![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ramy,
Look up the word "Satire". |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ramy.... cool down....I think he was being sarcastic....
;-) At 21:30 22 April 2005, Ramy wrote: Tom, You either completly missed the point or just ignore it. Unless you consider the pilot experience detailed in the NTSB report as speculation. This poor fellow just soloed 3 weeks ago and was allowed to take paid passengers for a ridge soaring ride for god's sake. Don't you see what's wrong with this picture? The purpose of discussions like this is to prevent similar things from hapenning again. Waiting 1-2 years for official NTSB report which will most likely be identical is a waste of time. It will be old news by then. I rather wait for the accident report in Soaring magazine. But again, this is not the point of this discussion. |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
![]() If anyone is to be condemned out of hand, it is an organization which would hire someone to do this sort of work who had "48.4 hours". It's worse than that. He had 48.4 hours logged the day before he was killed. He had even less when he was hired! Tony V. http://home.comcast.net/~verhulst/SOARING |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
ok, ok, I mixed Don and Tom so I took it seriously. But an emoticon
would have helped ;-) |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stefan,
A five year history (including this accident) of only a single US non-pilot glider fatality suggests non-pilot passengers are well protected by the status quo. This particular accident does nothing to contradict this conclusion. I also haven't seen any evidence that more or less time makes a particular pilot safer, in itself. Of 27 US fatalities in five years, NONE were student pilots, for example. Over time, there will be some very experienced pilots, and some inexperienced pilots killed in accidents. Concluding that the inexperienced ones died from inexperience and the experienced ones died from overconfidence seems a bit simplistic to me. I personally think the insurance company method of paying someone to report their involvement in an accident , and then raising their premium, is a much more sophisticated and effective way to improve safety. At 10:00 22 April 2005, Stefan wrote: M B wrote: Do you think the government or the insurance company does a better job of protecting the customer? This was not the point. The point was that the whole idea of a commercial rating should be to protect the costomer. A commercial rating should be a certificate that I can trust somebody. That's the idea. That this is not achived by the ridiculous requirements to get such a rating (in the USA) was exactly my point. Stefan Mark J. Boyd |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You gotta be kidding:
http://www.soarcsa.org/images/glider...ach%202-sm.jpg hauling the fuse through the sand and bushes with the tailplane on and the wings off? if that's how they run their operation a 48hr commercial ride driver doesn't look so surprising any more ... F.L. Whiteley wrote: I don't disagree, but there are other possibilities. 2-32 gives zippo spin warning, it tends to flick over the top from a tight turn. I thought the local operators were a bit more discriminating, requiring some referral. However, as I told my young friend, break one and drop in the ocean, the next week it would be old news there and the rides would continue. Different operator, same location http://www.soarcsa.org/glider_on_the_beach.htm FWIW one suggestion was the 'extreme return'. Vertical speed limiting dive to the numbers, rotate to landing. My young friend thought this would be a big seller. But parachutes would cut down on useful load. Shoe-horning them in was the order of the day. Frank BTIZ wrote: based on a witness report.. that is now flying here... minimum experience.. lack of spin training... I'd go with the lack of Airmanship.. BT "F.L. Whiteley" wrote in message ... Ramy wrote: As usual, the NTSB report is useless. Doesn't even attempt to analyze the cause for the accident. One of my younger soaring friends hauled rides there for a couple of stints. He clocked over 100 hours a month in 2-32's which we reckoned may have 20,000 to 40,000 hours on them in all that salt air. Airmanship or lack of it may have had nothing to do with this sad incident. |
#37
|
|||
|
|||
