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#31
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Kev writes:
Never mind, I googled it myself, and here's a good summary from the USAF: 1. Mid-air collisions generally occur during weekend daylight hours 56% of the accidents occurred in the afternoon. 32% of the accidents occurred in the morning. 2% of the accidents occurred at night, dusk, or dawn. 2. Most mid-air collisions occur under good visibility. 3. The majority of the aircraft involved in collisions are not on any type of flight plan. 4. Nearly all accidents occur at or near uncontrolled airports and at altitudes below 1000 ft. 5. Flight fatigue is not a major factor in most mid-air collisions. 6. The average flight time prior to the collision is 45 minutes. This time varies from takeoff to over seven hours. 60% of the pilots on the mishap flight had been airborne thirty minutes or less. Only 6% had been flying longer than two hours. 7. Pilots of all experience levels are involved in mid-air collisions, from the first solo ride to 20,000 hour veterans. What's the URL, and what else did they have to say about the problem? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#32
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Casey Wilson writes:
He was talking about you, you idiot. I'm not an idiot, so he could not have been talking about me. If you get in trouble with your computer game, all you have to do is cancel the game. You don't do that with Ctrl-Alt-Del. On Windows XP, this key sequence calls up the task manager, which is normally not used to stop applications or processes. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#33
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I once thought I was wrong, but I was mistaken!
![]() Scott Yes, A Real Pilot Mxsmanic wrote: Richard Riley writes: Or else you'll be wrong. So I'll be just like many real pilots, who are also wrong. |
#34
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VORs? Who flies over VORs? GPS eliminated VOR in my vocabulary in 1993
![]() Scott Kev wrote: Absolute agreement. To me, it's a good reason to be "heads up" when flying over VORs, since they can really concentrate aircraft. Most of us are spending more time on the gauges watching for the arrow to change. Still, maybe it's a non-issue, since we don't seem to hear of lots of collisions around VORs. Seems like mid-airs are mostly around airports. Anyone know the real stats of locations offhand? Thanks, Kev |
#35
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I disagree in principle. "Pacing" would imply everyone maintaining a
fixed distance between them and going at the same speed. That doesn't happen often in "real" aviation. I cruise toward the imaginary VOR at 75 MPH. United 405 may be at 550 MPH (granted I am at 500 feet and they are at 34,500 feet)...but my friend behind me may be at 500 feet and 110 MPH, therefore I better be checkin' six. Determine the exact position of each aircraft? Nope, I don't have a transponder and unless ATC is using primary radar, they don't even know I exist at that VOR. Scott Mxsmanic wrote: If traffic is precisely paced along airways, that could increase the risk, by creating dangerous periods during which multiple aircraft might arrive at the same spot at the same time. Precise traffic control increases safety to the extent that you can control and determine the exact position of all aircraft at the same time, but it also diminishes safety to the extent that you _cannot_ do these things. |
#36
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Now if I put 100 people in a hallway that is 4' wide and 100 yards long and have them randomly walk around
In the corridor they don't randomly walk around. They walk in lines. Jose -- Humans are pack animals. Above all things, they have a deep need to follow something, be it a leader, a creed, or a mob. Whosoever fully understands this holds the world in his hands. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#37
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6. The average flight time prior to the collision is 45 minutes. This
time varies from takeoff to over seven hours. 60% of the pilots on the mishap flight had been airborne thirty minutes or less. Only 6% had been flying longer than two hours. For this to be meaningful, one would need to relate it to the typical flight time - for example, at any given instant, x% of pilots have been airborne for how long? Jose -- Humans are pack animals. Above all things, they have a deep need to follow something, be it a leader, a creed, or a mob. Whosoever fully understands this holds the world in his hands. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#38
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Scott writes:
I disagree in principle. "Pacing" would imply everyone maintaining a fixed distance between them and going at the same speed. That doesn't happen often in "real" aviation. I know, but if it did, it could create additional problems. Rigidly controlling separation is fine as long as the controls work. If they slip, however, the likelihood of accidents is vastly increased over a system that isn't predicated on such rigid control. Determine the exact position of each aircraft? Nope, I don't have a transponder and unless ATC is using primary radar, they don't even know I exist at that VOR. Yup. But that may change in the future. Start saving now, so that you can install $100,000 worth of new avionics in your aircraft to tell Big Brother about your every move. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#39
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Scott writes:
VORs? Who flies over VORs? GPS eliminated VOR in my vocabulary in 1993 ![]() Anyone who wants to stay safe in the air flies VORs periodically. I practice it regularly. What will you do when GPS is jammed in your area? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#40
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![]() "Mxsmanic" wrote in message news ![]() NOTICE!!!! Mxsmanic is NOT a pilot, has NEVER flown an aircraft and is NOT qualified to issue competent information regarding any aspect of the operation of any aircraft. If traffic is precisely paced along airways, that could increase the risk, by creating dangerous periods during which multiple aircraft might arrive at the same spot at the same time. |
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