#12
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Do you make all your passengers wear Nomex undergarments?
No I don't. My risk is greater than theirs because I expose myself to that small chance many more times than they do. If they did make such a decision they too would significantly lower their chances of burning in such an accident. The line has to be drawn somewhere - for me I choose to protect myself as best I can - in everything I do in aviation. I do however make them wear life jackets when flying single-engine over water - I do carry a fire extinguisher - I do carry an aviation survival kit. I do a lot of other things too - many of which also get me 'stick' from others about my attitude to safety. I have many conversations about this (which fall mostly on deaf ears) - the inherent problem I find is that the group who's experience would be the most compelling when it comes to people taking a more serious approach to aviation safety are very quiet on the topic - because they're all dead. All the rest seem to think (a) "It won't happen to me" and (b) if it did then "I'd be able to handle it - it's the other pilots you need to worry about". .... and as a result they continue to have accidents and get injured. |
#13
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How is the risk any less per event for the passengers than it is for you?
Sure, you expose yourself more often, but if you think about it everyone onboard is exposed to the same level of risk at the time the operations are taking place. Increased frequency doesn't affect the per event risk and that is what the Nomex is protecting against isn't it? -- Jim Carter "Cockpit Colin" wrote in message ... Do you make all your passengers wear Nomex undergarments? No I don't. My risk is greater than theirs because I expose myself to that small chance many more times than they do. If they did make such a decision they too would significantly lower their chances of burning in such an accident. The line has to be drawn somewhere - for me I choose to protect myself as best I can - in everything I do in aviation. I do however make them wear life jackets when flying single-engine over water - I do carry a fire extinguisher - I do carry an aviation survival kit. I do a lot of other things too - many of which also get me 'stick' from others about my attitude to safety. I have many conversations about this (which fall mostly on deaf ears) - the inherent problem I find is that the group who's experience would be the most compelling when it comes to people taking a more serious approach to aviation safety are very quiet on the topic - because they're all dead. All the rest seem to think (a) "It won't happen to me" and (b) if it did then "I'd be able to handle it - it's the other pilots you need to worry about". ... and as a result they continue to have accidents and get injured. |
#14
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If the chances of being involved in a fire was 1 in a million and the
passengers only ever flew one flight then their chance would be one in a million. If I flew 1 million flights then, statistically speaking, my worst fears would come true eventually. At 1 in a million it's a chance they're prepared to take - for me the odds aren't one in a million - they're a lot higher - which I'm not prepared to take. I hear what you're saying - and I agree that when my time comes it's not good for the unfortunate passengers (if any) who happen to be with me - that's the chance they took. It's like russian roulette - if I play it long enough I'm always going to lose - so I do my best to protect myself against that eventuality. My point was I see so many pilots taking too many risks - most of them get away with it most of the time - but flip the coin over and a few are dead who would be alive today if they'd taken more precautions - and some poor kids have to grow up without a dad because of it. A bit like wearing seatbelts - you probably won't ever need them - but if you do, and you're not wearing it - then it's too late. Just imagine you're flying over moutainous terrain - in a single - engine stops. I "Freeze the scene" and sittling along side you for a second offer you some fire-proof clothing at recommended retail. Any takers? thought so. How about a flying helmet? Sold! Aviation survival kit? my my this is a good day for sales. Sadly I've had friends who have been disfigured from not wearing full seatbelts - known some who have died flying singles at night - some drowned through not wearing life jackets. All preventable - and yet still it keeps happening and happening and happening. What does it take to change peoples attitudes? I don't know. |
#15
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I follow your logic, but I didn't make the theme of my questions clear. If
you feel that any activity in which you participate is risky enough to change your preparedness level, then why do you let your passengers participate without changing theirs? Shouldn't you make them aware of your risk avoidance techniques and allow them to make their own decisions? Shouldn't you keep a list of the number of such activities you've conducted so they can weigh the odds in favor of them needing to modify their behavior? If, using your example of 1:1,000,000, you've conducted 500,000 events with no fire then their odds of needing protection have doubled. I have to admit that while flying in higher risk environments I also used to wear Nomex flight suit and gloves, and a helmet, but my civilian flying never approached those risk levels because of equipment, operation, and environment. We don't carry near the fuel quantities and usually hit the ground much slower nowadays. Does anyone have any statistics on refueling fires? I'd expect the risk there to be a lot higher than that associated with civilian flight, yet we don't see the line workers in Nomex. I wonder when that lawsuit will happen? -- Jim Carter "Cockpit Colin" wrote in message ... If the chances of being involved in a fire was 1 in a million and the passengers only ever flew one flight then their chance would be one in a million. If I flew 1 million flights then, statistically speaking, my worst fears would come true eventually. At 1 in a million it's a chance they're prepared to take - for me the odds aren't one in a million - they're a lot higher - which I'm not prepared to take. I hear what you're saying - and I agree that when my time comes it's not good for the unfortunate passengers (if any) who happen to be with me - that's the chance they took. It's like russian roulette - if I play it long enough I'm always going to lose - so I do my best to protect myself against that eventuality. My point was I see so many pilots taking too many risks - most of them get away with it most of the time - but flip the coin over and a few are dead who would be alive today if they'd taken more precautions - and some poor kids have to grow up without a dad because of it. A bit like wearing seatbelts - you probably won't ever need them - but if you do, and you're not wearing it - then it's too late. Just imagine you're flying over moutainous terrain - in a single - engine stops. I "Freeze the scene" and sittling along side you for a second offer you some fire-proof clothing at recommended retail. Any takers? thought so. How about a flying helmet? Sold! Aviation survival kit? my my this is a good day for sales. Sadly I've had friends who have been disfigured from not wearing full seatbelts - known some who have died flying singles at night - some drowned through not wearing life jackets. All preventable - and yet still it keeps happening and happening and happening. What does it take to change peoples attitudes? I don't know. |
