hindsight2020
Final Approach
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hindsight2020
Last time I checked, Ida may fuller wasn't a millennial. Spare us the generational canard. We re all innocent in Shawshank brother.
Don’t you think it would be more appropriate to make your point without ridicule?
Exactly. And I’m betting it wasn’t all that difficult..??
The sheep don’t listen, either way. From an effectiveness standpoint, it doesn’t matter at all.
That sounds like a convenient excuse for rude behavior.
But I agree though, that sheep don’t listen. The problem is that it’s easier to label someone than to actually articulate a point. So our definition of sheep quite naturally grows to include most anyone we disagree with.
My definition of sheep isn’t variable, perhaps yours is.
As far as “rude” goes, feel free to define that and we’ll see if your definition matches mine. I doubt it will.
What is your definition? Have you ever been wrong in assigning that label?
I shouldn't bite... but wasn't the whole NFL kneeling thing basically stemmed from this very thing exactly? There appears to be a perception that certain groups were, or are, being unfairly treated and targeted and discriminated against by the people who should be keeping all of us safe, etc. I support our officers, it's not an easy job and not one that I would want. I have to assume @James331 is speaking at least partially in hyperbole, but I think we're absolutely right to be weary of where things *may* be headed. My parents immigrated here (legally) in the 1970s from a communist country, and my dad has repeatedly said that the 2000's and later era are evolving more and more to look like the country he left so many decades agodiscriminate against entire groups of human beings and put them to death for their religious beliefs, ethnicity or sexuality
You quoted me and directly responded using a word that you said you had a definition for. You involved me by quoting me.Doesn’t matter. Between me and them, and you’re not involved, nor do I require your approval for doing so.
Or did you think I needed your permission? Sheep might.
If you don’t want me to respond to you, don’t quote my posts and don’t address me. If you do quote me, the you can expect me to respond to you.
I doubt we'd see any real change in lives saved from accidents like this. @MauleSkinner is right as well, regulations like that remove the expectation and the ability of the PIC to exercise good ADM.
Some regulations make sense and are needed, but I'm skeptical of an immediate response to anything as a call for more regulation.
^can't figure out if you're being sarcastic or not lol. I've been trying to keep my replies shorter, ha!
^can't figure out if you're being sarcastic or not lol. I've been trying to keep my replies shorter, ha!
My parents immigrated here (legally) in the 1970s from a communist country, and my dad has repeatedly said that the 2000's and later era are evolving more and more to look like the country he left so many decades ago
Oh, jeez.
Gotta love it when American citizens ask the government to protect them from themselves. "Please make it a rule so I don't do something dumb!"
Wonder what the WWII generation would think of us.
What about a pilot community that says, if you’re not comfortable taking off in 1/4 mile vis, you’re not a competent IR pilot. Or that it shouldn’t be difficult, not even close.
Or, if you call those conditions challenging, your credentials are questioned?
The FAA allows it, so it must be safe right?
(I actually think that is a reasonable expectation for part 91 passengers to have, but that’s aside from my point.) If you can’t operate in the conditions the FAA has set as the boundaries, you aren’t doing your part to stay proficient.
Those questions are Edit: aren’t directed at you @MauleSkinner, I am just using your post to make a point.
Has anybody said that here?Honestly, when someone say "anyone who doesn't feel comfortable doing 0/0 takeoffs isn't proficient enough to be flying IFR" I immediately add them to the idiot list.
Has anybody said that here?
Honestly, if you’re an IR pilot taking off in 1/4 mike vis is (should be) a COMPLETE NON ISSUE.
For a competent IR pilot even 300 rvr should be a non issue.
I would tend to disagree with lumping those statements together...there's a difference between being comfortable with something and being proficient enough to do it, and neither one is 0/0.Not 0/0, but same idea.
In the context of the original posts, I took @Kritchlow 's statements to be regarding proficiency, not comfort.The idea is that if you are a competent IR pilot, you should be comfortable doing 300 RVR takeoff. Conversely, if you aren’t comfortable with it, that must means your competence is in question.
Whether the criteria is set at 300 or 0, the idea is the same. 300 RVR is below what most airline pilots can use. I think the whole idea is wrong to suggest private pilots with and IR should be comfortable using criteria that many if not most professionals can use.
I also think it’s careless, as I pointed out earlier, to broadly state that on a forum where many non-professional pilots could get the wrong idea.
IMHO, of course.
Oh, jeez.
Gotta love it when American citizens ask the government to protect them from themselves. "Please make it a rule so I don't do something dumb!"
Wonder what the WWII generation would think of us.
What about a pilot community that says, if you’re not comfortable taking off in 1/4 mile vis, you’re not a competent IR pilot. Or that it shouldn’t be difficult, not even close.
Or, if you call those conditions challenging, your credentials are questioned?
The FAA allows it, so it must be safe right?
