Katamarino
Pattern Altitude
I think 60+ gallons of empty fuel tanks add buoyancy. ;-)
Only about 450 lbs. Guess it would help slow the sinking a bit?
I think 60+ gallons of empty fuel tanks add buoyancy. ;-)
Only about 450 lbs. Guess it would help slow the sinking a bit?
So me and another pilot are in a pretty heated debate about whether having a small scuba tank for each passenger in the event of a water ditching. We are talking about a piper Cherokee. He wants to buy each passenger position a small scuba tank to help escape.
im trying to convince him that it’s not necessary at all and would in the unlikely event of water ditching would only hinder.
I need some outside opinions because we are going in circles. Thanks
I would also want to add the main reason he thinks he needs it is the situation if you remember from AOPA safety institutes video where the pilot landed his float plane with the gears down and flipped and his son was tragically killed as his main argument.
So me and another pilot are in a pretty heated debate about whether having a small scuba tank for each passenger in the event of a water ditching. We are talking about a piper Cherokee. He wants to buy each passenger position a small scuba tank to help escape.
im trying to convince him that it’s not necessary at all and would in the unlikely event of water ditching would only hinder.
I need some outside opinions because we are going in circles. Thanks
Yeah, about 480 lbs. worth of buoyancy.My friend who did ditch his Cherokee reported no difficulty in getting out and that the airplane floated for a long time before it sank. I think 60+ gallons of empty fuel tanks add buoyancy. ;-)
I have to say if your biggest fear when flying is drowning, you may be doing something wrong. Unless you are in the Navy.
If I did a lot of driving over water out of gliding range of land, I probably would.Have you also thought about keeping a spare oxygen bottle in your automobile as well?
This. See the Helicopter crash in the Hudson a couple years back. One float didn’t deploy, one did, and it flipped over. The passengers had a crude belt cutter to cut their harness and watched a safety video before the flight. But in complete panic no passenger is going to be able to think rationally and get out in time unless they regularly face life and death situations or train to proficiency regularly.Are he and all passengers going to stay trained and proficient in donning the scuba equipment while hanging upside down underwater and in a state of panic?
There's no special knowledge or skill necessary to breathe on scuba. Everyone I've ever handed a regulator to has been able to breathe on the first try. And all this extra equipment can hang on a life vest. For a few hundred $, you've got several minutes of air. I get why some might spend their money elsewhere, but I really don't see any downside.Considering that people usually successfully egress the aircraft after the rare event of a ditching, I would be more concerned about how to keep them alive once they are out and to make sure that I will be found quickly: https://www.avweb.com/flight-safety/technique/ditching-old-wives-tales/
Like others said, I don't see any untrained, panicking person successfully breath out of a scuba bottle anyway. All the additional gear will likely also make if more difficult for them to get out, what should be the #1 priority anyway. Frankly, this idea sounds rather counterproductive to me.
There's no special knowledge or skill necessary to breathe on scuba. Everyone I've ever handed a regulator to has been able to breathe on the first try. [...]
Beats drowning.Without a mask on? When the regulator is full of water and they first have to blow it out, possibly while being under water?
Quite a few people struggle with the exercise even in a calm pool environment. Many people also find it mentally challenging to breath in under water.
All of those things are important, but are useless if you drown. Have all of those things. And then why discourage someone who wants air too? Spare Air or a HEEDS is not comparable to a pony bottle.Anyway, I don't think that he is focussing on the right things. I would certainly not want my freaked out passengers to start fiddling with a pony tank, when they have other stuff flying around, have water coming in, etc. - once we're in the water I want them out NOW.
The focus needs to be on emergency procedures, being found as fast as possible and to survive long enough. In terms of equipment, good live vests, an InReach and a life raft are the way to go. Don't load the passengers up with crap they won't be able to properly use anyway, that might hinder them to get out and that only distracts them from their main tasks in case of a ditching.
Beats drowning. All of those things are important, but are useless if you drown. Have all of those things. And then why discourage someone who wants air too? Spare Air or a HEEDS is not comparable to a pony bottle.