![]() About 15 years ago, Dody and I came across a commercial glider operation in North Carolina. We decided to take a demo flight in their 2-32, and just to see how they treated their walk-ons, we didn't mention that we both had over ten years of soaring experience at that point, nor that I was an active CFI-G. So we snuggled into the back seat (with no control stick) and took off with a 20-something commercial (I assume) pilot up front. Take off and flying were fine. As we got near pattern entry postition, our pilot suddenly put us into a very steep dive, did a buzz job on the airport and showed us his contest finish pull-up. We were not amused, to put it mildly. I had no idea of this pilot's glider experience, but we told the operation manager what had happened and made it clear he needed to straighten things out. He seemed to get the message. I believe this operation is no longer in existance. Sitting in the back without a stick made this the only glider flight, out of 2000, where I've seriously wondered if I was going to come out of it alive. Never again. Jack Wyman |
#39
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
correction
appears it was same operator that had the Grob on the beach. sorry for any confusion Frank F.L. Whiteley wrote: Note that was a different operator. However, given the amazing number of rides done there, few prior incidents. IIRC, CAP bent a 2-33 some time back on auto tow(?). The G103 in the surf and now this. Any others known to RAS regulars and lurkers? Not a bad record actually. Be interesting to know if there was some lapse. Frank wrote: You gotta be kidding: http://www.soarcsa.org/images/glider...ach%202-sm.jpg hauling the fuse through the sand and bushes with the tailplane on and the wings off? if that's how they run their operation a 48hr commercial ride driver doesn't look so surprising any more ... F.L. Whiteley wrote: I don't disagree, but there are other possibilities. 2-32 gives zippo spin warning, it tends to flick over the top from a tight turn. I thought the local operators were a bit more discriminating, requiring some referral. However, as I told my young friend, break one and drop in the ocean, the next week it would be old news there and the rides would continue. Different operator, same location http://www.soarcsa.org/glider_on_the_beach.htm FWIW one suggestion was the 'extreme return'. Vertical speed limiting dive to the numbers, rotate to landing. My young friend thought this would be a big seller. But parachutes would cut down on useful load. Shoe-horning them in was the order of the day. Frank BTIZ wrote: based on a witness report.. that is now flying here... minimum experience.. lack of spin training... I'd go with the lack of Airmanship.. BT "F.L. Whiteley" wrote in message ... Ramy wrote: As usual, the NTSB report is useless. Doesn't even attempt to analyze the cause for the accident. One of my younger soaring friends hauled rides there for a couple of stints. He clocked over 100 hours a month in 2-32's which we reckoned may have 20,000 to 40,000 hours on them in all that salt air. Airmanship or lack of it may have had nothing to do with this sad incident. |
#40
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You gotta keep the tailplane on if your gonna use the elevator to push the
glider. Sheesh! wrote in message oups.com... You gotta be kidding: http://www.soarcsa.org/images/glider...ach%202-sm.jpg hauling the fuse through the sand and bushes with the tailplane on and the wings off? if that's how they run their operation a 48hr commercial ride driver doesn't look so surprising any more ... F.L. Whiteley wrote: I don't disagree, but there are other possibilities. 2-32 gives zippo spin warning, it tends to flick over the top from a tight turn. I thought the local operators were a bit more discriminating, requiring some referral. However, as I told my young friend, break one and drop in the ocean, the next week it would be old news there and the rides would continue. Different operator, same location http://www.soarcsa.org/glider_on_the_beach.htm FWIW one suggestion was the 'extreme return'. Vertical speed limiting dive to the numbers, rotate to landing. My young friend thought this would be a big seller. But parachutes would cut down on useful load. Shoe-horning them in was the order of the day. Frank BTIZ wrote: based on a witness report.. that is now flying here... minimum experience.. lack of spin training... I'd go with the lack of Airmanship.. BT "F.L. Whiteley" wrote in message ... Ramy wrote: As usual, the NTSB report is useless. Doesn't even attempt to analyze the cause for the accident. One of my younger soaring friends hauled rides there for a couple of stints. He clocked over 100 hours a month in 2-32's which we reckoned may have 20,000 to 40,000 hours on them in all that salt air. Airmanship or lack of it may have had nothing to do with this sad incident. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
millionaire on the Internet... in weeks! | Malcolm Austin | Soaring | 0 | November 5th 04 11:14 PM |
"I Want To FLY!"-(Youth) My store to raise funds for flying lessons | Curtl33 | General Aviation | 7 | January 9th 04 11:35 PM |
AmeriFlight Crash | C J Campbell | Piloting | 5 | December 1st 03 02:13 PM |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Piloting | 25 | September 11th 03 01:27 PM |