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#41
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![]() "Michael" wrote in message om... Frankly, I think that's only true if we accept that the aircraft are not going to improve. Highway fatality rates have improved Well airbags in seatbelts are one nice up and coming possibility for a safety improvement. Perhaps terrain avoidance systems can help prevent CFIT accidents, but is that an airplane improvement or a pilot improvement? Perhaps weather datalink can help reduce weather accidents, but really that is providing info to the pilot, not improving the airplane per se. In any event, it will take a really long time for this to trickle down to the majority of the GA fleet... airplanes have a much longer average useful life than cars. Economics has a lot to do with this of course... there is no doubt in my mind that adding TKS to all GA airplanes would significantly reduce icing accidents... but that is not practical. So I do think focusing on pilots is more important than focusing on airplanes. And weather/judgment by far cause a disproportionate number of accidents and have for years. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#42
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Michael wrote:
Andrew Gideon wrote You wouldn't feel nearly as good making that approach/landing in calm winds/CAVU. In fact, I do feel pretty damned good making an excellent approach under the hood too. There's less risk, which I like, and there's also the same satisfaction of having met well the challenge. Ah - but do you feel AS good? Is it really the same? I believe that I feel better after the safer approach, as I don't have to feel the same risk factor leading into the completion. But to be honest, I really cannot say. I've not been able to perform a side-by-side comparison. [...] Here's the difference - an engine failure is a genuine emergency, and nobody I know wants one of those. A real approach to minimums? We all know it's an increased-risk operation, but I know more than a few people who seek it out, for "training value" and we think nothing of it. In fact, we consider it good training. When I intentionally choose the lowest local ceilings and visibilities for instrument training, is that about enjoying a bit of danger or providing the best, most challenging training available? And how do you separate the two? To my mind, easily. [...] I once went to a seminar that dissected a crash. I knew the pilot, and I knew how it happened. The seminar was very interesting, in the sense that a work of fiction can be interesting. It had nothing at all to do with what really happened. Lacking the direct knowledge you had, I cannot say. Since the pilots didn't survive in the example I used, we all knew that some guesswork was involved on that side of things. That's almost beside the point, though. Assuming the information presented was accurate, there is clearly value in examining past accidents. But is a safety seminar the best venue for this? I would suggest that it is not - that the optimal venue is hangar flying. Hanger flying wouldn't have easily afforded the recordings, video and audio, that were presented. That said, of course informal discussions are good too. [...] I've been to a couple like that. There was one on flying over the Gulf and the Caribbean by a guy who does it every year. I learned a lot. But flying over the Gulf has inherent risks, and while I suppose if you're going to go anyway you're better off going to the seminar than doing it cold, I can honestly say that all his seminar did was encourage me to cut across the Gulf when the opportunity presented itself. Turned out that there were things he didn't cover and there were a few tense moments there. I suppose he did a good enough job, since I'm still here and would go again (doing it a bit differently this time) but I can't in good conscience call it a safety seminar. I'm not clear on your point, here. What would you call it? - Andrew |
#43
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![]() "Snowbird" wrote in message om... and a long-time CFI. But his "solution" is to have a one-day course, associated with the National Convention, in which pilots pay a hefty fee ($100-$200) for 'recurrant training' done by "national names". I think perhaps a much more relevant and successful approach would be to have this course be relevant to your specific airplane type. Whether the program is done by a "national name" or not, how about a specific review of accidents related to your airplane type and then a discussion of how those accidents can be prevented? This seems to me to be more "doable" than a generic "aviation safety" program and it also seems to me that this would be more relevant to your particular type association. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#44
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Of course it will only work for those motivated to continue learning.
