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#1
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I just read in the October Soaring that the FAA will issue a NPRM in
response to a petition from many organizations, including the SSA. The petition asks the repack cycle be changed from 120 days to 180 days, a worthwhile improvement, I think. To view the petition and the FAA's response, go to http://dms.dot.gov/search/searchFormSimple.cfm and enter docket number 21829. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#2
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Evidence to support this claim could come from NASA.
A recent TV programme showed details of the project to land a probe on Titan one of the Saturn moons http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/operations/index.cfm The landing was controlled by parachute. They appeared to perform well as the probe is now sending back data. The journey took the best part of 7 years........ Dave PS Some stunning photos on the web site. At 19:48 28 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: I just read in the October Soaring that the FAA will issue a NPRM in response to a petition from many organizations, including the SSA. The petition asks the repack cycle be changed from 120 days to 180 days, a worthwhile improvement, I think. To view the petition and the FAA's response, go to http://dms.dot.gov/search/searchFormSimple.cfm and enter docket number 21829. -- Change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#3
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Further evidence if required of longer repack times.
My own club in the UK use sports parachutes made by Thomas Sports UK and following negotiations with the manufacturer the recommendation for club 'chutes is 6 months. The 'chutes are stored in a warmed cabinet and inspected before each days use. The are used on a daily basis and as club equipment they get some rough handling. Any faults and the equipment is sent for a repack. This practice has been in use for well over 10 years. Does it work? About 4 years ago a member of the club had a problem with an ASK 18 and jumped at around 1500 max AGL. Eye witnesses suggest that is was lower. The chute did its job and the pilot landed with no injuries. The incident was documented as is the repack history of the parachute, which incidentally is back in service. Dave. At 19:48 28 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: I just read in the October Soaring that the FAA will issue a NPRM in response to a petition from many organizations, including the SSA. The petition asks the repack cycle be changed from 120 days to 180 days, a worthwhile improvement, I think. To view the petition and the FAA's response, go to http://dms.dot.gov/search/searchFormSimple.cfm and enter docket number 21829. -- Change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#4
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Whether you are for or against this petition, I encourage
you to respond. I'd like to see as many responses to this as possible which emphasize emergency chutes for pilots/passengers instead of sport parachutists. I'd like FAA to recognise clearly that choices for emergency chutes for pilots/passengers is very different from the choices sport parachutists make. Sport parachutists are required to wear emergency reserves. Pilots and passengers in aircraft are not (generally). So cost reductions for solo glider pilots (for example) mean more pilots will choose to wear 'optional' chutes. Undoubtedly there will still be the Art Scholls of the world who will still refuse to wear a chute. But if even a few more are encouraged by lowered cost to wear them, this may be significant. Of the 23,000+ aviation fatalities in the NTSB database, how many would have worn lifesaving chutes if the repack cost was reduced over 30%? At 19:48 28 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: I just read in the October Soaring that the FAA will issue a NPRM in response to a petition from many organizations, including the SSA. The petition asks the repack cycle be changed from 120 days to 180 days, a worthwhile improvement, I think. To view the petition and the FAA's response, go to http://dms.dot.gov/search/searchFormSimple.cfm and enter docket number 21829. -- Change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Mark J. Boyd |
#5
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We should wait for the NPRM to come out before making comments, as the
petition comment period is closed, and further comments probably won't be accepted. M B wrote: Whether you are for or against this petition, I encourage you to respond. I'd like to see as many responses to this as possible which emphasize emergency chutes for pilots/passengers instead of sport parachutists. I'd like FAA to recognise clearly that choices for emergency chutes for pilots/passengers is very different from the choices sport parachutists make. Sport parachutists are required to wear emergency reserves. Pilots and passengers in aircraft are not (generally). So cost reductions for solo glider pilots (for example) mean more pilots will choose to wear 'optional' chutes. Undoubtedly there will still be the Art Scholls of the world who will still refuse to wear a chute. But if even a few more are encouraged by lowered cost to wear them, this may be significant. Of the 23,000+ aviation fatalities in the NTSB database, how many would have worn lifesaving chutes if the repack cost was reduced over 30%? At 19:48 28 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: I just read in the October Soaring that the FAA will issue a NPRM in response to a petition from many organizations, including the SSA. The petition asks the repack cycle be changed from 120 days to 180 days, a worthwhile improvement, I think. To view the petition and the FAA's response, go to http://dms.dot.gov/search/searchFormSimple.cfm and enter docket number 21829. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#6
