Is it true you need an instrument rating in order to fly CAP Planes? This is coming from a Captain in the Civil Air Patrol.. wondering if I'll be able to fly a CAP Plane in the next couple of years after I get my PPL.
Fatal accident rate, or property damage accidents? I have a suspicion by how many folks don't care for the equipment when someone else owns it, they're probably as high or higher than rentals, when it comes to property damage without injury/death.
1. There are no PPL students.
They have the highest paperwork to flight hour ratio of any GA flying out there...
Plus you get to AF Cosplay
well, not exactly true all the time, everywhere. Most of the folks in my sqdn fly in the blue polo shirt. Don't think many of us have a flight suit. I don't.They have the highest paperwork to flight hour ratio of any GA flying out there...
Plus you get to AF Cosplay
Sure you can work on a rating, but I'm not sure cadets are allowed to solo in the 182 or 206. Would have to go look at the regs again, they change far too often.There are, of course, PPL students. Cadets are authorized to pursue their PPL in CAP airplanes(generally 172 only without special authorization). Any member is authorized to pursue their PPL in CAP gliders or balloons.
Safer than the rest of GA? Depends on what you want to include in "the rest of GA".
Safer than corporate jets? No.
Safer than your once a month weekend warrior? Yes.
It just depends.
Safer than non-CAP 172/182/206. In other words, all else being equal do CAP missions/pilots have a lower accident rate? Are there any stats to show it?
Anything that rises to the level of an accident that is reported on my NTSB is handled by them, so you'd have to search their database for the CAP owned tail numbers and then decide how you'd correlate their number of flight hours to the rest of the fleet.
So no. I doubt there's any reasonable numbers.
I don't believe the safety incident system is public, although frankly, it should be, considering where the funding comes from.
Very odd CAP thread. The CAP-haters have not shown up to yet-again provide their tired old anecdotes of CAP screwups. Nice.
Is it true you need an instrument rating in order to fly CAP Planes? This is coming from a Captain in the Civil Air Patrol.. wondering if I'll be able to fly a CAP Plane in the next couple of years after I get my PPL.
I'd kinda take those stats with a grain of salt. . .ethics haven't been a strong point at the National HQ, Region, or even Wing levels. Plenty of good folks, of course, but the overall corporate culture is sketchy.These statistics are over seven years old, but they're the latest I've found so far:
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Source (scroll to bottom)
If the numbers were phony, I would expect to see a steady downtrend.I'd kinda take those stats with a grain of salt. . .ethics haven't been a strong point at the National HQ, Region, or even Wing levels. Plenty of good folks, of course, but the overall corporate culture is sketchy.
CAP call signs and aircraft paint jobs are obvious, so anytime a CAP pilot screws up, it gets noticed, vice the nearly anonymous nature of generic Cessnas. We did have some weak suck pilots, for sure - but in about the same proportion as in GA as a whole.
As someone has already said: Not true. Everything you might want to know about CAP flying is here: https://www.capmembers.com/media/cms/R060_001_132EEB0197465.pdf Reading that thing will also give you a taste of the bureaucratic minds that you'll be dealing with. Life's a tradeoff; If you want to fly their airplanes, you jump through their hoops.Is it true you need an instrument rating in order to fly CAP Planes? This is coming from a Captain in the Civil Air Patrol.. wondering if I'll be able to fly a CAP Plane in the next couple of years after I get my PPL.
CAP only requires its members to report mishaps that arise out of CAP operations. Using a non-CAP aircraft on a CAP operation requires permission from the wing commander, and would therefore be rare. I'm not aware of any systematic means for CAP to track flight activities of members in non-CAP operations. So I would say that there is very little chance that the numbers include non-CAP operations.Would any calculations include a CAP member in a non-CAP aircraft? Maybe not.
Also, do other stats include the operator or just the pilot and plane involved? Maybe not.
Yikes!...Example: A few years ago they installed a national database system for entering aircraft squawks. Consistent with the non-delegating culture, every single squawk was automatically reported to multiple state/wing authorities and to various National HQ panjandrums. The result was that our wing/state direction (in writing!) was to minimize use of the squawk system so that (unstated) wing maintenance didn't "look bad." There was at least one airplane flying around with flaps that would not go to full deflection and we were verbally prohibited from reporting that in the squawk system.
What other stats are you referring to? And what do you mean by including the operator?
Uh....this doesn't make much sense, I own an airplane. I am a CAP member. One has nothing to do with the other. The "operator" and owner of a CAP airplane is the CAP corporation. The pilot is a CAP member.Would any calculations include a CAP member in a non-CAP aircraft? Maybe not.
Also, do other stats include the operator or just the pilot and plane involved? Maybe not.
Uh....this doesn't make much sense, I own an airplane. I am a CAP member. One has nothing to do with the other. The "operator" and owner of a CAP airplane is the CAP corporation. The pilot is a CAP member.
Re stats and dishonesty, CAP corporate culture abhors delegation and is highly punitive of errors. The culture is also very fond of collective punishment. The effect of this, in my experience, is that all levels do a lot of covering-up and outright lying to superiors. This behavior cannot prevent NTSB-level accidents from being reported but it does hide a lot of minor stuff like hangar rash, including things like prop stoppages (aka "strikes") in, for example, tall grass where the transgression is known only to those in the aircraft. And, yes, National staff is no different and will have tried to shade their numbers to present the most favorable case. Just IMO, of course.
Why on earth would CAP have any interest in my life unless I'm directly participating in a CAP activity? Absolutely not.As a CAP member - are you required to report anything that occurs in your airplane and your automobiles?
The graphic in post 25 implies CAP pilots are safer than the general population.
I thought I asked a relatively easy question: Are those rates for all members, or for members while operating CAP equipment.
Case in point. I'm in a club... I had an incident in my personal plane. The club can proudly boast no incidents? OR The club can accurately report no incidents in the planes and 1 incident among members? OR IF a former member had an incident in a non-club plane the club incident history is now 2, while only half the offensive pilots are still involved.
Is CAP more than "reconnaissance missions for homeland security, search and rescue, disaster relief"?
Do you get access to planes for personal use?
Validity for what purpose? CAP intended the slide to represent the accident statistics of CAP operations. They didn't intend it to represent the accident statistics of CAP members when they are engaged in non-CAP operations.I'm questioning the validity of the slide you posted about CAP "safety" in 2010. What reporting is required of a CAP member in non-CAP equipment?
Don't get me wrong, I'm glad people enjoy being in CAP. I'm glad it subsidizes their flying. I'm glad they do SAR missions.
It's not for me, and I'm not a CAP-hater, but I do question the statistics.