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 |
#41
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
Also, as Dale said. I also think I am probably mostly lucky.
Ramy |
#42
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 6:07:47 PM UTC-8, 2G wrote:
I did - 20 years worth. Read every last one of the fatals and a lot of the major damage ones as part of an article I wrote for Soaring. I can give you a full statistical rundown as well - by phase of flight, type of glider, region of the country, contest/XC flight vs local, etc. I think you mis-understood me. A pilot makes hundreds to thousands of in-flight maneuvers every flight hour. Almost all of them executed without incident. Many of them are made based on presumptions about what the airmass, pilot workload, traffic situation, aircraft response and physical/mental capabilities of the pilot are likely to be over the next N seconds. Most of the time the consequences of being a bit wrong on where you are in the probability distribution of all of the above doesn't matter, but sometimes it does.. You can attempt to move where you are in the probability distribution of unexpected bad things by increasing your margins, but it's not a panacea. I would speculate that many of the stall/spin accidents I've seen in the mountains had a fair amount to do with the airmass not doing what the pilot expected. You can say - well, don't fly in the mountains! I think that's not especially helpful. An awful lot of final glides gone bad are the result of persistent sink that exceeded the pilot expectation plus whatever buffer he had. I personally interviewed a number of midair-involved pilots and I can tell you that even with a very good scan your odds of picking up an aircraft on a collision course (particularly if it's head-to-head) is about 50/50. Your fovea just isn't big enough for the closing velocities of aircraft.. The Air Force, NASA and various air safety bodies around the world have studied it to death and that's the rough number they come up with. That's one reason we have Flarm - you can't train yourself to have a bigger fovea. You can call all of that poor airmanship if you want, but I think you're whistling past the graveyard a bit. Andy Andy, I recommend that you do what I did: review ALL of the fatal glider accidents for the last two years and get back to me. Hint: those accidents did not fall into the 0.01% category. Tom |
#43
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
2G wrote on 11/27/2019 6:02 PM:
On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 11:16:46 AM UTC-8, Eric Greenwell wrote: Dave Nadler wrote on 11/27/2019 6:16 AM: On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 8:07:07 AM UTC-5, Tango Eight wrote: What about tunnel vision or "momentary lapses of judgement" isn't poor airmanship? Only someone else would exhibit "Poor Airmanship". "A momentary lapse" or "Tunnel vision", not so much... Be careful out there, Best Regards, Dave I think "poor airmanship" is such a broad term, it tells us nothing useful. Perhaps the term "pilot error" is more specific and useful, particularly when talking about pilots that clearly are good airman, yet have an accident. It gives you a specific reason that you can avoid or learn to control. I think Ramy is pointing out what we all know: all pilots make errors, and it is the margins we use that determine the consequences of the error. Somewhere near the start of this thread, it was posited that margins can erode over time for a number reasons, and previously safe pilot becomes, unknowingly, an unsafe pilot. "Pilot error" simply refers to the pilotage portion of airmanship. The whole idea of quoting statistics is to imply that these events are random and out of your control, which couldn't be further from the truth. My advice is if you apply good airmanship you are unlikely to become one of these statistics. For example, there IS NO reason for anyone to stall/spin turning final. This is good news. I'm not sure what you mean by "pilotage", which generally refers to navigation. I use "pilot error" more broadly than that; eg, I include misreading a weather forecast, mistuning a radio, entering the wrong airport ID in the GPS, over-ruddering in a turn, and generally any mistake the pilot makes during the preparation for and the flight itself. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
#44
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 9:49:10 AM UTC-8, Andy Blackburn wrote:
On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 6:07:47 PM UTC-8, 2G wrote: I did - 20 years worth. Read every last one of the fatals and a lot of the major damage ones as part of an article I wrote for Soaring. I can give you a full statistical rundown as well - by phase of flight, type of glider, region of the country, contest/XC flight vs local, etc. I think you mis-understood me. A pilot makes hundreds to thousands of in-flight maneuvers every flight hour. Almost all of them executed without incident. Many of them are made based on presumptions about what the airmass, pilot workload, traffic situation, aircraft response and physical/mental capabilities of the pilot are likely to be over the next N seconds. Most of the time the consequences of being a bit wrong on where you are in the probability distribution of all of the above doesn't matter, but sometimes it does. You can attempt to