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Whether you are for or against this petition, I encourage
you to respond. I'd like to see as many responses to this as possible which emphasize emergency chutes for pilots/passengers instead of sport parachutists. I'd like FAA to recognise clearly that choices for emergency chutes for pilots/passengers is very different from the choices sport parachutists make. Sport parachutists are required to wear emergency reserves. Pilots and passengers in aircraft are not (generally). So cost reductions for solo glider pilots (for example) mean more pilots will choose to wear 'optional' chutes. Undoubtedly there will still be the Art Scholls of the world who will still refuse to wear a chute. But if even a few more are encouraged by lowered cost to wear them, this may be significant. Of the 23,000+ aviation fatalities in the NTSB database, how many would have worn lifesaving chutes if the repack cost was reduced over 30%? At 19:48 28 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: I just read in the October Soaring that the FAA will issue a NPRM in response to a petition from many organizations, including the SSA. The petition asks the repack cycle be changed from 120 days to 180 days, a worthwhile improvement, I think. To view the petition and the FAA's response, go to http://dms.dot.gov/search/searchFormSimple.cfm and enter docket number 21829. -- Change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Mark J. Boyd |
#7
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For me this comes down to what is your life worth? Use that chute just
once and the cost seems to be no longer be a factor. |
#8
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Quite right. We should be required to pack chutes weekly, just to be
on the safe side. Of course, it's actually illegal to fly with an out-of-pack-date chute. If we were legally required to pack weekly, then the practical reality is that many more pilots might choose to fly without their chutes. The result of a one-week requirement would not be that everyone would carry better safety equipment (parachutes repacked recently), but that many of us would carry no safety equipment at all. One pilot dead because of a law like this would be one pilot too many. We already have a law like this. The regulation currently reads, "No pilot of a civil aircraft may allow a parachute that is available for emergency use to be carried in that aircraft unless...it has been packed by a certificated and appropriately rated parachute rigger within the preceding 120 days" That's right: it is illegal to carry something that might be used in an emergency. Before I lose the rule's supporters, I can suggest an alternative that may satisfy their objections (below). However, I really strongly object to a rule that restricts a pilot's right to be prepared for an emergency. I don't much care about the fact that there's an exception (the 120 days). The basic rule ("no parachute for emergency use") simply philosophically and logically shouldn't exist in the first place. I used to be with a glider community where everyone repacked once a year, or once every two years (taking grief from their buddies for that) - but to fly without a parachute was considered nuts. Here, we repack every 120 days, but if a parachute is out of pack date we don't just say "you should get that repacked," we also say "and leave it in the car until you do - you don't want to get ramp-checked!" My former flying community would have considered that kind of thinking the height of irresponsibility. So do I. I want to clarify something here. I object to making it illegal - for any reason - to carry a parachute under circumstances where it would be legal to fly without any parachute. On the other hand, I think a 180-day rule (or 120-day, if we must find a collective way to keep riggers busy) makes sense for flights where a parachute is required equipment. Parachutes are required for aerobatics, and I believe that reserves are required for skydiving. I believe that for best safety the regulation should read something more like "No pilot of a civil aircraft may allow a parachute that is REQUIRED TO BE available for emergency use to be carried in that aircraft unless..." Meanwhile, those of us who carry parachutes, not because we are required to but simply out of an abundance of caution can do so without someone making the ideal the enemy of the good, telling us to go without because we have done merely a good, rather than an ideal job of repacking. We're being responsible when we carry a parachute, and more responsible if it was recently repacked, not the other way around. Cheers! wrote: For me this comes down to what is your life worth? Use that chute just once and the cost seems to be no longer be a factor. |
#9
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#10
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