Sport Pilot
Pre-takeoff checklist
I have to say, the Mortuary forum I belong to is not as lively as POA. You guys are a hoot.
I have to say, the Mortuary forum I belong to is not as lively as POA. You guys are a hoot.
Whoa! They have those?I have to say, the Mortuary forum I belong to is not as lively as POA. You guys are a hoot.
I decided to purchase The Killing Zone based on a recommendation here. The author says: "...a person is 10.9 times more likely to be involved in a fatal general aviation aircraft accident than in a fatal car accident."
And he backs it by real stats. Not to scare off anyone, but there is no doubt it’s risky. But again I know a lot of people who died prematurely and didn’t even see the inside of a GA plane
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In my opinion (no actual facts to back it up) GA flying is about as safe as riding motorcycles on the street. Flying would be safer than motorcycles if it wasn't for that gravity thing.
I have to say, the Mortuary forum I belong to is not as lively as POA. You guys are a hoot.
Now I want to know what morticians talk about.
Flying.
Though I am a mortician, I have advanced training and certified in craniofacial reconstruction. Basically, if it’s a closed casket, they call me.
As far as flight safety, I did not feel confident on Tuesday as I was flying. Even though I have already passed my written and studied aviation for months, I felt as though all the information was lost.
Coming home after the flight training, I felt intimidated and overloaded with everything. I sure hope it gets better over time.
Never ride with a pilot who knows no fear.I met a vet few months back, he has a little over zillion hrs in all kinds of fighter planes, he told me one thing that I hope I never forget. His words: “son, the day u tell yourself, I’ve got this , don’t take off. Most likely that flight will kill you.”
Good point, you got me. . .maybe not WAY over your skill?But how does one obtain the skill?
How did it save you? Not being a jerk, but did it, really? Or maybe just prevent a near-ish miss, instead? If it saves even one life. . . we wasted a lot of money for a woefully inadequate ROI.Pretty broad statement from one year of data. As one who just recently had an ADS-B traffic alert save my pink butt, I disagree wholeheartedly with your premise. Secondly, you seem to disregard the possibility that having FIS -B may just prevent the aforementioned blunder into hazardous weather.
ADS-B enhances situational awareness. Situational awareness saves lives. Therefore ADS-B saves lives. Syllogistically rather than statistically speaking.
I have to say, the Mortuary forum I belong to is not as lively as POA. You guys are a hoot.
Statistically flying is actually more safe than driving a car.
Most dangerous part of flying is driving to the airport.
Coming home after the flight training, I felt intimidated and overloaded with everything. I sure hope it gets better over time.
"General aviation pilots frequently used to tell themselves, and their passengers, that the drive to the airport was the most dangerous part of the trip. They wanted to believe that flying their piston-engine general aviation airplane was safer than driving.
How did it save you? Not being a jerk, but did it, really? Or maybe just prevent a near-ish miss, instead? If it saves even one life. . . we wasted a lot of money for a woefully inadequate ROI.
The same is pretty much true about miles ridden on motorcycles, etc.ALL statistics regarding the GA fleet are very suspect, borderline invalid. Why?
You were there, I wasn't, so maybe/maybe you might have hit. No way to know for sure, of course. Maybe you would have been in the very small mid-air stats. But probably not. Eight billion+ $$$$, likely not counting FAA staff costs and aircraft owner costs; yeah, other benefits accrue for traffic managemt, especially for FAA, but mid-air avoidance isn't one of them. The safety aspect is a crock, a selling point easy to articulate, but not substantive. Real world, you spend to reduce risk, but not to completly eliminate it, else the last few percentage point imorovement costs you exponentially more.Aircraft descending into pattern at departure end. I was turning crosswind, my wing blocked my view. ADS-B alerted and pointed +200 and where to look. Had I continued to climb, there would have been a mid-air. And if the one life is your own, the investment is priceless. So yes, don't be a jerk.
Valid/invalid is an example of the fallacy of the excluded middle. I agree that accident rates are not as accurate as we might like, but data don't have to be perfect in order to be useful. Take the comparative risk numbers that John King cited, for example: How likely is it that the hours-and-miles data are off by more than a factor of seven? That's what it would take for the claim that "the drive to the airport is the most dangerous part of the trip" to be true. Furthermore, that claim is not based on inaccurate data, it's based on NO data, yet no one questions the statistical validity of that....We have no good data about how many hours the GA fleet flies per annum, and in what conditions. So statments like: "All GA flying is safer than/is more dangerous than riding [insert vehicle of choice]" are statistically invalid. Period. We can guess, estimate, etc. even use Ouija Boards but the answer is statistically invalid....
...the drive to the airport is the most dangerous part of the trip