#16
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![]() "Cockpit Colin" wrote in message ... If the chances of being involved in a fire was 1 in a million and the passengers only ever flew one flight then their chance would be one in a million. If I flew 1 million flights then, statistically speaking, my worst fears would come true eventually. Wrong. If the chance is 1 in a million each time you fly the chance is 1:1,000,000 on the first flight and 1:1,000,000 on the millionith flight. The dice don't have a memory. You are simply taking the 1:1,000,000 chance more often than your passengers. |
#17
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Gig,
The dice don't have a memory Or, in other words: There is no law of small numbers. Only one of large numbers. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#18
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I follow your logic, but I didn't make the theme of my questions clear. If
you feel that any activity in which you participate is risky enough to change your preparedness level, then why do you let your passengers participate without changing theirs? Shouldn't you make them aware of your risk avoidance techniques and allow them to make their own decisions? Hmmm - it's a thought-provoking idea. Flying by myself it obviously isn't an issue. Flying with other aircrew, I'd have to say "They know the risks and are responsible for their own risk management". Flying with non-aircrew - it's not something I've really thought about. They're always happy to wear a life jacket - they're happy to accept things like an aviation survival kit being on board - they're happy with items in the emergency equipment/action portion of the pre-flight safety briefing. They wouldn't be as familiar with aviation risks as we are, but having said that I'd say they're astute enough to appreciate the elevated risk of anything to do with aviation. Frankly, I'm finding passengers getting more and more nervous about aviation - each time a (GA) pilot does something stupid and kills himself and/or others it makes it just a little bit harder to get passengers onboard - something I find frustrating. |
#19
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Wrong. If the chance is 1 in a million each time you fly the chance is
1:1,000,000 on the first flight and 1:1,000,000 on the millionith flight. The dice don't have a memory. You are simply taking the 1:1,000,000 chance more often than your passengers. I agree with what you're saying - but if I take that risk 'n' times more than you then I'm 'n' times more likely to have my number come up. If I had a gun with a million hole chamber and only 1 round I wouldn't be too nervous about spinning the chamber once - I'd be real nervous about doing it a million times. The chances of blowing my brains out on any one occasion is always 1 in a million as you say - but do it enough times and the chance of that one chance coming up is increased proportionately - which proportionately affects my chances of continuing on in this life in good health! ![]() |
#20
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"Cockpit Colin" wrote in message
... If I had a gun with a million hole chamber and only 1 round I wouldn't be too nervous about spinning the chamber once - I'd be real nervous about doing it a million times. The chances of blowing my brains out on any one occasion is always 1 in a million as you say - but do it enough times and the chance of that one chance coming up is increased proportionately Not really. Funny thing about statistics, they don't always make intuitive sense to someone that hasn't sat down and looked at the math. Your statement would be correct if you were talking about an agreement made in advance to spin the barrel and pull the trigger some very large number of times. But that wasn't your statement. Every time you choose to take a try at your million-chambered revolver, you have exactly a 1 in 1 million chance of killing yourself. Once you've taken a try and survived, the next try still has exactly a 1 in 1 million chance of killing yourself. No matter how many times you take a try, the next time you take a try, the chance is still exactly 1 in 1 million. Now, how does this matter with respect your fire suit? I suppose it depends on how you think about it. In one respect, each time you fly you have exactly the same chance of burning up as any of your passengers do. In that respect, it does seem unfair that you fly around in your fire suit while allowing your passengers to go unprotected. In other respect, however, you have "made an agreement in advance" to make a number of flights. The actual number is perhaps not known with any accuracy, but it may be safe to say that it's hundreds, if not thousands of flights. By choosing (again, in advance) to wear a fire suit on each and every flight, you are a) betting that you WILL crash and burn during some point in those hundreds or thousands of flights, and b) making a decision to try to protect yourself against that eventuality. But the truth remains that for any given flight, no matter how many flights you've already made, you still have exactly the same chance of crashing and burning as you had on the previous flight, and will have on the subsequent flight, statistically speaking. If on any flight, you feel it's necessary for you to wear a fireproof suit, a passenger would be well within their rights to feel like they are being treated with less care than the pilot is treating himself. After all, on that flight, both the passenger and the pilot have the exact same chance of being in the plane if and when it crashes and burns. So to me, the real question is this: when you are flying with passengers, do you allow one of the passengers to wear your fire suit instead of wearing it yourself, or do you take advantage of them and protect yourself to a greater degree than you protect your passengers? Another question would be: do you wear the same suit when driving a car? After all, there's a risk of being in an accident where the car (and occupants) are consumed by fire in an automobile as well. How about when you fly commercially? Ride in someone else's car? Stay in a hotel? Sleep in your own bed? Not very many aviation accidents result in one or more occupants being burned when they otherwise would have survived the accident. Although it does happen, the risk is comparable to the risk of being burned in any number of other situations in which I'm guessing you don't wear your suit. I don't know what a full Nomex suit costs, but I know that I'd choose to spend that money on other more relevant safety devices, like a nice ANR headset, or a backup handheld radio, or a handheld GPS, rather than wasting it on clothing that is probably never going to be of any use to me, and which does nothing to improve the safety of my passengers. Which is not to say you shouldn't wear your suit if you feel it's useful. It's just to say that I don't really understand your thinking, and probably never will. I wouldn't be surprised if more people share that sentiment than don't. Pete |
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