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In the June AOPA Pilot "State of General Aviation" issue, Bruce
Landsberg gives a gold star to Cessna, for their new production singles, which, according to the article, have not suffered a single fuel mismanagement accident. Well, I know of one near-miss, which could have broken that record, and presents an ethical dilemma as well. It involves a flying club and an ATP rated pilot - in fact, a 767 Captain for a major. He took out a new C-182S on a personal trip, and returned "uneventfully" under IFR, in IMC at night, with two passengers. When the plane was refueled in the morning, it took 90GAL of 100LL - useable fuel for that model is 88GAL, with total 92GAL. It is quite possible that a missed approach that night would have resulted in three fatalities. When confronted discreetly about it, the pilot was nonchalant. He has a career ahead of him, and a family, with two young children. Because of his poor judgment, and even more because of his flippant attitude, some people who know about this want to make a full-blown incident out of it. Others feel it would damage or destroy his career - and we "hope" he has learned his lesson. |
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On 7/15/2005 04:22, Greg Farris wrote:
In the June AOPA Pilot "State of General Aviation" issue, Bruce Landsberg gives a gold star to Cessna, for their new production singles, which, according to the article, have not suffered a single fuel mismanagement accident. Well, I know of one near-miss, which could have broken that record, and presents an ethical dilemma as well. It involves a flying club and an ATP rated pilot - in fact, a 767 Captain for a major. He took out a new C-182S on a personal trip, and returned "uneventfully" under IFR, in IMC at night, with two passengers. When the plane was refueled in the morning, it took 90GAL of 100LL - useable fuel for that model is 88GAL, with total 92GAL. It is quite possible that a missed approach that night would have resulted in three fatalities. When confronted discreetly about it, the pilot was nonchalant. He has a career ahead of him, and a family, with two young children. Because of his poor judgment, and even more because of his flippant attitude, some people who know about this want to make a full-blown incident out of it. Others feel it would damage or destroy his career - and we "hope" he has learned his lesson. I don't know whether you should take any official action, but in my opinion, if the pilot is not all together clear about the seriousness of the incident, then anyone that flies with him will be taking a potentially unacceptable risk. In that case, it doesn't seem like it would be much of a flying career... As far as I understand it, the FARs don't say you need to land with your fuel reserve. I certainly would never want to cut my fuel that close ... and I sure would not want to fly in a plane with a pilot that did so. -- Mark Hansen, PP-ASEL, Instrument Student Sacramento, CA |
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"Greg Farris" wrote in message
... [...] It involves a flying club and an ATP rated pilot - in fact, a 767 Captain for a major. He took out a new C-182S on a personal trip, and returned "uneventfully" under IFR, in IMC at night, with two passengers. When the plane was refueled in the morning, it took 90GAL of 100LL - useable fuel for that model is 88GAL, with total 92GAL. It is quite possible that a missed approach that night would have resulted in three fatalities. Has anyone actually looked why he landed with so little fuel on board? Does the expected fuel consumption based on the recorded flight hours match the apparent fuel consumption? If not, can you determine why not? Was it a leaning error? Or some sort of fault with the airplane? Is it possible that overnight someone actually removed the fuel from the airplane? Even in the friendly environment of an airport, theft is not unheard of and fuel prices have been very high for some time now. If the fuel consumption is consistent with the flight hours, was the pilot at least aware that he landed with so little fuel? It seems to me that a pilot who admits (or claims) to not knowing how much fuel was on board at the end of the flight needs *at a minimum* some sort of remedial training and oversight. This would include some probation period during which someone is monitoring his flights and ensuring that he not only knows how much fuel he has left at the end of a flight, but that that amount of fuel is consistent with safe operation. You say the pilot was "nonchalant", but that doesn't really tell us what his reaction was. Does that mean that he acknowledged landing with practically zero fuel, but wasn't concerned? Or does it mean that the person confronting him got a reaction other than the one they expected and/or would have been satisfied with. If that person was not considering the issue from all possibilities, it's entirely possible they misinterpreted the pilot's reaction, and you haven't given us enough details to know one possible scenario from another. I do feel that if it can be established without a doubt that the pilot knowingly landed with so little fuel, that there is cause for concern. If he did so in a way that was predictable, and could have been avoided with proper preflight planning, that is cause for even more concern. Career or no career, he cannot be allowed to continue to fly with that attitude (assuming he has "that attitude", of course). Either the attitude needs to change, or the flying needs to stop. Pete |
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"Mark Hansen" wrote in message
... [...] As far as I understand it, the FARs don't say you need to land with your fuel reserve. I certainly would never want to cut my fuel that close ... and I sure would not want to fly in a plane with a pilot that did so. That's correct. The FARs require departing with a particular reserve, depending on the nature of the flight, but there is no requirement that you not use that reserve. However, any pilot who DOES use that reserve had better a) at least know that they are doing so, and b) have a good reason for doing so, and for not terminating the flight early to take on more fuel. There is, of course, the additional question of whether the FAA-mandated reserves are sufficient for truly safe operation, but that's up to each pilot to determine for each flight. Pete |
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Fuel theft. I've put 25 gal in a 24.5 gal usable 152. Should have been at
