Flight tracking is blocked on FA. There's sparse coverage of the center frequencies in that area too.
OK, I found 511AC talking to Grissom as he was going into Marion. Forgot that Marions is UTC -4 this time of the year...
KGUS-Apr-02-2018-2030Z.mp3 from liveatc, (I can't post the full link yet).
511AC was cleared to desend to 2500, and instructed to report Marion in-sight.
at 27:18, or just a few seconds before, 511AC reported airport in-sight
ATC offered to cancel IFR, or wait till on the ground,
511AC cancelled IFR.
Tower said "No traffic between you and the airport, cancellation received, change to advisory frequency approved"
511AC acknowledged.
That would have occurred about 11 or 12 minutes before the time of the reported incident.
So without the recording from 122.7, there is no way to know what happened, except that the airport manager or someone had reported that the C150 pilot did broadcast intentions, I read that in one of the news articles but can't confirm it at this point.
....
Don't know anyone involved, but I fly in that area from time to time.@Chicago Bearhawk. Hello and welcome aboard POA. I noticed that you just joined POA yesterday and have made just three posts, all on this thread. So I feel compelled to ask if you have a particular interest in this accident and if so what it is? It’s perfectly ok if you do, I’m just curious. You seem to have done quite a bit of research and put some thought into it. Did you know someone involved?
I'm wondering too if I became a bit desensitized to all this. I remember in Tucumcari a couple of years back I landed on runway 8. As I rolled out, a crop duster landed on an intersecting runway silently. Although I was going to stop before the intersection, he saw me, throttled it up and leaped over the intersection, leaving me room to roll through (in the event, I didn't need to take it). I know I was on the right frequency, because an employee of the FBO asked me if I needed fuel. I suppose the cropduster was on a separate frequency to talk to his ground support. Instances like this happen pretty regularly and most of the time nothing happens, until this time. Have to ask if something I do needs to change.3. At KVPZ I have been witness to 2 or 3 runway incursions or near incursions (no accidents yet thank goodness), because of the crossing runways. This has included people on final unannounced.
Long time lurker (years!), first time poster. Not the type of thread I'd usually want my first post to be on but felt inclined to comment since this is near me (I'm in Indy) and this type of accident has always been my nightmare as a student pilot.
This type of incident shouldn't happen in 2018. Technology that costs less than a refueling probably could have prevented this (and I'm not talking about just ADS-B receiver + tablet etc...). Many GA accidents make me sad but this one just makes me angry. There is really no excuse for something like this to happen.
To be clear, I'm not faulting the pilots of either plane or anything like that (far from it!). I'm also not trying to be an armchair quarterback, especially given that we don't know all the details. I'm just saying, at a high level, this type of incident isn't acceptable any more (not that it ever has been!).
A cheapo tablet with GPS, a data connection, and everyone using an app that reports locations might have been able to help. Lights that change colors placed on or near the runways when sensors detect large objects or weight might have helped. Everyone communicating on the CTAF might have helped. Who knows. What I do know is we have more than enough cheap technology to make sure everyone has situational awareness at this point.
Speaking of cheap tech - one thing this incident is inspiring me to do is to research ways to stream data real-time with low latency so that, in the event of an accident the audio, flight data, and perhaps even video are stored on remote systems. That way, if anything ever happens, people that care can access it accordingly.
The tech to do the aforementioned is already there. The only issues would be bandwidth, latency, error handling, and data caps. That said, "off the shelf tech" can probably handle those issues with little or no tweaks and cost.
Our aircraft are excellent antennas - between satellites and terrestrial stations there should be very few data coverage gaps on our planet. If you can get wifi on international flights across vast swaths of ocean, there should be zero reason why things like Malaysia Flight 370 are still a mystery. Flight data and audio streaming should only take a few kilobits per second - you could hack out 1's and 0's via morse code and be it'd be close to being sufficient for that little amount of data.
My point with all of the above is - this incident shouldn't have happened in the first place and, since it has, we should already know far more than we do about it.
Perhaps a good first step would be if people donated less than $100 worth of equipment (RTL-SDR + Raspberry Pi for instance) to each non-towered airport that has an internet connection to stream their CTAF to somewhere like liveatc so that when incidents like this happen we at least have some more information. I plan on making said donation to my local FBO if they will take it.
