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#91
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As I recall the article, they were planning on flying under the Class B near
its edge. Of course that's now the ADIZ that goes all the way down to the surface, so they were actually expecting to be in what is now ADIZ. -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) "Ron Natalie" wrote in message m... Mike Schumann wrote: I have 0 sympathy for either of these guys. Since when is a GPS required for VFR navigation? What happened to learning how to read a map and looking out the window? Makes you really question a system where you get your pilots license and you are good to go for life. Maybe there should be some periodic retest to make sure people still have the skills they need or have learned about new stuff that didn't exist when they first got their license. If they'd drawn a straight line between Smoketown and Lumberton, they would have pretty much missed the entire ADIZ mess (and the class B as well). The straight line path if I recall runs right down the east edge of the ADIZ. If they'd have tracked down the eastern shore until past DC, they wouldn't have come close and the visual landmark (the Chesapeake bay) is pretty hard to miss. Yes, it does mean that they would have had to cross the water however. |
#92
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Jose wrote:
Until recently the pilot certificate had the SSN on it. For many people it still does. For many people it never did. Jack |
#93
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John T wrote:
Both aircraft had functioning radios and the initial instruction from the Blackhawk was to tune to 121.5. However, there was other traffic (I've never understood exactly what, but the consensus is it was an ELT) on that frequency that prevented its use. More valuable time was lost trying to figure out a) a new frequency and b) how to communicate that to the errant 150. Was the ELT in either the Blackhawk or in the C-150? Must have been a real _strong_ ELT to have disabled the freq for two aircraft that were relatively close to one another. Jack |
#94
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Skywise wrote:
My understanding is that of those four listed, only the IRS has a legal right to the number. that was my understanding too, but it seems that the DMV can indeed require it, at least here in California (I can dig it up if you'd like, it's probably buried in my privacy related doc); oh I forgot another bunch of folks who demand (and use rather casually SSN#): anything to do with the military it seems whether directly or indirectly (e.g., you wont be able to register for a high altitude training without it, the CAP for some reason demand it, etc.) --Sylvain |
#95
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"Ron Lee" wrote in message
... "Jay Honeck" wrote: Yessssss.... More regulations. More draconian enforcement. Listen bub, weekly testing and the death penalty wouldn't prevent this **** from ever happening. The root cause rests in stupidity; which is incurable. Amen, brother. -- Unfortunately that is correct. The FAA can mandate all the black boxes that can be imagined at huge cost to GA or comercial pilots but at the end of the day human failure will continue to be a major cause of aircraft accidents, incidents and fatalities. And insane measures will make such fallibility appear far more dangerous than it is. Homeland Insecurity with a billion dollars couldn't talk one lost pilot down or even identify what he was. This was failure at all levels. It's crap. It's shoot to kill at any cost crap. Sky marshals on GA flights crap. The radios didn't work crap. The cigarette lighter didn't work crap. F16s trying to slow to 110KTS crap. CIs (commanding idiots) wondering if this is the one to make an example of crap. ARRARAGHHH.. Ok. Not tonight. moo |
#96
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"Jay Honeck" wrote in message
news:3sRuf.704951$xm3.340008@attbi_s21... To be fair, we didn't get the intercepting pilots' stories. Actually, the article mentions that one of the F-16 pilots was quoted as saying that "They knew the C-150 wasn't a threat" -- which is why (apparently) they didn't shoot him down. That's not a story. A C150 is never a real threat to an F16. A real story would be "We're making this situation worse. LET'S GET THIS GUY ON THE TARMAC PRONTO." whAT'S A THREAT? MOO |
#97
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"George Patterson" wrote in message
news:wlTuf.6643$If.5052@trnddc05... Happy Dog wrote: To be fair, we didn't get the intercepting pilots' stories. It's not for lack of trying. The department of HSA has refused to comment. That's not the pilots fault. moo |
#98
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"John T" wrote in message news:
"Happy Dog" wrote in message news ![]() A frigging *radio* would have made sense. ... But you probably would have remembered to try 121.5. You may be unaware of a couple key facts. Both aircraft had functioning radios and the initial instruction from the Blackhawk was to tune to 121.5. However, there was other traffic (I've never understood exactly what, but the consensus is it was an ELT) on that frequency that prevented its use. More valuable time was lost trying to figure out a) a new frequency and b) how to communicate that to the errant 150. Crap. Read the report and try again. Homeland insecurity at its best. Imagine if they'd killed these guys. Nah. They're not *that* stupid... Yeah, it's real stupid to risk getting shot by not knowing where you are. DoD and DHS claim to have learned valuable lessons, but I can only hope other pilots have learned there is an ADIZ around here with special rules and special penalties. Every violation hurts our chances of getting the damned thing dismantled. Especially when it's almost a given that there will be some innocuous violations. More info and opinion: http://sage1solutions.com/TknoFlyer/PermaLink,guid,4ebaf403-5dbd-479f-8514-355334db4275.aspx There are substantial differences between this account and AOPA. Explain them. moo |
#99
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"Jack" wrote in message
m... John T wrote: Both aircraft had functioning radios and the initial instruction from the Blackhawk was to tune to 121.5. However, there was other traffic (I've never understood exactly what, but the consensus is it was an ELT) on that frequency that prevented its use. More valuable time was lost trying to figure out a) a new frequency and b) how to communicate that to the errant 150. Was the ELT in either the Blackhawk or in the C-150? Must have been a real _strong_ ELT to have disabled the freq for two aircraft that were relatively close to one another. Exactly. In fact, it's crap unless new of them had an operating 121.5 beacon. People talk over these things all the time. moo |
#100
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"John T" wrote in message news:
"Happy Dog" wrote in message news ![]() A frigging *radio* would have made sense. ... But you probably would have remembered to try 121.5. You may be unaware of a couple key facts. Both aircraft had functioning radios and the initial instruction from the Blackhawk was to tune to 121.5. However, there was other traffic (I've never understood exactly what, but the consensus is it was an ELT) on that frequency that prevented its use. More valuable time was lost trying to figure out a) a new frequency and b) how to communicate that to the errant 150. Crap. Student pilots can figure this out. The radcio doesn't work on 121.5, try another frequency. This brought the who intercept procedure down? Get a grip! Homeland insecurity at its best. Imagine if they'd killed these guys. Nah. They're not *that* stupid... Yeah, it's real stupid to risk getting shot by not knowing where you are. DoD and DHS claim to have learned valuable lessons, but I can only hope other pilots have learned there is an ADIZ around here with special rules and special penalties. More rules. More penalties. That's it. Read the ****ing AOPA report. This was a 6 out of 10 for stupid pilot tricks. There's no risk commeseurate with the defence effort. m Get it? Every violation hurts our chances of getting the damned thing dismantled. As does every twit who goes on record supporting it. moo |
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