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#41
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I don't pretend to be an expert, but I wanted to pull out two comments
from this and another thread: I also think it's believable that some experienced pilots may relax their safety margins over time. *Fine, untill the day they really need them. and: I cannot believe this is pilot error ,comp pilots have so much instinctive skill, that is what allows them to deal with every thing else while there body flys the plane. So my thoughts are medical ,or possible the main ballast dumped and the fin stayed in and pushed the c of g beyond the recoverable range. In my opinion, these comments, while heartfelt, point out exactly why I think it's difficult to have any kind of meaningful safety discussion within the community. First, of course, experienced pilots relax (or as needed, tighten) their safety margins, that is how one becomes an experienced pilot. Safety margins necessarily vary according to the nature of the flight. My margins at 100 hours were very different from my margins at 1200. My margins taking a passenger for a ride around the airport are quite different than flying in a competition. I think it quite simplistic to think that there is one true set of safety margins that apply to all pilots with all experience levels under all circumstances, and as a result, it is impossible to "train" all pilots to a consistent level of "skill" that will keep them 99.99% safe. Second, I see a certain element of denial that plays into all safety discussions. In order to be willing to continue flying (or driving, etc.), I needed to believe that my skills, experience, and margins were sufficient to keep me safe from making the kinds of simple errors other (less safe) pilots made. This created a bit of a conundrum, as periodically during my soaring career, other pilots that I readily acknowledged had equal or greater piloting skills than myself still managed to make fatal errors doing the sorts of things I thought I was "safe" doing. In fact, of the ten glider pilots I've personally known who had fatal accidents, all but two were either at my level of skill or well beyond. There are three ways to handle this conundrum. One is to simply denigrate the perceived skills and judgement of the pilot post-accident (which tends to apply here on r.a.s., unless we're talking about a well known/liked contest pilot). The second is to find some technological solution to the problem. The third is to reach the conclusion that NO pilot is immune from making mistakes (particularly, the seemingly benign choices that lead unexpectedly to a critical situation), and to adjust the way one thinks while flying accordingly... Marc |
#42
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#43
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This is a great article and it really stuck with me when I read it back when it was published.
Does anyone know a link that has a big database of soaring safety articles? ... Aaron |
#44
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On Jun 30, 10:42*am, akiley wrote:
This is a great article and it really stuck with me when I read it back when it was published. Does anyone know a link that has a big database of soaring safety articles? *... Aaron I have a small database of soaring safety articles http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...m#safety_rules |
#45
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On Tuesday, June 26, 2012 2:31:06 PM UTC-5, Bill D wrote:
On Jun 26, 10:54*am, soartech wrote: So the next issue of Soaring magazine will come off the press without a single word about this horrible accident... like it never happened!! Head in the sand attitudes will not fix this problem. WE NEED to air the dirty laundry until this problem is much better. We can't depend on speculation on RAS or digging for NTSB reports which often don't contain anything helpful. Give me the facts, ma'am. Soaring Magazine isn't the place for this subject but the SSF web site is. I'd like to see detailed no-holds-barred discussion of every accident. Unfortunately, making public allegations of incompetence against a deceased pilot CAN get you sued by irate family members. There is a need to tread responsibly - and carefully. Why is Soaring Magazine not the right venue for a detailed discussion of accidents? AOPA Pilot has lots of articles on this topic, and it is one of the more interesting, not to mention informative, parts of the magazine. |
#46
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On Sunday, July 1, 2012 10:52:37 PM UTC-4, Mike Schumann wrote:
Why is Soaring Magazine not the right venue for a detailed discussion of accidents? The majority of the fatalities discussed in Soaring are the fictional characters found in Dr. Dan's Soaring RX column; and the magazine gets grief over that (see this month's letters to the editor). Now imagine what would happen if real accidents were openly discussed. The obituary section in the magazine (Final Glide) does not even mention if the death happened in a glider... not even an asterisk next to the name. I wonder if this editorial policy is itself a historical accident, or if the policy evolved over the years. Were accidents ever reported in the magazine? I'd guess that they were and that it caused some discord (this is pure speculation). |
#47
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On Wednesday, July 4, 2012 6:56:09 PM UTC-4, son_of_flubber wrote:
The obituary section in the magazine (Final Glide) does not even mention if the death happened in a glider... not even an asterisk next to the name. I opened the latest Soaring Magazine to find a safety-related letter to the editor by a competition pilot recently killed during a competition, and the mention of another such pilot in the rankings of another competition. That's food for thought. People (that is, the general public) generally misjudge the risk involved in anything when rare events are involved. It is a well-studied fact that people cannot correctly estimate probabilities of low-frequency events (see Nobel prize winner Kahneman & Tversky's work), and if people are told about these events (as in the media), they become very salient and their probability is over-estimated (see Barron&Erev). Thus, there are sound reasons why a public magazine does not discuss actual fatalities in a timely manner; however, I agree that this does not serve the soaring community well. I like the "Never Again" column in AOPA magazine. Perhaps that would be a good compromise. |
