![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
How will filing an ASRS promote safety? Have you or anyone else read these
files and learned from the experience of others? Are they even available to the public? As stated in the original post, there was clear visibility from one end of the runway to the other- one pilot didn't make radio calls, while the other departed without looking. There were no physical limitations in visibility from one end of the runway (including nearly 1000 feet of over run where we were parked) to the other. Do you think the FSDO will somehow take the information from an ASRS and use it to investigate the circumstances or look at safety conditions at the airport? If the involved pilots were so oblivious do you think they would make an effort to improve their flying by filing the form? In the abstract the ASRS may be beneficial, but from a practical perspective in this scenario would have little to offer. |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Viperdoc wrote:
How will filing an ASRS promote safety? Have you or anyone else read these files and learned from the experience of others? Are they even available to the public? http://tinyurl.com/bmth3 -- Peter |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Viperdoc wrote:
How will filing an ASRS promote safety? Have you or anyone else read these files and learned from the experience of others? Are they even available to the public? Doc, you need to read more! ASRS puts out a monthly newsletter (it's free!), CALLBACK, that chronicals notable experiences by submitters of NASA Form 277B (the reporting form). I have every issue that was ever published (goes back about 30 years or so). They are also available online. http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov/ As stated in the original post, there was clear visibility from one end of the runway to the other- one pilot didn't make radio calls, while the other departed without looking. There were no physical limitations in visibility from one end of the runway (including nearly 1000 feet of over run where we were parked) to the other. Broaden your scope of thought the way these pilots should have broadened their vision of their environment. Perhaps other incidents have occurred at other airports under similar conditions. The analysts at ASRS may find a common thread based on dissparate reports and determine a solution. Do you think the FSDO will somehow take the information from an ASRS and use it to investigate the circumstances or look at safety conditions at the airport? If the involved pilots were so oblivious do you think they would make an effort to improve their flying by filing the form? That's not how the system works. In the abstract the ASRS may be beneficial, but from a practical perspective in this scenario would have little to offer. Again, look at the big picture, not the the view through the pinhole. |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
Pilots aren't obligated by FAR to breathe, either -- but it's highly recommended. well, there are a thing or two about being physically fit (14 CFR 67) and I am pretty sure that being alive is implied even for sport pilots :-) --Sylvain |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Nope don't even have a pulse!!!!
![]() Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech "Sylvain" wrote in message ... Jay Honeck wrote: Pilots aren't obligated by FAR to breathe, either -- but it's highly recommended. well, there are a thing or two about being physically fit (14 CFR 67) and I am pretty sure that being alive is implied even for sport pilots :-) --Sylvain |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I agree completely with the premise that collection of data can lead to
improved safety- this is one of the basic tenets of my job as a flight surgeon. However, I also had the the very real experience of nearly seeing two planes collide and crash. In my civilian job as a surgeon at a level I trauma center I see people on a near daily basis whose lives are irretrievably changed through acts of stupidity or carelessness- the elderly lady shot inadvertantly in a drive by shooting, or the family wiped out by a drunk driver. These things are very real, as was the near miss we saw the other day. Filling out NASA forms is a voluntary process, and may be beneficial in the abstract. Unless the data is utilized in some meaningful fashion, however, it will have little benefit to the general flying public. Most pilots would probably agree that they should self announce their position and intent at uncontrolled airfields, as is recommended in the AIM, and most would agree that it would be unwise to depart directly toward an oncoming 210. Yet, both of these occurred. Would filling out these forms help counsel these pilots in better operations at uncontrolled fields? How many pilots read the ASRS reports? Why don't the big magazines such as AOPA Pilot, Flying, etc summarize them on a regular basis to help the rest of us? While they may be an undertilized safety resource, I suspect the forms are of little practical utility since their submission is voluntary, and frequently used as the "get out of jail free" card to avoid enforcement action. |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Viperdoc wrote:
While neither pilot had any obligation to announce, if I had been in the 210 and somebody made a radio call saying they were departing off of the same runway in the opposite direction it probably would have gotten my attention. That's right, pilots aren't obligated to be smart. Fortunately, most of us are, but there are a few really stupid ones out there that don't self announce at uncontrolled fields. The sad part is that occasionally the stupid pilots take down a smart pilot with them. Luckily, not in this case. Matt |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Matt Whiting" wrote in message news ![]() Viperdoc wrote: While neither pilot had any obligation to announce, if I had been in the 210 and somebody made a radio call saying they were departing off of the same runway in the opposite direction it probably would have gotten my attention. That's right, pilots aren't obligated to be smart. Fortunately, most of us are, but there are a few really stupid ones out there that don't self announce at uncontrolled fields. The sad part is that occasionally the stupid pilots take down a smart pilot with them. Luckily, not in this case. Matt Let's not forget the really, really stupid ones that yack on the radio but don't know what the windows on their airplanes are for. Give me a stupid one looking out the window over a smart one yacking but not looking any day. |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave Stadt wrote:
"Matt Whiting" wrote in message news ![]() Viperdoc wrote: While neither pilot had any obligation to announce, if I had been in the 210 and somebody made a radio call saying they were departing off of the same runway in the opposite direction it probably would have gotten my attention. That's right, pilots aren't obligated to be smart. Fortunately, most of us are, but there are a few really stupid ones out there that don't self announce at uncontrolled fields. The sad part is that occasionally the stupid pilots take down a smart pilot with them. Luckily, not in this case. Matt Let's not forget the really, really stupid ones that yack on the radio but don't know what the windows on their airplanes are for. Give me a stupid one looking out the window over a smart one yacking but not looking any day. Yes, that is equally stupid. No reason not to do both, assuming you have a radio. If you don't, then I'll accept that as an excuse! :-) Matt |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Viperdoc wrote:
Would filling out these forms help counsel these pilots in better operations at uncontrolled fields? How many pilots read the ASRS reports? Why don't the big magazines such as AOPA Pilot, Flying, etc summarize them on a regular basis to help the rest of us? While they may be an undertilized safety resource, I suspect the forms are of little practical utility since their submission is voluntary, and frequently used as the "get out of jail free" card to avoid enforcement action. According to the ASRS website, there are 85k subscribers to CALLBACK. Compare that to 610k pilots in the US, yielding 17% readers. FLYING magazine does use the reports. Peter Garrison writes two columns, one on aviation technology, the other on accident analysis. Richard Collins also often cites ASRS data and compares it to AOPA's Aviation Safety organizations numbers. Quite the contrary, I believe. It does depend on the situation reported, but the researchers may go into great depth of study to analyze the information gleaned not only from the original report but also followup telephone calls and other correspondence. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Long flight today... | Steve R. | Rotorcraft | 1 | October 21st 04 11:16 PM |
I'M GOING TO DIE TODAY. | ArtKramr | Military Aviation | 0 | February 4th 04 09:44 PM |
12 Dec 2003 - Today’s Military, Veteran, War and National Security News | Otis Willie | Naval Aviation | 0 | December 12th 03 11:01 PM |
"Target for Today" & "Thunderbolt" WWII Double Feature at Zeno'sDrive-In | Zeno | Aerobatics | 0 | August 2nd 03 07:31 PM |
The Yankee Lady Flew Today | Tom Huxton | Piloting | 0 | July 11th 03 11:57 PM |