least 10 gal in the tanks. It happens. John Severyn KLVK "Greg Farris" wrote in message ... In the June AOPA Pilot "State of General Aviation" issue, Bruce Landsberg gives a gold star to Cessna, for their new production singles, which, according to the article, have not suffered a single fuel mismanagement accident. Well, I know of one near-miss, which could have broken that record, and presents an ethical dilemma as well. It involves a flying club and an ATP rated pilot - in fact, a 767 Captain for a major. He took out a new C-182S on a personal trip, and returned "uneventfully" under IFR, in IMC at night, with two passengers. When the plane was refueled in the morning, it took 90GAL of 100LL - useable fuel for that model is 88GAL, with total 92GAL. It is quite possible that a missed approach that night would have resulted in three fatalities. When confronted discreetly about it, the pilot was nonchalant. He has a career ahead of him, and a family, with two young children. Because of his poor judgment, and even more because of his flippant attitude, some people who know about this want to make a full-blown incident out of it. Others feel it would damage or destroy his career - and we "hope" he has learned his lesson. |
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Greg Farris wrote:
In the June AOPA Pilot "State of General Aviation" issue, Bruce Landsberg gives a gold star to Cessna, for their new production singles, which, according to the article, have not suffered a single fuel mismanagement accident. Well, I know of one near-miss, which could have broken that record, and presents an ethical dilemma as well. It involves a flying club and an ATP rated pilot - in fact, a 767 Captain for a major. He took out a new C-182S on a personal trip, and returned "uneventfully" under IFR, in IMC at night, with two passengers. When the plane was refueled in the morning, it took 90GAL of 100LL - useable fuel for that model is 88GAL, with total 92GAL. It is quite possible that a missed approach that night would have resulted in three fatalities. I have to wonder if, as an airline captain, he's used to having the dispatch department or whoever deal with fuel, so he just doesn't think about it. Even in his position that seems like a bad attitude, since the airlines are into this "smart fueling" deal where they try to load just the right amount of fuel so if he has to hold or divert he'd have to calculate. But that's just a thought. When confronted discreetly about it, the pilot was nonchalant. He has a career ahead of him, and a family, with two young children. Because of his poor judgment, and even more because of his flippant attitude, some people who know about this want to make a full-blown incident out of it. Others feel it would damage or destroy his career - and we "hope" he has learned his lesson. When something similar (but not that extreme) happened in my flying club, the offending pilot's flying privileges were revoked until he took remedial training in fuel planning with a club instructor. |
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Greg Farris wrote:
When confronted discreetly about it, the pilot was nonchalant. He has a career ahead of him, and a family, with two young children. Because of his poor judgment, and even more because of his flippant attitude, some people who know about this want to make a full-blown incident out of it. Others feel it would damage or destroy his career - and we "hope" he has learned his lesson. "Someone stole the fuel out of it" |
#8
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Greg Farris wrote:
In the June AOPA Pilot "State of General Aviation" issue, Bruce Landsberg gives a gold star to Cessna, for their new production singles, which, according to the article, have not suffered a single fuel mismanagement accident. Well, I know of one near-miss, which could have broken that record, and presents an ethical dilemma as well. It involves a flying club and an ATP rated pilot - in fact, a 767 Captain for a major. He took out a new C-182S on a personal trip, and returned "uneventfully" under IFR, in IMC at night, with two passengers. When the plane was refueled in the morning, it took 90GAL of 100LL - useable fuel for that model is 88GAL, with total 92GAL. It is quite possible that a missed approach that night would have resulted in three fatalities. When confronted discreetly about it, the pilot was nonchalant. He has a career ahead of him, and a family, with two young children. Because of his poor judgment, and even more because of his flippant attitude, some people who know about this want to make a full-blown incident out of it. Others feel it would damage or destroy his career - and we "hope" he has learned his lesson. You've got to do what suits your conscience, but pilot's with an attitude like that seldom learn from their experiences. Matt |
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#10
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"Greg Farris" wrote in message
... [...] Fuel was not stolen form the plane - it did not overnight anywhere - he flew it out and back. How do you know that fuel was not stolen from the airplane? Just because the airplane spent the night at your club rather than elsewhere, that doesn't prove there was no theft. If the airplane is hangared, theft is much less likely, but again not proveably impossible (especially since the theft could be an "inside job", as they say). I don't know if it was full when he departed, or what measures he took to satisfy himself with the adequacy of his fuel on board. I mentioned the AOPA article about the late model Cessnas though because of the fuel management system and low fuel warnings they have built into these planes. The thing must have been blaring at him for a good half an hour on his return flight! Again, did he actually admit to landing with low fuel? Has anyone talked to the passengers to see if they noted a low fuel warning? It's one thing if he's actually admitted the transgression and seems unapologetic about it. But it's another entirely if there is an allegation that has been so far unproven. Certainly the pilot should be given the benefit of the doubt unless it can be established without question that he arrived with practically empty tanks. As I've mentioned, so far you haven't communicated to this newsgroup any incontrovertible reason to believe that the pilot did in fact do what you are suggesting he did. Your post takes as a foregone conclusion that he did (or at least appears to), but the written record here doesn't demonstrate that conclusion. As you've guessed, I was of the opinion that no good would come of making an incident that would damage his career - at the same time, I have to admit that I would not want to fly with him, in any type of aircraft or any mission profile. I'm a bit stunned by the disregard he showed for the lives of his two passengers that night. You keep writing things that make it seems as though you are certain he did what you say he did. But what evidence do you have that he did? Did he actually admit to doing so? Did the passengers verify the theory that he did? Did someone check the fuel level immediately after his landing? I'm talking about *proof*, not circumstantial evidence. He may very well have done exactly what you say he did, even if there is not proof of it. But it does the aviation community no good at all to make unproven accusations, and especially to act on them. That's exactly the kind of behavior we find so abhorrent from the TSA and the rest of our government; it would be hypocritical to act that way at all, never mind to our own. Pete |
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