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#1
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Loek writes:
How on earth do you both know all about the cause of this tragic accident?? (low time and failure to give right of way) Ah, you both were there, right? It's a simple process of elimination. VFR conditions, both pilots required to see and avoid, tow plane has the right of way. The Cirrus aircraft failed to see and avoid and failed to yield right of way. There aren't too many other possibilities. It's unlikely to be a mechanical failure or weather. And as I've said, this has happened before, also with a Cirrus. Quite an eerie coincidence. You may have read something I don't know about yet, but until you have proven facts on paper there is no way you can give the Cirrus pilot the blame / fault for this. Sure you can. Unless you can think of some other possible explanation? |
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MX,
I'm not saying you are wrong, just that you can not know what really happened except making "wild" guesses. For the same reason a bar in the cockpit may have obstructed the view at the critical moment. (I don't know the cirrus!) Or was their attention drawn away for some yet unknown reason. Go ahead and find some other less logical reasons. There is lots of them. The cases I had never were that easy as it looked. There was always something "funny" part of the pyramid. Got to go now. I'll be back tomorrow evening! Cheers, Loek "Mxsmanic" schreef in bericht ... Loek writes: How on earth do you both know all about the cause of this tragic accident?? (low time and failure to give right of way) Ah, you both were there, right? It's a simple process of elimination. VFR conditions, both pilots required to see and avoid, tow plane has the right of way. The Cirrus aircraft failed to see and avoid and failed to yield right of way. There aren't too many other possibilities. It's unlikely to be a mechanical failure or weather. And as I've said, this has happened before, also with a Cirrus. Quite an eerie coincidence. You may have read something I don't know about yet, but until you have proven facts on paper there is no way you can give the Cirrus pilot the blame / fault for this. Sure you can. Unless you can think of some other possible explanation? |
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Loek writes:
I'm not saying you are wrong, just that you can not know what really happened except making "wild" guesses. For the same reason a bar in the cockpit may have obstructed the view at the critical moment. (I don't know the cirrus!) Or was their attention drawn away for some yet unknown reason. Go ahead and find some other less logical reasons. There is lots of them. True, there are jillions of potential reasons for the accident other than simple pilot error. But pilot error looms large in accident statistics, and in this case it's hard to imagine any other plausible explanation. Even if something obstructed the pilot's view momentarily or his attention was drawn elsewhere, it's still his fault, as he should have sufficient situational awareness to know of the other aircraft without having to depend on a fraction of a second of perception. What about radio calls? What about traffic patterns? There are multiple ways in which he should have become aware of the other aircraft. Unless the surviving pilot and passengers from the glider can shed some insight into this accident, we may never know what actually happened, but I don't think it's unreasonable to assume pilot error until proven otherwise. There's also the eerie coincidence of there being at least one other accident with a Cirrus that happened pretty much exactly the same way, except that there were survivors. |
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On Feb 9, 6:55*am, Mxsmanic wrote:
True, there are jillions of potential reasons for the accident other than simple pilot error. But pilot error looms large in accident statistics, and in this case it's hard to imagine any other plausible explanation. This coming from some-one who has never flown an aircraft in real time. Remember that mixedup's only claim to flying is playing flying simulator games. And as to 'situational awareness' there's an extremely large blind spot in the modern sailplane right under the nose |
#5
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In article ,
Mxsmanic wrote: Loek writes: I'm not saying you are wrong, just that you can not know what really happened except making "wild" guesses. For the same reason a bar in the cockpit may have obstructed the view at the critical moment. (I don't know the cirrus!) Or was their attention drawn away for some yet unknown reason. Go ahead and find some other less logical reasons. There is lots of them. True, there are jillions of potential reasons for the accident other than simple pilot error. But pilot error looms large in accident statistics, and in this case it's hard to imagine any other plausible explanation. It's trivial to imagine many other plausible explanations. The others are not LIKELY, but there are tons of scenarios which are plausible. There's also the eerie coincidence of there being at least one other accident with a Cirrus that happened pretty much exactly the same way, except that there were survivors. You have awfully low standards for eerieness. Two accidents happening the same way that just happened to involve the same type of aircraft is not eerie, it's just happenstance. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