Still, it will at least provide continued exposure to information for those that are motivated, and hopefully even those not so motivated will benefit from that exposure. In my profession, you can pick and choose which CE's to complete. Some are brainless, some are challenging. Some are not applicable to a particular branch of the profession. I'd like to have access to standardized lesson plans for CE in piloting that would be applicable to my level of flying (single engine, light aircraft). I know it would help me. Now there will be those that will go for the brainless, easy lessons. "You can lead a horse to water..." I think it would be an economic way to improve pilot skills. "Richard Kaplan" wrote in : "smpharmanaut" wrote in message .51... It works in the medical professions. No, it doesn't "work" in the medical profession. Most doctors are self-motivated and attend CME courses out of their own interest. Those docs who are not interested in CME have lots of ways to go on a ski vacation and get credit for the CME course anyway. The same happens with CFI renewal courses right now and would happen with mandatory pilot CME -- those who would benefit don't need the mandate. -------------------- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#45
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"smpharmanaut" wrote in message
.51... mandatory continuing education for pilot license. After I'd been flying for awhile, I began to notice a disturbing decline in the proportion of my time spent looking outside (flying VFR). In retrospect, it's easy to see how that could happen: there's no overt feedback to remind you that you're doing something wrong when your eyes linger inside the cockpit, so a bad habit of neglecting the exterior scan can easily creep up on you. I made a conscious effort to monitor and correct the problem. But I wonder what other bad habits might develop unnoticed. I suspect that recurrent training every two years is inadequate to catch such problems in a timely manner. One possibility, of course, is to fly with an instructor (or at least another pilot) far more often. Another would be to compile an list of bad habits that can develop in the absence of corrective feedback, and explicitly monitor for them. Or perhaps it'd be beneficial to videotape oneself while flying, and review the tape afterwards (perhaps showing representative portions to an instructor) to watch for any lapses. --Gary |
#46
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![]() I began to notice a disturbing decline in the proportion of my time spent looking outside (flying VFR). Try covering up most of the instruments. VFR you don't really need much. Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#47
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"Richard Kaplan" wrote
Well airbags in seatbelts are one nice up and coming possibility for a safety improvement. Why go so far? The reality is that a huge chunk of the fleet is still flying around without shoulder harnesses. Ever wonder why? I don't. I've installed two sets. Both were ridiculously expensive and poorly designed. Why? FAA. Perhaps terrain avoidance systems can help prevent CFIT accidents, but is that an airplane improvement or a pilot improvement? It's an airplane improvement. While it's always the pilot's responsibility to avoid terrain, the truth is that no pilot (suicides excepted) ever intentionally pointed his airplane at terrain. The easier it is to maintain situational awareness, the less likely the pilot is to do it. In fact, I believe the whole issue of workload deserves a lot more consideration. The more a pilot has to do, the more likely he is to make a mistake. Do you realize that every car sold in the past 10 years has highly reliable, very efficient FADEC with single-lever control? Why are they a rartiy on airplanes? FAA. Perhaps weather datalink can help reduce weather accidents, but really that is providing info to the pilot, not improving the airplane per se. But it is improving the airplane. Pilots do not intentionally fly into weather they can't handle. They fly into weather they think they can handle, and they are wrong - IMO usually about the weather, not their capabilities. The more accurate, timely, and user-friendly the weather-update system becomes, the less likely pilots will be to make these mistakes. In any event, it will take a really long time for this to trickle down to the majority of the GA fleet... airplanes have a much longer average useful life than cars. Why? FAA. Economics has a lot to do with this of course... there is no doubt in my mind that adding TKS to all GA airplanes would significantly reduce icing accidents... but that is not practical. Why not? Frankly, there's just not that much to the system. Most of the system cost is regulatory compliance. In other words, FAA. So I do think focusing on pilots is more important than focusing on airplanes. No, I think that's the wrong focus. If we're going to make a major effort to address a systemic problem, it should be the correct systemic problem. The FAA. Michael |
#48
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"Teacherjh" wrote in message
... I began to notice a disturbing decline in the proportion of my time spent looking outside (flying VFR). Try covering up most of the instruments. VFR you don't really need much. The problem wasn't that I was paying too much attention to the instruments. Rather, I was starting to spend too much contiguous time on other tasks (tuning radios to initiate flight following or open my flight plan; looking at charts, etc.) with only a cursory glance out the window. I also noticed that my visual scan would pause unnecessarily while I was talking over the radio--kind of like drivers with cell phones, I guess. --Gary |
#49
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Andrew Gideon wrote
When I intentionally choose the lowest local ceilings and visibilities for instrument training, is that about enjoying a bit of danger or providing the best, most challenging training available? And how do you separate the two? To my mind, easily. Then spell it out for me. Which am I doing, and why? Lacking the direct knowledge you had, I cannot say. Since the pilots didn't survive in the example I used, we all knew that some guesswork was involved on that side of things. But there's a difference between guesswork and outright twisting of the facts to support a point. John Galban posted an interesting story about how the latter happened with regard to an accident he was involved with. I've been to a couple like that. There was one on flying over the Gulf and the Caribbean by a guy who does it every year. I can't in good conscience call it a safety seminar. I'm not clear on your point, here. What would you call it? Advanced training? Encouraging dangerous behavior? It all depends on your point of view. Going across the Gulf is really not for the novice pilot, IMO. First off, it's not really something you do in a single engine airplane (since an engine failure leaves you basically no chances at all - the route I flew had me 50-120 miles from land for over 2 hours) so as a minimum you're looking at being a twin pilot. Second, even in a twin, there are issues. You are out of RADAR contact for hours, and have only very limited radio contact (relays via airliners passing overhead). There is effectively no way to update the weather picture, so you have a greatly increased likelihood of encountering adverse weather, while at the same time greatly reduced options for both landing and ATC assistance. It's all doable, but my point is that really the safest solution is not to do it. When you have a seminar that basically tells you how to do it, it's hard to call it a safety seminar. Suppose I put on a seminar about how to scud run. I might include tips like not flying at the bases of the clouds, where the vis is worst. I might cover route planning - instead of the usual VFR-direct, how to choose roads to follow for supplemental nav, being prepared for obstructions, etc. I would likely cover low altitude diversions - how to get to a nearby airport in a hurry. I might cover emergency procedures - off field precautionary landings with power and how to choose a field, an emergency instrument climb and what to expect from ATC, etc. I might discuss various techniques for slowing the plane down - when a notch of flaps might be appropriate, for example. I've been there and done that, and if you're going to scud run, I assure you that you're way better off going to this seminar than just doing it cold and figuring it out as you go along. But would it be a safety seminar? Michael |
#50
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