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2G wrote on 11/16/2019 4:56 PM:
On Saturday, November 16, 2019 at 6:12:07 AM UTC-8, Eric Greenwell wrote: 2G wrote on 11/15/2019 10:16 PM: On Tuesday, November 12, 2019 at 6:40:44 AM UTC-8, Richard Livingston wrote: In mountain climbing there is the concept of "objective hazard". This is a hazard that is recognized, such as climbing up a gully that occasionally experiences rock falls. If you are in the gully when this happens it would almost certainly be fatal. The wise climber recognizes this hazard and decides what he can do to mitigate it, such as climbing before dawn when rock falls are less likely (warming by sunlight tends to trigger these). He then has to decide if, for a particular situation, the risk is worth the reward (getting to the peak, or getting back to camp before the weather turns bad). The wise climber sometimes loses this gamble. The unwise climber loses more often. Soaring is similar in that there are hazards that, through training, experience and acquired skill, can be recognized and mitigated, but never completely avoided. Each pilot must assess their own skill versus the situation and decide if the reward is worth the risk. The wise pilots will sometimes lose, but the unwise pilots will lose more often. Rich L I challenge you guys to go back thru the last few years of glider accidents in the US and find ANY fatal accidents that fall into these categories.. Generally, they are the consequence of ****-poor airmanship. I don't recall any recent incidents, but getting sucked into a cloud may be an example of slowly reducing your margins because you got away with it before. I'm thinking of Erik Larson, who wasn't killed, but bailed out of his ASH26E when it became enveloped in a cloud while wave flying out of Minden. Another is Kempton Izuno, who got pulled up into the cloud during thermalling, and very narrowly avoided catastrophe. Both could have gone far worse. Another example might be Bill Gawthrop's crash short of the runway at Truckee. All three of these were very good pilots at the time of the incidents. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 None of these were fatal accidents (Bill's was very close). Flying in wave these days w/o an artificial horizon is a judgment, not an airmanship, error. Furthermore, Bill's accident was the result of very unusual winds, which is just bad luck. The original post specifically mentioned fatalities. I was giving examples that I thought illustrated the concept, and perhaps jog peoples memories for more examples. They didn't need to be fatal for that purpose, especially since I wasn't certain "loses" referred only to fatal events. Erik Larson did have an artificial horizon, but as I recall, it was not on when he entered cloud, and it didn't spin up fast enough to help him. I think Bill's accident was not just bad luck, but partly the result of a purposeful reduction in margins. As I recall, he wanted to land short to avoid pushing the plane back a longer ways, instead of landing long as using the turnout further down the runway. |
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