move where you are in the probability distribution of unexpected bad things by increasing your margins, but it's not a panacea. I would speculate that many of the stall/spin accidents I've seen in the mountains had a fair amount to do with the airmass not doing what the pilot expected. You can say - well, don't fly in the mountains! I think that's not especially helpful. An awful lot of final glides gone bad are the result of persistent sink that exceeded the pilot expectation plus whatever buffer he had. I personally interviewed a number of midair-involved pilots and I can tell you that even with a very good scan your odds of picking up an aircraft on a collision course (particularly if it's head-to-head) is about 50/50. Your fovea just isn't big enough for the closing velocities of aircraft. The Air Force, NASA and various air safety bodies around the world have studied it to death and that's the rough number they come up with. That's one reason we have Flarm - you can't train yourself to have a bigger fovea. You can call all of that poor airmanship if you want, but I think you're whistling past the graveyard a bit. Andy Andy, I recommend that you do what I did: review ALL of the fatal glider accidents for the last two years and get back to me. Hint: those accidents did not fall into the 0.01% category. Tom The air in which we fly is not uniform, sometimes not even honest. Peter Masak, was a great pilot. He met fate flying in an area and conditions he was familiar with. While I did not view his GPS trace I did speak with a pilot whom did. Nothing unusual noted in the GPS. You can stall at any speed and any attitude. We have seen this in the Sierra's. Andy's right on about the stall/spin accidents, sometimes there are other factors. One of the things I worked with a XC student I had was noticing and calling out changes in airmass. Sailors are particularly attuned to this. |
#45
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 11:57:58 AM UTC-8, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
The air in which we fly is not uniform, sometimes not even honest. Peter Masak, was a great pilot. He met fate flying in an area and conditions he was familiar with. While I did not view his GPS trace I did speak with a pilot whom did. Nothing unusual noted in the GPS. Yes, ridge/mountain flying presents increased risk compared to flying in the flat lands. I personally take the following precautions in order to minimize the additional risk associated with mountain flying: I fly a short winged glider in the mountains (12.6m span). I fly with an instrument that calculates wind speed and direction in near real time (LX 9000). I apply good airmanship when ridge flying, by maintaining generous margins in airspeed and distance from the ridge. I only fly competitions in flat lands. Branko XYU |
#46
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
At 21:12 28 November 2019, Branko Stojkovic wrote:
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 11:57:58 AM UTC-8, Jonathan St. Cloud wro= te: The air in which we fly is not uniform, sometimes not even honest. Peter = Masak, was a great pilot. He met fate flying in an area and conditions he = was familiar with. While I did not view his GPS trace I did speak with a p= ilot whom did. Nothing unusual noted in the GPS. Yes, ridge/mountain flying presents increased risk compared to flying in th= e flat lands. I personally take the following precautions in order to minim= ize the additional risk associated with mountain flying: I fly a short winged glider in the mountains (12.6m span). I fly with an instrument that calculates wind speed and direction in near r= eal time (LX 9000). I apply good airmanship when ridge flying, by maintaining generous margins = in airspeed and distance from the ridge. I only fly competitions in flat lands. Branko XYU Yes, interesting approach to mountain flying. However a 12.6m wingspan (low performance) is going to mean you spend a LOT more time down near the rocks than if you were in an 18m ship? It's been suggested that European Alpine statistics show that 15m ships have a worse accident rate than 25m ships? I don't know how these figures were generated: there are a lot more 15/18m ships flying than 25+m ships; is the analysis based on Alpine hours flown? For sure it's dangerous; just look at where most French glider pilots die: the Alps. Dave Walsh |
#47
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 1:12:43 PM UTC-8, Branko Stojkovic wrote:
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 11:57:58 AM UTC-8, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote: The air in which we fly is not uniform, sometimes not even honest. Peter Masak, was a great pilot. He met fate flying in an area and conditions he was familiar with. While I did not view his GPS trace I did speak with a pilot whom did. Nothing unusual noted in the GPS. Yes, ridge/mountain flying presents increased risk compared to flying in the flat lands. I personally take the following precautions in order to minimize the additional risk associated with mountain flying: I fly a short winged glider in the mountains (12.6m span). I fly with an instrument that calculates wind speed and direction in near real time (LX 9000). I apply good airmanship when ridge flying, by maintaining generous margins in airspeed and distance from the ridge. I only fly competitions in flat lands. Branko XYU Flat lands would be more dangerous for me as 99.9 % of my flying has been in the mountains , much of that in a 26.5 meter glider. Therein lays one of the issues when trying to quantify how safe this sport is. To me it is safe enough to want to do it as often as the daily struggles of life permit. |