First of all, welcome to POA as a first time poster! The incidents close to us geographically do tend to affect us more. I’m in Indy as well and based out of KUMP (Fishers) and we had our first (I believe) fatal at the airport last year, and it occurred shortly after I landed. I think the investigators will be able to determine the cause(s) for the Marion crash. I heard that an airport worker heard the radio transmissions and will be able to provide unbiased feedback. They will also be able to interview the jet pilot. I agree that it would be beneficial to have more airports with CTAF recordings. Additionally, equipping more of the GA fleet with ADS-B out will help prevent some of these incidents as well.Long time lurker (years!), first time poster. Not the type of thread I'd usually want my first post to be on but felt inclined to comment since this is near me (I'm in Indy) and this type of accident has always been my nightmare as a student pilot.
This type of incident shouldn't happen in 2018. Technology that costs less than a refueling probably could have prevented this (and I'm not talking about just ADS-B receiver + tablet etc...). Many GA accidents make me sad but this one just makes me angry. There is really no excuse for something like this to happen.
To be clear, I'm not faulting the pilots of either plane or anything like that (far from it!). I'm also not trying to be an armchair quarterback, especially given that we don't know all the details. I'm just saying, at a high level, this type of incident isn't acceptable any more (not that it ever has been!).
A cheapo tablet with GPS, a data connection, and everyone using an app that reports locations might have been able to help. Lights that change colors placed on or near the runways when sensors detect large objects or weight might have helped. Everyone communicating on the CTAF might have helped. Who knows. What I do know is we have more than enough cheap technology to make sure everyone has situational awareness at this point.
Speaking of cheap tech - one thing this incident is inspiring me to do is to research ways to stream data real-time with low latency so that, in the event of an accident the audio, flight data, and perhaps even video are stored on remote systems. That way, if anything ever happens, people that care can access it accordingly.
The tech to do the aforementioned is already there. The only issues would be bandwidth, latency, error handling, and data caps. That said, "off the shelf tech" can probably handle those issues with little or no tweaks and cost.
Our aircraft are excellent antennas - between satellites and terrestrial stations there should be very few data coverage gaps on our planet. If you can get wifi on international flights across vast swaths of ocean, there should be zero reason why things like Malaysia Flight 370 are still a mystery. Flight data and audio streaming should only take a few kilobits per second - you could hack out 1's and 0's via morse code and be it'd be close to being sufficient for that little amount of data.
My point with all of the above is - this incident shouldn't have happened in the first place and, since it has, we should already know far more than we do about it.
Perhaps a good first step would be if people donated less than $100 worth of equipment (RTL-SDR + Raspberry Pi for instance) to each non-towered airport that has an internet connection to stream their CTAF to somewhere like liveatc so that when incidents like this happen we at least have some more information. I plan on making said donation to my local FBO if they will take it.
Eh? The FAA registry has no clue whether you have a mode S transponder or not. All aircraft in the registry have Mode S codes allocated (even those without electrical systems).Also the C150 did have a MODE S transponder (per registry info at FAA)
Eh? The FAA registry has no clue whether you have a mode S transponder or not. All aircraft in the registry have Mode S codes allocated (even those without electrical systems).
Overthinking it. And overreacting.
We have the information. The Citation crew survived the accident, remember?
It’ll all be in the report in a year.
As an engineer I did chuckle that all of your “solutions” that “cost less than a refueling” all cost significantly more than a refueling.
The solutions were pretty awful also and didn’t even account for basic time/speed/distance math.
Maybe Sales is more your thing than engineering? LOL.
What I probably should have stated is "We have plenty of technology available today, a lot of which costs less than a refueling, that helps provide situational awareness and might have helped prevent an incident like this one".
.
But it doesn’t, and you have yet to give an example of one that does.
Certainly nothing inexpensive enough to deploy widely for this sort of accident which is, exceedingly rare, when looked at against total flight ops.
Is there some cheap solution you forgot to mention?
OK, I'll take a shot. Super cheap? FlightRadar24 on a cheap Android tablet with a data connection. Of course the flaw with this is that all aircraft must have ADS-B and the data needs to be real-time (although, from my experience, it is near real-time to within a few seconds) and there must be something receiving ADS-B nearby for anything at low altitudes. Pull it up after run-up and check for anything near the field. Overkill? Not ideal? Imperfect? Absolutely - but I do it. I'm not saying communicating on CTAF and a thorough check for traffic isn't and shouldn't be the primary method for avoiding this type of incident. But additional situational awareness is generally a good thing, especially given there is no requirement to communicate on CTAF (and I've observed many that don't) and the difficulty in seeing things in the distance sometimes.