(I actually think that is a reasonable expectation for part 91 passengers to have, but that’s aside from my point.) If you can’t operate in the conditions the FAA has set as the boundaries, you aren’t doing your part to stay proficient.
Those questions are Edit: aren’t directed at you @MauleSkinner, I am just using your post to make a point.
If a pilot can't stay on centerline with 300 feet of it visible, they most likely can't stay on centerline in good weather.I may be missing some of the context. He did mention that in a reply to me but I didn’t see it in the original posts.
I could substitute proficient for comfortable in my above statement and still be ok with it. Many IR pilots don’t need to deal with that. And if they set their personal criteria higher and avoid it altogether, I don’t think that makes them less of a pilot. More likely the opposite.
I do think most IR pilots could be trained to perform those without issue, I don’t remember having any particular problem with it. But could and should are much different.
If a pilot can't stay on centerline with 300 feet of it visible, they most likely can't stay on centerline in good weather.
If a pilot can't rotate and transition immediately to controlled instrument flight, they most likely have issues with instrument flight otherwise.
The proficiency part isn't about the weather...it's about basic aircraft control. I see far too many pilots who don't have that.
They ARE being consistent. As I wrote in an earlier post, they regulate commercial transportation more stringently than private transportation. I am glad that they don't try to micromanage decisions any more than they already do.Not asking the government to protect me from myself. I can protect myself just fine, thanks. I'm asking that the government be consistent in their need to, and their application of, regulations that they believe are protecting us.
It was significantly dense at the time and didn’t lift until mid to late morning. He wouldn’t have been in VMC by the end of the runway. I would imagine the tops were around 2500’, based on eyeballing it as it was burning off.How thick are these fog layers in this area? If there is visibility to see the center line an IR pilot should be able to climb through a fog layer with no issues. If it's the kind of layer I'm imagining he'd probably be in clear skies by the end of the runway.
Not asking the government to protect me from myself. I can protect myself just fine, thanks. I'm asking that the government be consistent in their need to, and their application of, regulations that they believe are protecting us. Apparently, you can't tell the difference.
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Which is one reason I disagree with a "one standard" for all operations, commercial or private. In the commercial world, a "minimum" becomes a de facto requirement. In other words, if you're approved and equipped for 500 RVR, it basically means that if it's 500 RVR you won't have a choice as to whether to takeoff or not.All that may or may not true, I would say it’s partially true. But it does oversimplify it. All IMC conditions are not equal and the regulations reflect that. The challenges to operating in IMC are not all equal.
The mechanics to taking off low vis are not that difficult, I agree. Those mechanics are also mostly consistent with other regimes of IFR flight. But I think it involves some challenges that increase the difficulty for people only regulated by Part 91.
1. The transition to IMC occurs during a transition in phase of flight.
2. You are losing visual cues right when the vestibular system is impacted from being connected to the ground, to airborne and experiencing acceleration and a climb.
3. Your going directly from on the ground to IMC. There’s no warm up time for someone who may be slightly rusty, or a little off in general and not know it yet. Maybe a little stuffy in the sinuses but didn’t notice it.
All that may be fine for someone current and proficient, or has another pilot in the cockpit. But it also can be a real threat to someone who thinks it’s no big deal because the have an IR and are current by the FAAs standards. Or, because the pilot community in general says they should be able to do it no problem.
So is the government (FAA) not deficient by your measure in not regulating all of aviation to the same standard? Clearly the government believes it is protecting us with the high levels of regulation and standards it applies to Commercial carriers. There is a direct and irrefutable correlation between the fatal accident rate and the amount of regulation being applied to each of E-AB, GA and Commercial carriers. Knowing this shouldn't the government be consistent?
I am not trying to be deliberately obtuse here. I am trying to understand your reasoning and how it should apply beyond the narrow example of 0/0 takeoff conditions.
You actually think the government cares about you?
That's cute
...As I mentioned earlier, commercial rules are there in large part to remove pilot judgment from the equation. The target is to remove bad judgement, but good judgment is also removed.
I think they do make sense, they make sense because they differentiate between someone who makes aviation his business versus someone for whom it is a hobby - consistent with other spheres of human activity. But this is just my opinion. But you can petition your lawmakers to rewrite the rules, no doubt they will be a hearing and opinions will vary greatly. You might win by presenting super tight arguments but the other side will produce counter-arguments, we will see where chips will fall.Regulations need to make sense.
I agree.As I mentioned earlier, commercial rules are there in large part to remove pilot judgment from the equation. The target is to remove bad judgement, but good judgment is also removed.
Hell, at this point I’d take a quarterly or annual update over updates every other day that effectively turn my phone into a brick....And of course there’s the reality that even the ultra-safe $10,000+ GPS units are still getting nearly quarterly software updates to squash deadly software bugs, or at least annually, and we’re talking models that have been out for over a decade.