#6
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Dear Mx,
I just cannot agree with you. You're reasoning is a little too easy and I get the impression it only serves the purpose of finger pointing an already very dead person. (At least I think he is?) His family will be quite happy with you. Again: you and I were not there so we can not and do not know what happened exactly. Wild guesses are of no use at all but a healthy discussion about possible causes is something different and even useful in a group like this. Leave it to the very experienced and evenly qualified NTSB to find the root cause of this tragic accident so we all can learn from it. And then we can take measures to prevent an accident like this from happening again in the future. Cheers, Loek "Mxsmanic" schreef in bericht ... Loek writes: I'm not saying you are wrong, just that you can not know what really happened except making "wild" guesses. For the same reason a bar in the cockpit may have obstructed the view at the critical moment. (I don't know the cirrus!) Or was their attention drawn away for some yet unknown reason. Go ahead and find some other less logical reasons. There is lots of them. True, there are jillions of potential reasons for the accident other than simple pilot error. But pilot error looms large in accident statistics, and in this case it's hard to imagine any other plausible explanation. Even if something obstructed the pilot's view momentarily or his attention was drawn elsewhere, it's still his fault, as he should have sufficient situational awareness to know of the other aircraft without having to depend on a fraction of a second of perception. What about radio calls? What about traffic patterns? There are multiple ways in which he should have become aware of the other aircraft. Unless the surviving pilot and passengers from the glider can shed some insight into this accident, we may never know what actually happened, but I don't think it's unreasonable to assume pilot error until proven otherwise. There's also the eerie coincidence of there being at least one other accident with a Cirrus that happened pretty much exactly the same way, except that there were survivors. |
#7
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... .. Cirrus is the "fork-tailed doctor killer" of our era. The old V-tailed Bonanzas tended to attract low-time, low-competence, high-income pilots, and Cirrus aircraft are doing the same thing. I don't know if Beechcraft ever deliberately tried to target that market as Cirrus is doing, though. I remember that back in the mid 60s, Flying magazine had an article on doctor involved accidents. At that time doctors, as a group, were involved in about a third of all fatals in private GA aircraft. A lot of these doctors were experienced pilots, and the majority their accidents involved weather. The conclusion as to why this was happening came down to one word... arrogance. Being in the business of saving lives these individuals felt that they could handle any situation. Oh, and I seem to remember that Bonanzas were involved in some of the incidents. |
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On Feb 7, 8:03*pm, "Ian D" wrote:
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... . Cirrus is the "fork-tailed doctor killer" of our era. The old V-tailed Bonanzas tended to attract low-time, low-competence, high-income pilots, and Cirrus aircraft are doing the same thing. I don't know if Beechcraft ever deliberately tried to target that market as Cirrus is doing, though. I remember that back in the mid 60s, Flying magazine had an article on doctor involved accidents. *At that time doctors, as a group, were involved in about a third of all fatals in private GA aircraft. *A lot of these doctors were experienced pilots, and the majority their accidents involved weather. The conclusion as to why this was happening came down to one word... arrogance. *Being in the business of saving lives these individuals felt that they could handle any situation. Oh, and I seem to remember that Bonanzas were involved in some of the incidents. This is mostly true. I had many doctors and lawyers as students during the Bonanza accident period. In many there was indeed an arrogance, and coupled with their natural desire to achieve a short time line on anything taught to them, many had retention issues. The real killer in the Bonanza craze wasn't arrogance per se but a general lack of proper training in handing an airplane with a VERY clean wing in instrument conditions. Many of the Bonanza crashes were the result of pilots getting the aircraft into weather they couldn't handle. The Bo, being extremely clean, was exceptionally capable of getting nose low in turns. Many of the fatals involved pilots applying back pressure when sensing a nose low condition instead of swallowing the bank FIRST or SIMULTANEOUSLY, thus swallowing the bank before applying a positive pitch input. This VERY BASIC ERROR in a nose low condition just served to increase the nose low condition. It didn't take the Bo long at all to reach Vne and beyond. At that point many Bo's lost wings to the high g loads that became available with the greatly increased airspeed. The Bonanza was and is a fine airplane, but like any airplane, especially with a slippery wing, on instruments you need to be VERY careful when recovering from a nose low condition. Arrogance and lack of basics in a Bonanza nose low on the clocks was a killer equation! Dudley Henriques |