Slightly more expensive but better? Foreflight + Stratus + ipad. Still need all aircraft to have ADS-B though.
I get what you're saying on the total flight ops versus incident rate. I understand and respect that you're OK with the status quo. I just think we can do better, but that is just my opinion and I'm leaving it at that.
Happy flying and safe skies my friend!
1090ES, you must have tax forms on the brain at this time of year.
You want to have real fun, read some of Stuart Wood's books. Initially, for a man who claims to be a pilot and flies a citation, he purports absolute drivel about FlightAware in his books. I was thinking it was just poetic license to make the stories work, but I've found so many errors in his books (just about everything he writes about DC is wrong and even much he writes about flying is way off), I decided he just doesn't care about authenticity.denverpilot said:
"FlightRadar is far from “near real time”. "
While this has been proven for years, posters on forums talk about FR24 and Flight Aware profiles of accident aircraft as if they were gospel.
Too bad you're getting flamed for want of better tech. I mean a portable roadside sign can tell me if I'm speeding, why not a runway sign showing a warning light or something when cross runway traffic is 'detected'. ??? dunno, just saying, why flame a guy for wondering why it isn't better.OK, I'll take a shot. Super cheap? FlightRadar24 on a cheap Android tablet with a data connection. Of course the flaw with this is that all aircraft must have ADS-B and the data needs to be real-time (although, from my experience, it is near real-time to within a few seconds) and there must be something receiving ADS-B nearby for anything at low altitudes. Pull it up after run-up and check for anything near the field. Overkill? Not ideal? Imperfect? Absolutely - but I do it. I'm not saying communicating on CTAF and a thorough check for traffic isn't and shouldn't be the primary method for avoiding this type of incident. But additional situational awareness is generally a good thing, especially given there is no requirement to communicate on CTAF (and I've observed many that don't) and the difficulty in seeing things in the distance sometimes.
Slightly more expensive but better? Foreflight + Stratus + ipad. Still need all aircraft to have ADS-B though.
I get what you're saying on the total flight ops versus incident rate. I understand and respect that you're OK with the status quo. I just think we can do better, but that is just my opinion and I'm leaving it at that.
Happy flying and safe skies my friend!
No doubt the Citation was landing on the longer Rwy 4-22 and the 150 taking off on 15-33. If the Citation wasn't basically touching down at the time it would have been worse. Another example of runway incursion avoidance and situational awareness. There was a similar collision (or near collision with loss of control) on crossing runways in FL not long ago. Condolences all around.Two dead in collision of two aircraft at Marion airport
https://www.wthr.com/article/two-dead-in-collision-of-two-aircraft-at-marion-airport
Kinetic forces being what they are, the jet has a larger mass, solidly on concrete decelerating, but still moving right-to-left, vs. the light 150 just above rotation speed hitting the vertical stablizer with propel the plan in the direction the jet is still moving (right to left). The relative positions make sense of the aircraft make sense in the photo.No skid marks indicating the jet spun around.
Too bad you're getting flamed for want of better tech. I mean a portable roadside sign can tell me if I'm speeding, why not a runway sign showing a warning light or something when cross runway traffic is 'detected'. ??? dunno, just saying, why flame a guy for wondering why it isn't better.
Welcome to POA (as a poster)! Since you've been lurking a while you probably already know but, put on your helmet and try not to perpetuate an argument with someone who won't let it go.
There are a million reasons to not invent something, thanks for enumerating a few of them for the random idea I pulled out of, well somewhere.He didn’t ask why. He stated flatly that there were cheap solutions.
We already have such warning light systems. They’re operated by the cheapest and most reliable all weather detectors we could find. They’re called “air traffic controllers”.
The warning light system costs about $20,000 per runway minimum for a standardized set. More intersections, more money.
But let’s say you’re designing this system. Where do the warning lights go? Alongside each runway? Every 1000’? Both directions? We’re up to $50,000 in lights before we buy the mythical detector.
Now the detector. Is it going to detect aircraft in flight on final? Short final? Only when they’re touching the runway? How will it differentiate between a Citation and a Bull Moose standing in the middle of the cross runway? How about a rabbit? What shall the criteria be for this sensor
Okay we deployed the thing. It trips all the time on animals and tumbleweeds and other crap but it’s “better than nothing!” We’re in our single engine trainer and 400’ from the crossing runway the lights start flashing. Do we stand on the brakes and destroy a set of tires? Do we go and hope the detector detected the other airplane on final and didn’t malfunction until they’re also 400’ from the intersection?
