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#11
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
On Monday, May 7, 2012 7:06:22 AM UTC-6, Sean F2 wrote:
What happened in TN? http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html |
#12
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
On Monday, May 7, 2012 8:35:23 AM UTC-6, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Monday, May 7, 2012 7:06:22 AM UTC-6, Sean F2 wrote: What happened in TN? http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html Pilot surname is Miller, erroneously reported as Smith. I see they've now corrected the name in the report. The new Google Groups remains pretty yucky8^p |
#13
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
At 14:47 07 May 2012, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Monday, May 7, 2012 8:35:23 AM UTC-6, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Monday, May 7, 2012 7:06:22 AM UTC-6, Sean F2 wrote: What happened in TN? http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html Pilot surname is Miller, erroneously reported as Smith. I see they've now corrected the name in the report. The new Google Groups remains pretty yucky8^p Thanks for the update I hoped you were wrong,on the plus side there has not been a lot of publicity ,but I do find the endless fatalities upsetting. Jon |
#14
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
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#15
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
On 5/7/2012 9:23 AM, Jonathon May wrote:
At 14:47 07 May 2012, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Monday, May 7, 2012 8:35:23 AM UTC-6, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Monday, May 7, 2012 7:06:22 AM UTC-6, Sean F2 wrote: What happened in TN? http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html Pilot surname is Miller, erroneously reported as Smith. I see they've now corrected the name in the report. The new Google Groups remains pretty yucky8^p Thanks for the update I hoped you were wrong,on the plus side there has not been a lot of publicity ,but I do find the endless fatalities upsetting. Jon Jon, You're not alone in finding 'the endless fatalities upsetting.' If you're like me - and probably like a whole lot of other gliderpilots - you probably find the endless *accident* litany upsetting, too, whether minor or major. There's nothing any of us can do about past accidents, but I submit there *ARE* things each of us can (and should) do to help prevent future ones. Risking upsetting some readers by using the most recent USA accident of which I'm aware as a discussional point of departure... http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html ....I give the crashed glider's co-owner credit for positing what he thought might have gone wrong. If we assume the quotes are accurate as reported, and further assume the observations in them are accurate, this 'immediately' becomes a pilot-induced (and therefore quite preventable) accident. In any event, this particular pilot is luckier than most in that he at least gets the chance of a 'do-over' should he decide to continue with the sport. Most pilots in the pattern-stall-spin scenario die. Here's my point about what this pilot could (should?) have done differently had he ever vaguely suspected beforehand that he might one day set him up for a low, slow pattern (and thus heighten his chances for a whole host of possibilities associated with an inadvertent stall-spin to insinuate themselves into his pattern)... 1) Don't do it!!! (Don't make a low pattern entry.) 2) Don't do it!!! (Don't lower your pattern speeds; if anything increase 'em.) 3) Work extra hard on your coordination!!! 4) Never - EVER - depart controlled flight in the pattern. All 'Duh!' stuff, right? Except people continue to make these sorts of depressing (to everyone), easily preventable errors. I submit that if pilots really and truly thought beforehand (and here I mean while sipping a beer on the patio, not just as they're sinking inexorably toward a low-pattern-entry-point) they might just possibly some day crash their sailplane in a particular way (e.g. departure from controlled flight in the pattern), then they might work that much harder to NOT do precisely that. Where pilots 'need to be' when it comes to predictable, 'stupid pilot tricks', is in the place where the Navy pilot was when he responded to an ignorant reporter's amazed question/statement after he ejected during a low-energy catapult shot. The question/statement was to the effect: "Wow! How amazing you could make that sort of decision so quickly!" The response was: "That was a decision made long ago." I submit that many (most?) 