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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message Why would you want to? Because I'm interesting in *my* probability of dying in a plane crash, not anyone elses. Since I: snip a-n ...I conclude that I may eliminate many of the "stupid pilot tricks" from my personal risk assessment. Trouble is, I don't know how to do that... Your list is comprehensive and no doubt helpful, with the exception of items D and E, which taken together I consider a net negative. Be that as it may, you're doing a creditable job of reducing risk, and that in itself serves to markedly reduce your risk, the theory being that if you personally take responsibility for every phase of decision making, and you know that you can greatly control the degree to which you screw up, then you can reduce your risk to a very low point indeed. And keep it such for a long time. Where the process breaks down is he when you operate and fly, it is in a world (GA) that offers you precious little backstop, as you try to reduce your personal risk assessment to something akin to a commercial airline. YOU (meaning you and/or Mary) monitor, manage, plan, fly, maintain (throughsupervision), fuel, monitor, repair, and replace every aspect of your plane and your flying, with some assistance from a mechanic, a fuel guy, and perhaps some friends at the airport. When I was flying (or anyone else in an airline environment) I had two other pilots in the cockpit with me, or inspecting the plane for me, and we were all flying 12-17 days a month; a loadmaster and cargo handling crew, or sometimes 5-15 FAs; a dozen ramp people and mechanics working around the plane on every flight, all of them - 30-35 people or more - keeping an eye out for anything that didn't look right, plus ops planners, dispatchers, maintenance schedulers, a training department, and a bunch of others behind the scenes all managing this and a hundred other airplanes to make sure that when the plane was at the gate, it was ready and in good shape to go, and that the pilots flying it were as ready as they could be. And still there would be minor mistakes, mechanical failures that delayed things, oversights, etc., usually none of them serious, but there none the less. It is this backstopping infrastructure that gives the airline environment the safety record it enjoys. Its not just great pilots (although we'd all like to take some credit :-))- its the whole show: if I overlooked something, there were 2 other people looking over my shoulder in the cockpit. If anyone anywhere in the process overlooked something, there were always a number of other folks somewhere whose job included double checking the first guy. This is an environment that GA does not, and simply cannot, provide. The bottom line is that when you fly, you're doing damn near everything yourself, and in that environment, the probability of mistakes slipping through will always be higher. You can reduce the risk through exceptional vigilance, but imo you can never individually duplicate the type of safety net that an airline provides. The point is this: what can you do? and what will you do in response? What is the real world benefit to you if you calculate that you can decrease your fatality probability from 1 in 73,187 flights (GA) to 1 in 581,395 flights (scheduled 135)? How many total flights have you made up to now? When will you likely reach 73,187? Even at an average 3 hours per flight you'd have to log over 24,000 hours of GA flying to get close to that point. Then what? Will you stop flying because the so-called "law of averages" is now working against you? The fact that you think of these things, and take steps to make your flying as safe as you can means that you probably *are* making your flying as safe as you can. You don't need to attach a probability number to that, because it would be meaningless in real world terms. You're doing the best you can, which is a hell of a lot better than most of your GA compatriots, judging by the numbers you will undoubtedly beat. |
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