AKiss20
Line Up and Wait
Largely agree with your assessment but I do question why that heli route even exists. So far it seems either it should have been NA when landing Runway 1 or 33, but there is no public evidence afaik of that policy existing (and you still seemingly have some conflicts for the opposing runways), or it requires ATC to actively slot helis between landing traffic as vertical separation of 500’ is seemingly not assured. It also seems PAT has a history of using visual separation to be able to shorten flight times.I'm really not understanding y'all's points. Fact of the matter is - planes gotta fly, pilots (especially military) gotta train. What we have here is a very unfortunate accident. Like nearly ALL accidents, it could probably have been avoided. Now we wait for the professionals to do what they do and make whatever changes may be necessary. Thousands die everyday from avoidable accidents.
It seems that a significant portion of the users of that heli route are PAT whose primary job is to fly big wigs around. Is their time so valuable that they *have* to fly down the river and can’t circumnavigate a few miles to stay out of the very close in final approach path to this riverside airport?
I don’t really buy that this was actually a “continuity of government” training mission. In such a scenario, if they have enough knowledge of an attack and time to get a heli to the pentagon, they would have enough time to divert traffic from DCA so it isn’t a factor (either for the heli pickup or a threat to the capitol). It doesn’t seem like forcing PAT to weave between normal and scheduled landing traffic is actually relevant or needed to simulate “continuity of government” conditions. It is, however, needed to simulate transporting General Smith so he doesn’t have to sit in traffic or whatever…
Maybe there’s a perfectly rational and more defensible reason that PAT has to fly down the river, but so far I’m not really seeing it.