'stupid pilot tricks' come about precisely because Joe Pilot - for whatever reason(s)...ignorance, mis-placed superhero attitude, whatever - has NOT pre-decided to 'actively work' to avoid them. Is this a harsh view? If anyone thinks so, then it is. But it's the view I've long had in my own flying, and (so far) it has worked for me. I can honestly say I've never had an insurance claim resulting from one of my own 'stupid pilot tricks.' Knock on wood... As the co-owner of the TN glider now knows too well, sometimes it's not always 'some other guy' (whom you don't know) who has the accident. Pilots who crash are from our little, highly interconnected community. If you think it's upsetting when strangers crash (even from 'chance' or from some previously undetectable airframe defect), it's an order of magnitude worse when it's someone you know...or worst yet, yourself. Flying inherently contains sufficient kinetic energy that to indulge in it without *actively* respecting the twin facts: a) gravity never quits, and b) Mother Nature doesn't care *what* Joe Pilot's experience is, is setting oneself up for higher chances of committing a stupid pilot trick. Respectfully, Bob W. P.S. Earlier this year there was a fatal private charter approach crash in western CO. Some survived, but not the 70,000+ hour pilot (not a typo!)/(active-)glider pilot. They hit the ground, apparently under control, apparently in a localized snow shower, in daylight, at an airport not constricted by nearby mountains. Why? I don't know, but you'll have to look a ways to find a more experienced pilot dying at the controls. Mother Nature and physics are a relentless, powerful combination demanding ceaseless respect from all pilots. To presume every pilot who pulls a 'stupid pilot trick' suffered (for example) medical incapacitation would be an example of ostrichian thinking in my view, maybe even denial. Compared to light twins (the plane in this particular accident), gliders are simple airplanes, flown entirely (in the USA) in VFR conditions. The NTSB database (and personal observation) strongly suggests (to me, anyway) the loosest nut in the whole glider is likely to be the one holding the top of the stick. |
#16
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
On May 7, 10:40*pm, BobW wrote:
On 5/7/2012 9:23 AM, Jonathon May wrote: At 14:47 07 May 2012, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Monday, May 7, 2012 8:35:23 AM UTC-6, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Monday, May 7, 2012 7:06:22 AM UTC-6, Sean F2 wrote: What happened in TN? http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html Pilot surname is Miller, erroneously reported as Smith. I see they've now corrected the name in the report. *The new Google Groups remains pretty yucky8^p Thanks for the update I hoped you were wrong,on the plus side there has not been a lot of publicity ,but I do find the endless fatalities upsetting.. Jon Jon, You're not alone in finding 'the endless fatalities upsetting.' If you're like me - and probably like a whole lot of other gliderpilots - you probably find the endless *accident* litany upsetting, too, whether minor or major. There's nothing any of us can do about past accidents, but I submit there *ARE* things each of us can (and should) do to help prevent future ones. Risking upsetting some readers by using the most recent USA accident of which I'm aware as a discussional point of departure... http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html ...I give the crashed glider's co-owner credit for positing what he thought might have gone wrong. If we assume the quotes are accurate as reported, and further assume the observations in them are accurate, this 'immediately' becomes a pilot-induced (and therefore quite preventable) accident. In any event, this particular pilot is luckier than most in that he at least gets the chance of a 'do-over' should he decide to continue with the sport. Most pilots in the pattern-stall-spin scenario die. Here's my point about what this pilot could (should?) have done differently had he ever vaguely suspected beforehand that he might one day set him up for a low, slow pattern (and thus heighten his chances for a whole host of possibilities associated with an inadvertent stall-spin to insinuate themselves into his pattern)... 1) Don't do it!!! (Don't make a low pattern entry.) 2) Don't do it!!! (Don't lower your pattern speeds; if anything increase 'em.) 3) Work extra hard on your coordination!!! 4) Never - EVER - depart controlled flight in the pattern. All 'Duh!' stuff, right? Except people continue to make these sorts of depressing (to everyone), easily preventable errors. I submit that if pilots really and truly thought beforehand (and here I mean while sipping a beer on the patio, not just as they're sinking inexorably toward a low-pattern-entry-point) they might just possibly some day crash their sailplane in a particular way (e.g. departure from controlled flight in the pattern), then they might work that much harder to NOT do precisely that. Where pilots 'need to be' when it comes to predictable, 'stupid pilot tricks', is in the place where the Navy pilot was when he responded to an ignorant reporter's amazed question/statement after he ejected during a low-energy catapult shot. The question/statement was to the effect: "Wow! How amazing you could make that sort of decision so quickly!" The response was: "That was a decision made long ago." I submit that many (most?) 