#48
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
Saying that someone who crashed because he experienced unexpected
conditions (wind, sink, thunderstorms, etc.) is the definition of poor airmanship.Â* Quote all the statistics you want - I'd venture that the statistics were generated by pilots who didn't pay attention to the weather ahead or back at the home field, who tried too long to find that saving thermal and then couldn't reach a suitable field, who neglected to hook up one or more of the controls, who didn't drink enough water, who depended too much on electronics to keep them safe, etc. Now I'm not saying that electronics aren't of value, only that over reliance on them exhibits poor airmanship, as is blaming the weather, field conditions, etc.Â* As the pilot in command, you are the only one responsible for the safe conduct of the flight.Â* Take responsibility for your actions (or lack thereof). On 11/28/2019 10:49 AM, Andy Blackburn wrote: On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 6:07:47 PM UTC-8, 2G wrote: I did - 20 years worth. Read every last one of the fatals and a lot of the major damage ones as part of an article I wrote for Soaring. I can give you a full statistical rundown as well - by phase of flight, type of glider, region of the country, contest/XC flight vs local, etc. I think you mis-understood me. A pilot makes hundreds to thousands of in-flight maneuvers every flight hour. Almost all of them executed without incident. Many of them are made based on presumptions about what the airmass, pilot workload, traffic situation, aircraft response and physical/mental capabilities of the pilot are likely to be over the next N seconds. Most of the time the consequences of being a bit wrong on where you are in the probability distribution of all of the above doesn't matter, but sometimes it does. You can attempt to move where you are in the probability distribution of unexpected bad things by increasing your margins, but it's not a panacea. I would speculate that many of the stall/spin accidents I've seen in the mountains had a fair amount to do with the airmass not doing what the pilot expected. You can say - well, don't fly in the mountains! I think that's not especially helpful. An awful lot of final glides gone bad are the result of persistent sink that exceeded the pilot expectation plus whatever buffer he had. I personally interviewed a number of midair-involved pilots and I can tell you that even with a very good scan your odds of picking up an aircraft on a collision course (particularly if it's head-to-head) is about 50/50. Your fovea just isn't big enough for the closing velocities of aircraft. The Air Force, NASA and various air safety bodies around the world have studied it to death and that's the rough number they come up with. That's one reason we have Flarm - you can't train yourself to have a bigger fovea. You can call all of that poor airmanship if you want, but I think you're whistling past the graveyard a bit. Andy Andy, I recommend that you do what I did: review ALL of the fatal glider accidents for the last two years and get back to me. Hint: those accidents did not fall into the 0.01% category. Tom -- Dan, 5J |
#49
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 9:49:10 AM UTC-8, Andy Blackburn wrote:
On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 6:07:47 PM UTC-8, 2G wrote: I did - 20 years worth. Read every last one of the fatals and a lot of the major damage ones as part of an article I wrote for Soaring. I can give you a full statistical rundown as well - by phase of flight, type of glider, region of the country, contest/XC flight vs local, etc. I think you mis-understood me. A pilot makes hundreds to thousands of in-flight maneuvers every flight hour. Almost all of them executed without incident. Many of them are made based on presumptions about what the airmass, pilot workload, traffic situation, aircraft response and physical/mental capabilities of the pilot are likely to be over the next N seconds. Most of the time the consequences of being a bit wrong on where you are in the probability distribution of all of the above doesn't matter, but sometimes it does. You can attempt to move where you are in the probability distribution of unexpected bad things by increasing your margins, but it's not a panacea. I would speculate that many of the stall/spin accidents I've seen in the mountains had a fair amount to do with the airmass not doing what the pilot expected. You can say - well, don't fly in the mountains! I think that's not especially helpful. An awful lot of final glides gone bad are the result of persistent sink that exceeded the pilot expectation plus whatever buffer he had. I personally interviewed a number of midair-involved pilots and I can tell you that even with a very good scan your odds of picking up an aircraft on a collision course (particularly if it's head-to-head) is about 50/50. Your fovea just isn't big enough for the closing velocities of aircraft. The Air Force, NASA and various air safety