#48
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On 7/4/2012 4:56 PM, son_of_flubber wrote:
On Sunday, July 1, 2012 10:52:37 PM UTC-4, Mike Schumann wrote: Why is Soaring Magazine not the right venue for a detailed discussion of accidents? The majority of the fatalities discussed in Soaring are the fictional characters found in Dr. Dan's Soaring RX column; and the magazine gets grief over that (see this month's letters to the editor). Now imagine what would happen if real accidents were openly discussed. Everyone's entitled to opinions, and encouragement of the sharing of them is a fundamental aspect of "the U.S. system." As is learning how to agree to disagree... - - - - - - The obituary section in the magazine (Final Glide) does not even mention if the death happened in a glider... not even an asterisk next to the name. I wonder if this editorial policy is itself a historical accident, or if the policy evolved over the years. Were accidents ever reported in the magazine? I'd guess that they were and that it caused some discord (this is pure speculation). SSA members have online access to "Soaring" magazine - a treMENdous resource, btw!!! - and a search using "Safety Corner" will yield decades' worth of columns (beginning, I seem to remember, in the 1960s) of "useful safety stuff," very often including description/assessment of real-world-explicit incidents & accidents. A search using "George Thelen" will yield author-specific sub-columns mostly from the '80s and '90s, though George didn't limit himself strictly to accident reporting. Great stuff all, IMHO... - - - - - - After I'd begun taking soaring instruction in '72, but even before my first copy of "Soaring" arrived, my club's chief instructor handed me a stapled package of what turned out to be copies of "Safety Corner"...to tide me over until my subscription started, he smiled. Then he added he expected me to tell him what lesson I learned after I'd absorbed the reading material he'd given me. (Curses! His freebie came with strings attached.) Put me in the camp that recognizes "Soaring" mag is likely read by some "'members of the general public," but who also believes its primary-intended-audience is soaring *enthusiasts*. In any event, even - if it's still around; I don't know - every issue I ever saw of the v-e-r-y "general-flying-audience" magazine "Flying" openly discussed real-world accidents, pretty much in every issue, by multiple authors, some on-staff, some by readers. Someone will surely note that "Flying" mag wasn't put out by a member organization as SSA is. AOPA is a member organization as is EAA. Both of their monthly "general audience" magazines routinely discuss various aspects of aviation/piloting safety, sometimes "purely statistically" sometimes using real-world examples. I find the arguments: (paraphrasing) "SSA will be at risk/SSA will scare off potential members," not terribly compelling reasons to NOT discuss in the magazine real-world-scenario incidents/accidents. JMHO... - - - - - - MAJOR Kudos to every individual involved in making happen what Chuck Coyne writes about in the July "Soaring" mag's "Flight Lines" column. Open discussion hardly gets any better than what he describes! Bob W. |
#49
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On Wednesday, July 4, 2012 3:56:09 PM UTC-7, son_of_flubber wrote:
On Sunday, July 1, 2012 10:52:37 PM UTC-4, Mike Schumann wrote: Why is Soaring Magazine not the right venue for a detailed discussion of accidents? The majority of the fatalities discussed in Soaring are the fictional characters found in Dr. Dan's Soaring RX column; and the magazine gets grief over that (see this month's letters to the editor). Now imagine what would happen if real accidents were openly discussed. The obituary section in the magazine (Final Glide) does not even mention if the death happened in a glider... not even an asterisk next to the name. I wonder if this editorial policy is itself a historical accident, or if the policy evolved over the years. Were accidents ever reported in the magazine? I'd guess that they were and that it caused some discord (this is pure speculation). At least some of the accidents described in that column are not fictional at all, except the name/place etc. A recent article described an accident which happened in Hobbs a decade ago if I recall correct. Ramy |
#50
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+1 On Sunday, July 1, 2012 10:52:37 PM UTC-4, Mike Schumann wrote:
On Tuesday, June 26, 2012 2:31:06 PM UTC-5, Bill D wrote: On Jun 26, 10:54*am, soartech wrote: So the next issue of Soaring magazine will come off the press without a single word about this horrible accident... like it never happened!! Head in the sand attitudes will not fix this problem. WE NEED to air the dirty laundry until this problem is much better. We can't depend on speculation on RAS or digging for NTSB reports which often don't contain anything helpful. Give me the facts, ma'am. Soaring Magazine isn't the place for this subject but the SSF web site is. I'd like to see detailed no-holds-barred discussion of every accident. Unfortunately, making public allegations of incompetence against a deceased pilot CAN get you sued by irate family members. There is a need to tread responsibly - and carefully. Why is Soaring Magazine not the right venue for a detailed discussion of accidents? AOPA Pilot has lots of articles on this topic, and it is one of the more interesting, not to mention informative, parts of the magazine. |
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