'stupid pilot tricks' come about precisely because Joe Pilot - for whatever reason(s)...ignorance, mis-placed superhero attitude, whatever - has NOT pre-decided to 'actively work' to avoid them. Is this a harsh view? If anyone thinks so, then it is. But it's the view I've long had in my own flying, and (so far) it has worked for me. I can honestly say I've never had an insurance claim resulting from one of my own 'stupid pilot tricks.' Knock on wood... As the co-owner of the TN glider now knows too well, sometimes it's not always 'some other guy' (whom you don't know) who has the accident. Pilots who crash are from our little, highly interconnected community. If you think it's upsetting when strangers crash (even from 'chance' or from some previously undetectable airframe defect), it's an order of magnitude worse when it's someone you know...or worst yet, yourself. Flying inherently contains sufficient kinetic energy that to indulge in it without *actively* respecting the twin facts: a) gravity never quits, and b) Mother Nature doesn't care *what* Joe Pilot's experience is, is setting oneself up for higher chances of committing a stupid pilot trick. Respectfully, Bob W. P.S. Earlier this year there was a fatal private charter approach crash in western CO. Some survived, but not the 70,000+ hour pilot (not a typo!)/(active-)glider pilot. They hit the ground, apparently under control, apparently in a localized snow shower, in daylight, at an airport not constricted by nearby mountains. Why? I don't know, but you'll have to look a ways to find a more experienced pilot dying at the controls. Mother Nature and physics are a relentless, powerful combination demanding ceaseless respect from all pilots. To presume every pilot who pulls a 'stupid pilot trick' suffered (for example) medical incapacitation would be an example of ostrichian thinking in my view, maybe even denial. Compared to light twins (the plane in this particular accident), gliders are simple airplanes, flown entirely (in the USA) in VFR conditions. The NTSB database (and personal observation) strongly suggests (to me, anyway) the loosest nut in the whole glider is likely to be the one holding the top of the stick. It's interesting how sporty it is to speculate on an accident, the individuals in question...until it's your home field and your own club members. My only suggestion is we all keep it in our minds who reads these boards, and how silly we can look playing armchair quarterback, when we don't even have the playbook. Jordan ASW20 E |
#17
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
Unfortunately we have to speculate to learn lessons since there is one thing in common across almost all accidents whether they are fatal or not - those who knows the details, including the clubs and pilots involved, almost never share the details. The recent bailout was a welcome change. NTSB reports are usually useless.
Luckily the pilot involved in the stall/spin incident survived so am looking forward to read his timely report. It will be extremely valuable to learn from someone who survived a low altitude stall/spin what went wrong and how. Ramy |
#18
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
On Tuesday, May 8, 2012 9:37:39 PM UTC-6, Ramy wrote:
Unfortunately we have to speculate to learn lessons since there is one thing in common across almost all accidents whether they are fatal or not - those who knows the details, including the clubs and pilots involved, almost never share the details. The recent bailout was a welcome change. NTSB reports are usually useless. Luckily the pilot involved in the stall/spin incident survived so am looking forward to read his timely report. It will be extremely valuable to learn from someone who survived a low altitude stall/spin what went wrong and how. Ramy Agreed, that would be enlightening. We are still awaiting final reports on two fatal accidents here in Colorado from over a year ago. I broke bread with someone in the know Saturday night, and we may be waiting a good while longer. Frank W |
#19
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Fatal glider/tow plane accident, France
On May 7, 10:35*pm, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Monday, May 7, 2012 7:06:22 AM UTC-6, Sean F2 wrote: What happened in TN? http://www.t-g.com/story/1845882.html Pilot surname is Miller, erroneously reported as Smith. The old "low and slow" thing once again. |
#20
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Glad the guy in Tennessee survived and perhaps as previously stated we can learn something from him when he recovers and responds. I remember getting off tow in 800 FPM of sink (3000 foot tow) and intuitively knew not to stray too far from the airport. In about 3 minutes I found myself at pattern altitude at the IP, downwind, descending as if I had the spoilers deployed. I maintained good airspeed, turned a close base and final and didn't deploy the spoilers until I was right over the end of the runway. Never experienced a gravity storm like that before, haven't experienced one since. Bottom line is that sometimes things happen and while they are not completely beyond our control, they can be difficult to overcome. I was lucky considering my lack of experience at the time. Experience is the great teacher, one can only hope to live long enough and fly long enough to gain a level of experience that will keep us out of trouble. What I have learned thus far is that low and slow in the pattern is not good.
Walt |
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