![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I don't think that you could find 25 million
adults in the U.S. who are mentally and physically capable of piloting a Cessna. Ever taken a good look at the people at the DMV office? You would never get a takeoff clearance. All citizens would have to wear hard hats to avoid the debris falling from the sky. Collision avoidance would be impossible, even with computers, because the of the computational complexity of the problem. Millions of pilots and their passengers would die. There would have to be an army of air traffic controllers. Sure, I'd trust my life to see the automated air traffic controller running on Microsoft Windows. Norad would go crazy trying to track that many objects. Regarding enforcement actions, with 25 million people, it would be like the wild west. It seems that people are becoming less and less law-abiding; people are running red lights without even thinking about it these days. There would have to be an army of these "Administrative Law Judges" to hear all the cases. -- __ / \___/ | / / | / _ | / / \ _| __ / --- / | \__/ \__ \/\ Dan Luke wrote: ...in the USA instead of 400,000 or so: There would be GA airports *everywhere*. They would be like beehives on the day before Thanksgiving. You could rent a T hangar for less than the cost of a 1 br apartment. The accident rate would be about the same but the fatal accident rate would be lower due to modern, more crashworthy designs. You'd give the engine in your airplane about as much thought as you do the one in your car. The idea of sending oil samples off for analysis at each change would seem absurd. Your new "family" airplane would be air conditioned. It would have a headup synthetic vision/HITS display, emergency autoland capability, real time data link weather and a CD/DVD player. You'd have a second, "fun" airplane. 40-year old airplanes would all be junkers or lovingly restored classics. Vacuum pumps would be deep in landfills. Air traffic control would automated for most functions. Regulation enforcement officers would be flying around, watching and listening, but federal enforcement actions would be more uniform and fair due to more lawyers and politicians getting busted and raising hell. Frogs could dance and the Cubs would win the World Series. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Another one who "gets it"... Ted Huffmire wrote: I don't think that you could find 25 million adults in the U.S. who are mentally and physically capable of piloting a Cessna. Ever taken a good look at the people at the DMV office? You would never get a takeoff clearance. All citizens would have to wear hard hats to avoid the debris falling from the sky. Collision avoidance would be impossible, even with computers, because the of the computational complexity of the problem. Millions of pilots and their passengers would die. There would have to be an army of air traffic controllers. Sure, I'd trust my life to see the automated air traffic controller running on Microsoft Windows. Norad would go crazy trying to track that many objects. Regarding enforcement actions, with 25 million people, it would be like the wild west. It seems that people are becoming less and less law-abiding; people are running red lights without even thinking about it these days. There would have to be an army of these "Administrative Law Judges" to hear all the cases. |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
With 40 million GA pilots, there would be no VFR. All GA flight would have
to be controlled. Imaging a road system with no traffic control. "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... ...in the USA instead of 400,000 or so: There would be GA airports *everywhere*. They would be like beehives on the day before Thanksgiving. You could rent a T hangar for less than the cost of a 1 br apartment. The accident rate would be about the same but the fatal accident rate would be lower due to modern, more crashworthy designs. You'd give the engine in your airplane about as much thought as you do the one in your car. The idea of sending oil samples off for analysis at each change would seem absurd. Your new "family" airplane would be air conditioned. It would have a headup synthetic vision/HITS display, emergency autoland capability, real time data link weather and a CD/DVD player. You'd have a second, "fun" airplane. 40-year old airplanes would all be junkers or lovingly restored classics. Vacuum pumps would be deep in landfills. Air traffic control would automated for most functions. Regulation enforcement officers would be flying around, watching and listening, but federal enforcement actions would be more uniform and fair due to more lawyers and politicians getting busted and raising hell. Frogs could dance and the Cubs would win the World Series. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We have a 3d volume to use up there. With TCAS and HITS I don't think it
