Subsea
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2015
- Messages
- 232
- Display Name
Display name:
Subsea
What has to happen for them to make these things available to more aircraft?
What has to happen for them to make these things available to more aircraft?
I would hope the FAA would be more pro active than re active,when it comes to safety innovations. They should cut some of the red tape ,on approving things like emergency chutes.
Yep..Good to see another life saved.
The FAA could care less whether GA succeeds or fails. It's OUR job to put the FAA in it's place and get them out of our way.
Get the FAA out of the business completely. Look no further than EXP. Make the mfgs compete for a retrofit solution.
30 years ago, they almost, started, just begun, with some trepidation to make sense on the rules on retrofitting shoulder harnesses. Back then, you could install harnesses on almost any airplane with a simple logbook entry and a diagram. Heck, you could take used harness out of a car and install it in workmanlike manner and it would get the nod of approval. The FAA recognized that any harness was better than no harness.
That was then, when the FAA cared about saving lives. Things are different now. Look at the latest 'change' to the ADS-B mishigoss. Sleep Apnea, whatever. It's not about saving lives anymore. Power, control, authority.
I cannot even imagine what the state of aviation safety would be if there was no FAA. I do know that while I hate overregulation, no regulations would be disastrous. Finding the right balance is not an easy task.
That might be true for a shoulder harness but not for a parachute. You would want your odds to be very good that it would work properly before making the decision to pull. Otherwise you might be better off trying to make the landing yourself, especially if it was a failed engine rather than a control problem.30 years ago, they almost, started, just begun, with some trepidation to make sense on the rules on retrofitting shoulder harnesses. Back then, you could install harnesses on almost any airplane with a simple logbook entry and a diagram. Heck, you could take used harness out of a car and install it in workmanlike manner and it would get the nod of approval. The FAA recognized that any harness was better than no harness.
That might be true for a shoulder harness but not for a parachute.
I'd like you to provide your engineering studies that show a properly rigged and installed parachute landing is worse than no parachute at all.
Let's not forget the "workmanlike manner" qualifier I put in.
Of course, you too may be setting up a strawman that you can knock down.
I'll be waiting for your engineering studies with baited breath.
any harness was better than no harness.
Your statement was...
I don't need to provide any engineering studies to say that falling under a failed parachute is not better than attempting the landing yourself.
Everskyward;1826769[B said:]That might be true for a shoulder harness but not for a parachute. You would want your odds to be very good that it would work properly before making the decision to pull.[/B] Otherwise you might be better off trying to make the landing yourself, especially if it was a failed engine rather than a control problem.
Not necessarily. It would be interesting to know the reason for pulling the chute though.
There are OUTSTANDING quality harnesses out there.. Especially in the racing world....
For instance...
Just look at the final lap at Daytona on Sunday night.... 20 years old driver, put into the catch fence in front of the grandstand at about 200 MPH.. Came to a full stop in the length of your Citataion Sovereign.. or less...
Crawled out of the wreckage and waived to the crowd.......
Guys and gals... That is cutting edge stuff...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
Maybe I missed it somehow, but if not, I certainly wish that video included the part where he "Crawled out of the wreckage and waived to the crowd......."
Not necessarily. It would be interesting to know the reason for pulling the chute though.
Maybe I missed it somehow, but if not, I certainly wish that video included the part where he "Crawled out of the wreckage and waived to the crowd......."
And it was a very gay wave.
Maybe the forum Cirrus owners/pilots can chime in but IIRC, when you deploy the chute on one, it automatically becomes totalled and the insurance company's plane.It looks repairable.
People need to have more confidence in a parachute than a shoulder harness when they make the decision to use it. It doesn't matter how "workmanlike" the installation is if it fails.I don't know, some people are just making shyte up to be combative. I guess it's what you do.
If the industry, in their effort to provide a parachute to GA wants to make a sale, they won't be putting a box of tissue paper in a pillow sack and calling it a BRS.
Having been involved in the design of stuff for sale to a specific market before, there are some things we can take at face value. GA plane owners won't buy a BRS unless it's been tested at least a bit.
Your statement assumes facts not in evidence. If a harness is installed in a workmanlike manner and was approved by the FAA for install it will do a better job of protecting the people than none at all.
If a parachute is installed in a workmanlike manner and was approved by the FAA for install it will do a better job of protecting the people than none at all.
If you just want to argue a point, at least use a smidge of common sense. I know that's asking a lot.
I wasn't commenting on the quality of shoulder harnesses. If you put one on and it doesn't work it's no worse than having no shoulder harness. But that is not true of parachutes for reasons which would seem obvious.There are OUTSTANDING quality harnesses out there.. Especially in the racing world....
O rly?When Cirrus first came out with the parachute there were plenty of people here, on this board, who declared they would not use it because they felt their chances were better by making an emergency landing. Now that there have been many successful saves you don't hear that as much.
Maybe the forum Cirrus owners/pilots can chime in but IIRC, when you deploy the chute on one, it automatically becomes totalled and the insurance company's plane.
Just make sure you're adequately insured before the transfer ;-)That is correct. We call it the "ownership transfer lever"
What has to happen for them to make these things available to more aircraft?