acrophile
Line Up and Wait
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- May 26, 2013
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acrophile
Sad. Could be any of us. RIP.
Man, pretty horrible all around. I couldn't help but notice this comment on the mercurynews site: "The plane was almost 40 years old, definitely on its last legs. No I wouldn't drive a 40 year old car to Gilroy much less Las Vegas. Imprudent action on the part of the pilot."
Tragic. I'm not sure what went wrong, but this kind of thing is what puts the weight on my shoulders every time I fly... especially with my family on board. It's that worst-case scenario that I never speak of and scarcely want to think of but is there reminding me that I better do everything right. Damn.
Pretty sure you're not accepting an IFR clearance without an instrument rating.
Can someone post the liveATC feed?
My girlfriend used to get "disappointed" when I cancelled a flight. She has come to know the reasons for my decisions and now she never pressures me when I say, "not today."
I still feel that "self-imposed" pressure. But I won't succumb!
Can someone post the liveATC feed?
As a guy that owns a PA32 with a wife, two daughters, and a son that often fly with me I wonder how I can avoid this exact scenario... I'd like to think that I wouldn't put myself, or my family, into a situation that was questionable, but I have to imagine that this guy didn't think he ever would either...
Do I not fly in inclement weather? Do I avoid taking my family with me?
Did this guy completely lack situational awareness?
I guess it boils down to; how am I not this guy?
RIP to the family.
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You can hear the kids screaming I wish I never played it.
Pretty sure you're not accepting an IFR clearance without an instrument rating.
I never listen to the ATC feeds on crashes unless it's a safety flight video. Doesn't set well with me, I try to learn about the event without listening to it.
You can see where the crash is way off of a direct route. I wonder how he got off course so badly.
I try not to criticize dead pilots. Anyone have the recording? Im interested.
Some of the AOPA safety videos have audio that is sobering without being too disturbing. I find it very helpful to watch those (that may be the safety flight videos you refer to).
Maybe he wasn't flying direct? Not being on a direct route does not equate with being off one's planned course. Maybe he was trying to avoid the peaks. I have not seen any graphics showing his planned route overlaid with his actual course and the accident site. If you have that, please post.
A few seconds before the mayday call, ATC instructed him to "turn right immediately", with no mention of traffic, weather, or any other explanation. That's consistent with his being off course from his clearance.
You can see where the crash is way off of a direct route. I wonder how he got off course so badly.
And if ATC was instructing him to turn right in order to get him back on his clearance route that would have put his assigned route further south which would have been further away from a direct route. Correct?.
You can see where the crash is way off of a direct route. I wonder how he got off course so badly.
I try not to criticize dead pilots. Anyone have the recording? Im interested.
...
So, why is anyone assuming he was way off course just because he was not on a direct route that would have taken him and his family over the tall granite including possibly Whitney? I think most pilots would have probably flown the doglegged route that he appeared to be on.
Just remember, for every crash like this there are thousands of guys like me who safely flew their family coast to coast, Canada to Mexico, year 'round, for decades, all VFR.I often dream of taking my family on trips in our own little plane...(someday) Things like this put a chill through me.
As a guy that owns a PA32 with a wife, two daughters, and a son that often fly with me I wonder how I can avoid this exact scenario...
I guess it boils down to; how am I not this guy?
Just remember, for every crash like this there are thousands of guys like me who safely flew their family coast to coast, Canada to Mexico, year 'round, for decades, all VFR.
Sadly, that made-up statistic is exaggerated by more than an order of magnitude.
Roughly 1% of the US GA pilot population is killed in crashes every two decades (~300 per year out of ~600,000 pilots). So for each pilot killed in a 20-year period, there are merely dozens--not hundreds, and certainly not thousands--who survive.
Sadly, that made-up statistic is exaggerated by more than an order of magnitude.
Roughly 1% of the US GA pilot population is killed in crashes every two decades (~300 per year out of ~600,000 pilots). So for each pilot killed in a 20-year period, there are merely dozens--not hundreds, and certainly not thousands--who survive.
Yeah, but why do think the same three hundred guys crash EVERY YEAR? What, are they the luckiest guys in aviation?