would be that big a deal. With more airports the congestion would be spread out. We have the technology. We just don't have enough people willing to implement it. And we're too unable to accept responsibility for our actions, always wanting to blame and sue somebody else so it will probably never happen. But it's certainly possible. Look at all the traffic we fit on all our little 2 dimensional ribbons of roadway. You think we couldn't handle that in the skies? mike regish "James Blakely" wrote in message ... With 40 million GA pilots, there would be no VFR. All GA flight would have to be controlled. Imaging a road system with no traffic control. "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... ...in the USA instead of 400,000 or so: There would be GA airports *everywhere*. They would be like beehives on the day before Thanksgiving. You could rent a T hangar for less than the cost of a 1 br apartment. The accident rate would be about the same but the fatal accident rate would be lower due to modern, more crashworthy designs. You'd give the engine in your airplane about as much thought as you do the one in your car. The idea of sending oil samples off for analysis at each change would seem absurd. Your new "family" airplane would be air conditioned. It would have a headup synthetic vision/HITS display, emergency autoland capability, real time data link weather and a CD/DVD player. You'd have a second, "fun" airplane. 40-year old airplanes would all be junkers or lovingly restored classics. Vacuum pumps would be deep in landfills. Air traffic control would automated for most functions. Regulation enforcement officers would be flying around, watching and listening, but federal enforcement actions would be more uniform and fair due to more lawyers and politicians getting busted and raising hell. Frogs could dance and the Cubs would win the World Series. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We have a 3d volume to use up there. With TCAS and HITS I don't think it
would be that big a deal. With more airports the congestion would be spread out. We have the technology. We just don't have enough people willing to implement it. And we're too unable to accept responsibility for our actions, always wanting to blame and sue somebody else so it will probably never happen. But it's certainly possible. Look at all the traffic we fit on all our little 2 dimensional ribbons of roadway. You think we couldn't handle that in the skies? I just don't like the thought of always-controlled flight... well, that and I don't trust a computer to do all the flying and navigation. Basically, driving a car is within the capabilities of most people (well, supposedly, anyways). Flying isn't... the average person doesn't have the attention span, coordination, or judgement to fly an aircraft. |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The average person has all he needs to learn to safely and competently fly a
plane. The only ingredient lacking is desire. I know a bunch of people who would love to learn to fly, but as soon as you mention cost the lights go out. People handle cars-they handle boats. A plane is just one small step beyond either of those. We, as a society, seem to have an inate fear of heights or of falling to our deaths. Other forms of dying don't seem to bother us as much. If that were different-people thought the risk of flying was the same as the risk of other forms of transportation-we could have a much different world. Like that AOPA ad-A mile of road gets you a mile. A mile of runway gets you anywhere. We have the technology and ability to make flying as routine as driving a car. Safer even. But falling out of the sky is a less appetizing way to die than running into a brick wall. People in general, tend to be landlubbers. If that were not true we would probably be a flying society right now. mike regish "Bob Martin" wrote in message ... We have a 3d volume to use up there. With TCAS and HITS I don't think it would be that big a deal. With more airports the congestion would be spread out. We have the technology. We just don't have enough people willing to implement it. And we're too unable to accept responsibility for our actions, always wanting to blame and sue somebody else so it will probably never happen. But it's certainly possible. Look at all the traffic we fit on all our little 2 dimensional ribbons of roadway. You think we couldn't handle that in the skies? I just don't like the thought of always-controlled flight... well, that and I don't trust a computer to do all the flying and navigation. Basically, driving a car is within the capabilities of most people (well, supposedly, anyways). Flying isn't... the average person doesn't have the attention span, coordination, or judgement to fly an aircraft. |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tom S. wrote:
| When you are IMC with smoke in your cockpit, how do you know which | electrical system to shut down? You shut down both of them and wait for the smoke to clear. Then you cautiously turn them on one at a time and see which one produces smoke. Or your observe your panel status lights to determine which is having bus problems, then shutdown the inop one. You *must* figure out the problem from your panel indicators (or something like that). If you are in IMC in an all-electric airplane and you turn off all your electrical systems, your NTSB report will at least be interesting. Tim |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message ... Then have two. When you are IMC with smoke in your cockpit, how do you know which electrical system to shut down? -- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Jeff" wrote: Another one who "gets it"... Dang...there goes another irony meter. |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Richard Kaplan" wrote in message s.com... | | | | | "Dan Luke" c172rgATbellsouthDOTnet wrote in message | ... | | Then have two. | | When you are IMC with smoke in your cockpit, how do you know which | electrical system to shut down? You shut down both of them and wait for the smoke to clear. Then you cautiously turn them on one at a time and see which one produces smoke. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
Dover short pilots since vaccine order | Roman Bystrianyk | Naval Aviation | 0 | December 29th 04 12:47 AM |
[OT] USA - TSA Obstructing Armed Pilots? | No Spam! | Military Aviation | 120 | January 27th 04 10:19 AM |
[OT] USA - TSA Obstructing Armed Pilots? | No Spam! | General Aviation | 3 | December 23rd 03 08:53 PM |
USAF = US Amphetamine Fools | RT | Military Aviation | 104 | September 25th 03 03:17 PM |