Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
- Messages
- 16,021
- Location
- DXO124009
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Light and Sporty Guy
Zaon PCAS...That capability was already available to you via TCAS though.
Zaon PCAS...That capability was already available to you via TCAS though.
I think you hit the nail on the head saying it makes you feel safer.I understand what you're saying, but at the same time, I can't tell you how many times I've already been able to spot traffic via ADS-B that I wouldn't have otherwise seen.
I feel MUCH safer with this capability.
I think you hit the nail on the head saying it makes you feel safer.
I'm not so sure that I feel safer when I think that a pilot has his eyes focused on a screen without keeping a sharp lookout outside the cockpit, especially in the airport environment.It is safer - you are notified about planes around you even if this is not a 100% radar-like picture you are getting.
I'm not so sure that I feel safer when I think that a pilot has his eyes focused on a screen without keeping a sharp lookout outside the cockpit, especially in the airport environment.
If there is a pilot that can not multitask to the point of putting traffic scanning both in and out of the cockpit into their cycle they shouldn’t be flying IMHO.
Flying is about multitasking. Adding a glance at the screen for traffic every few minutes should not be too much for any competent, even marginally competent pilot,
I think you hit the nail on the head saying it makes you feel safer.
So we should just ignore them?
That said, if I was alerted to traffic converging from a direction where I was blind, I would make S-turns to try to get a visual on the traffic.
Okay then, should I ignore it? I have enough sense to not dodge traffic I can’t see. I have that much sense. Really!
so should I just ignore it?
This is solid advice. I’ve only changed my course once for traffic I couldn’t see. I could tell we both were headed for the same gap between rain showers and were both limited by the clouds above and the ground below. We were on a 90 degree intercept, knowing I was faster I turned to parallel his course to put some distance between us before returning to my original course.Well, the makers of Skywatch warned that one should never change course or altitude in an attempt to avoid traffic they cannot see. It can set up a “stutter-step” scenario where each plane maneuvers in such a way as to put them in conflict when they otherwise would not have been.
I think it’s good advice, but not regulatory, so do what you want.
That said, if I was alerted to traffic converging from a direction where I was blind, I would make S-turns to try to get a visual on the traffic.
It IS safer....but not AS SAFE as many people think it is.It is safer - you are notified about planes around you even if this is not a 100% radar-like picture you are getting.
It might be. But I'll wait until mid-air accident data comes out for 2020 and beyond before I say it IS safer.It is safer - you are notified about planes around you even if this is not a 100% radar-like picture you are getting.
It might be. But I'll wait until mid-air accident data comes out for 2020 and beyond before I say it IS safer.
Kind of like waiting for someone to die at an intersection so that you can justify a stop sign?
It might be. But I'll wait until mid-air accident data comes out for 2020 and beyond before I say it IS safer.
That’s the way at works. The stop signs are plugging up traffic flow everywhere except the dangerous intersections.
Yeah, even more hilarious than “Road May Flood” is “Bridge May Ice in Cold Weather.” Ya’ think?
I'm not sure what you're trying to say. You're comparing ADSB to a stop sign?Kind of like waiting for someone to die at an intersection so that you can justify a stop sign?
Which is one of the reasons why I feel it is not worth the cost.Given the rarity of mid air collisions, it would be hard to come to a statistically significant conclusion no matter how few mid-airs there are in 2020.
Which is one of the reasons why I feel it is not worth the cost.
TIS-B or not TIS-B, that is the question:Not only that, but this hobbyist fanaticism over TIS-B is and has been a monumental red herring in the mandate discussion.
I'm not sure what you're trying to say. You're comparing ADSB to a stop sign?
Often, safety measures have unintended consequences. I do not feel (there's that word again, "feel") that the ADSB mandate is remotely worth the cost, but I'm willing to say that maybe it will save lives. It could also have unintended consequences and cost lives, or have no effect either way. Only time will tell.
Mid-airs are very rare. It's going to take a long time and a lot of objective analysis to make any sense of mid-air accident data for 2020 and subsequent years.
When something happens once in 100,000 or x thousand chances, having it happen twice in one period doesn't really mean much.
TIS-B or not TIS-B, that is the question:
Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune
Or to install ADS-B against a sea of troubles
And by detecting, avoid them.
Not "plucking out of context", I'm saying its not the same thing, or even close to the same thing. If I was using your stop sign example to explain ADSB, I'd say the government forces owners of vehicles to install a device that might tell them another car is approaching the intersection, but might not always work to tell you. And the device costs 1/10 of the value of the car or more. But in this case, it would be worth more than ADSB in aircraft, because running-the-stop-sign deaths are a much more significant cause of traffic fatalities.No wonder since you plucked part of what I wrote out of context.
The poster seemed to imply that the technology couldn’t be justified without a mid air collision caused by lack of the technology. If that is the implication, that is akin to the common situation where a stop sign or traffic light won’t be budgeted until someone dies at the intersection.