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On Feb 7, 9:26*pm, "Peter Dohm" wrote:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message news:903eb1bf-9d81-4282-8979- ... This is mostly true. I had many doctors and lawyers as students during the Bonanza accident period. In many there was indeed an arrogance, and coupled with their natural desire to achieve a short time line on anything taught to them, many had retention issues. The real killer in the Bonanza craze wasn't arrogance per se but a general lack of proper training in handing an airplane with a VERY clean wing in instrument conditions. Many of the Bonanza crashes were the result of pilots getting the aircraft into weather they couldn't handle. The Bo, being extremely clean, was exceptionally capable of getting nose low in turns. Many of the fatals involved pilots applying back pressure when sensing a nose low condition instead of swallowing the bank FIRST or SIMULTANEOUSLY, thus swallowing the bank before applying a positive pitch input. This VERY BASIC ERROR in a nose low condition just served to increase the nose low condition. It didn't take the Bo long at all to reach Vne and beyond. At that point many Bo's lost wings to the high g loads that became available with the greatly increased airspeed. The Bonanza was and is a fine airplane, but like any airplane, especially with a slippery wing, on instruments you need to be VERY careful when recovering from a nose low condition. Arrogance and lack of basics in a Bonanza nose low on the clocks was a killer equation! Dudley Henriques I wonder if the quickest, safest and least costly solution to a similar problem might be a couple of hours of glider instruction--and a glider of medium performance or greater. Admittedly, this is advocacy above my own experience; but it is the first place (other than a true-motion sim) that I would look for my own use. *And besides, that glider intro flight was a lot of fun! Peter "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message news:903eb1bf-9d81-4282-8979- ... This is mostly true. I had many doctors and lawyers as students during the Bonanza accident period. In many there was indeed an arrogance, and coupled with their natural desire to achieve a short time line on anything taught to them, many had retention issues. The real killer in the Bonanza craze wasn't arrogance per se but a general lack of proper training in handing an airplane with a VERY clean wing in instrument conditions. Many of the Bonanza crashes were the result of pilots getting the aircraft into weather they couldn't handle. The Bo, being extremely clean, was exceptionally capable of getting nose low in turns. Many of the fatals involved pilots applying back pressure when sensing a nose low condition instead of swallowing the bank FIRST or SIMULTANEOUSLY, thus swallowing the bank before applying a positive pitch input. This VERY BASIC ERROR in a nose low condition just served to increase the nose low condition. It didn't take the Bo long at all to reach Vne and beyond. At that point many Bo's lost wings to the high g loads that became available with the greatly increased airspeed. The Bonanza was and is a fine airplane, but like any airplane, especially with a slippery wing, on instruments you need to be VERY careful when recovering from a nose low condition. Arrogance and lack of basics in a Bonanza nose low on the clocks was a killer equation! Dudley Henriques I wonder if the quickest, safest and least costly solution to a similar problem might be a couple of hours of glider instruction--and a glider of medium performance or greater. Admittedly, this is advocacy above my own experience; but it is the first place (other than a true-motion sim) that I would look for my own use. And besides, that glider intro flight was a lot of fun! Peter I've always advocated glider instruction as a positive factor for any pilot in a total training regimen. There is no doubt that glider training can contribute to a better overall powered pilot flying a powered aircraft. Along the same line of reasoning, aerobatics is of immeasurable benefit in increasing basic skill sets to higher levels. The bottom line in any training regimen involves not only the material covered but how the time is spent by both the instructor and the student as they interface together to form the teacher/student equation. If I had to pinpoint a single attribute to be the most important a pilot could posses exiting a training program it would be the acquirement of a sound sense of professional judgment coupled with good basic flying skills. In many of the Bonanza crashes, this factor unfortunately didn't seem to be present. DH |
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