bodies around the world have studied it to death and that's the rough number they come up with. That's one reason we have Flarm - you can't train yourself to have a bigger fovea. You can call all of that poor airmanship if you want, but I think you're whistling past the graveyard a bit. Andy Andy, I recommend that you do what I did: review ALL of the fatal glider accidents for the last two years and get back to me. Hint: those accidents did not fall into the 0.01% category. Tom Andy, What I call "poor airmanship" are the majority of the fatal accidents in the last two years (I have not gone further than that). I was with you right up to the "whistling" comment; I am only being realistic about what I read in the accident reports. When you stall/spin in the pattern, you are CLEARLY exhibiting sub-standard airmanship. Certainly you agree with that. The air mass can do some unpredictable things, and I have seen accidents that resulted from that. These are the minority of the accidents. I personally witnessed a stall/incipient spin in the pattern (he survived) and advised the pilot that his skills were sub-standard. He sold his glider and gave up the sport - perhaps I saved his life. I honestly don't understand the rational here. It seems that the majority of you think you are alive only by luck! I can assure you that that isn't the case. You can't train a pilot to be lucky, only skilled. When someone once told me that I was lucky in life, I replied "I make my own luck." Tom |
#50
|
|||
|
|||
Put your money where the risk is
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 11:57:58 AM UTC-8, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 9:49:10 AM UTC-8, Andy Blackburn wrote: On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 6:07:47 PM UTC-8, 2G wrote: I did - 20 years worth. Read every last one of the fatals and a lot of the major damage ones as part of an article I wrote for Soaring. I can give you a full statistical rundown as well - by phase of flight, type of glider, region of the country, contest/XC flight vs local, etc. I think you mis-understood me. A pilot makes hundreds to thousands of in-flight maneuvers every flight hour. Almost all of them executed without incident. Many of them are made based on presumptions about what the airmass, pilot workload, traffic situation, aircraft response and physical/mental capabilities of the pilot are likely to be over the next N seconds. Most of the time the consequences of being a bit wrong on where you are in the probability distribution of all of the above doesn't matter, but sometimes it does. You can attempt to move where you are in the probability distribution of unexpected bad things by increasing your margins, but it's not a panacea. I would speculate that many of the stall/spin accidents I've seen in the mountains had a fair amount to do with the airmass not doing what the pilot expected. You can say - well, don't fly in the mountains! I think that's not especially helpful. An awful lot of final glides gone bad are the result of persistent sink that exceeded the pilot expectation plus whatever buffer he had. I personally interviewed a number of midair-involved pilots and I can tell you that even with a very good scan your odds of picking up an aircraft on a collision course (particularly if it's head-to-head) is about 50/50. Your fovea just isn't big enough for the closing velocities of aircraft. The Air Force, NASA and various air safety bodies around the world have studied it to death and that's the rough number they come up with. That's one reason we have Flarm - you can't train yourself to have a bigger fovea. You can call all of that poor airmanship if you want, but I think you're whistling past the graveyard a bit. Andy Andy, I recommend that you do what I did: review ALL of the fatal glider accidents for the last two years and get back to me. Hint: those accidents did not fall into the 0.01% category. Tom The air in which we fly is not uniform, sometimes not even honest. Peter Masak, was a great pilot. He met fate flying in an area and conditions he was familiar with. While I did not view his GPS trace I did speak with a pilot whom did. Nothing unusual noted in the GPS. You can stall at any speed and any attitude. We have seen this in the Sierra's. Andy's right on about the stall/spin accidents, sometimes there are other factors. One of the things I worked with a XC student I had was noticing and calling out changes in airmass. Sailors are particularly attuned to this. Masak's accident was a CFIT, the most avoidable of all accidents. This occurred in a contest when he was trying to clear a ridge with a suitable landing field within reach. Every other pilot in the contest did not attempt this. Bottom line: there IS NO contest worth dying over; after all, we are not at war. https://app.ntsb.gov/pdfgenerator/Re...Final&IType=LA Tom |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Gliding risk.... | [email protected] | Soaring | 141 | December 11th 19 05:25 PM |
YOUR safety is at risk | BR549 | Instrument Flight Rules | 0 | December 13th 07 12:21 AM |
Safety at risk in FAA | Peterpan | Piloting | 7 | February 24th 05 08:58 PM |
how much money have you lost on the lottery? NOW GET THAT MONEY BACK! | shane | Home Built | 0 | February 5th 05 07:54 AM |
U.S. SCHOOLKIDS AT RISK | Cribsheet | Piloting | 0 | December 5th 04 05:29 PM |