How about how does this detector thingy tell you someone is head on with you on YOUR runway vs the crossing runway? Or does it just flash annoying anytime anyone is lined up and waiting on any runway?
What if we have two parallels and a crosswind runway? Does it flash all the time while someone is on the parallel to our left or right?
All of that crap has to be defined and added to airport regs, the signage has to be standardized, and the system has to meet a certification standard so what it actually does can be put into the AIM as well as standards for malfunctions, Notams for out of service conditions, someone to monitor it and fix it. All our current airport lighting systems already have such standards.
Does the ops truck need to go out and drive up and down the runway and ask someone to go check in another truck that all the lights are blinking their important warning?
How much money are we up to now for a sleepy little airport that doesn’t qualify for a “free” tower?
Wouldn’t they just be better off putting up a contract tower and paying for it and the controllers? There’s nothing stopping them from doing so. FAA does have to draw the line somewhere and it’s by number of operations per day.
Nope. There’s not a cost effective simple solution to the problem. There’s solutions, but they’re expensive. Most small municipal airports can’t afford them. If the rate of these rare occurrences is too high, cough up the tax dollars and I’m sure every airport could have a tower and someone else’s eyeballs watching every intersection. Or demand the local municipality do it and pay the taxes to them.
Either way, it’s still the simplest, while not foolproof, system.
You can’t have cheap local small airports and not have a bit more risk than the big commercial airports and all their controllers and toys. Many of those even have ground radar for this during bad weather and low visibility ops.
Is your nightmare a runway crossing accident? Then plan to fly only to controlled airports. You’ll change your personal risk model slightly to one that has a tiny percentage lower chance of that happening, and a larger chance of an in-flight collision, also quite small.
And then you’ll still go kill yourself in your airplane by running out of fuel or a loss of directional control on landing, because you didn’t bother mitigating the largest risks as already seen in real world accident reports.
But you flew less because you felt safer with that new locally owned and operated control tower sucking your wallet dry. They’ll kindly hit the alert button to call an ambulance for you as you slide off the runway in a crosswind and flip your spamcan from lack of experience.
It really is an acceptable risk compared to what really kills light aircraft pilots. Even more harsh, it didn’t kill the crew or passengers of the bigger commercial aircraft in this case.
And yes I’m aware that controlling the airport doesn’t solve all problems. Tenerife comes to mind. But yes, we have to put resources to the most effective use and there is a priority system, and Marion is pretty far down it.
We had this discussion with leadership at work today. “How much security do you really want, and how are you planning to pay for it? Are you charging your customers enough to meet THEIR security requirements on us?” Normal business question. Same goes for “safety”. It’s the same analysis.
If this circumstance isn’t “safe” enough, then cough up the dough. We engineers can make it as “safe” as you like with blinky lights and all sorts of toys and you still have to decide if you’ve got the distance to stop your airplane and blow both mains doing it, if the blinky lights say to.
There are a million reasons to not invent something, thanks for enumerating a few of them for the random idea I pulled out of, well somewhere.
I heard a former president of Beech give a talk on the Starship...sounded a lot like that.It’s ok. This is what I do in IT.
“Do you really need a $1M solution to document management or would a filing cabinet and an organized part time secretary meet 95% of what you’re trying to accomplish? I know which one we can afford...”
I wasn't able to really follow the entire back/forth about the discussion above, but a couple of points I wanted to make:He didn’t ask why. He stated flatly that there were cheap solutions.
...
Okay we deployed the thing. It trips all the time on animals and tumbleweeds and other crap but it’s “better than nothing!” We’re in our single engine trainer and 400’ from the crossing runway the lights start flashing. Do we stand on the brakes and destroy a set of tires? Do we go and hope the detector detected the other airplane on final and didn’t malfunction until they’re also 400’ from the intersection?
How about how does this detector thingy tell you someone is head on with you on YOUR runway vs the crossing runway? Or does it just flash annoying anytime anyone is lined up and waiting on any runway?
What if we have two parallels and a crosswind runway? Does it flash all the time while someone is on the parallel to our left or right?
All of that crap has to be defined and added to airport regs, the signage has to be standardized, and the system has to meet a certification standard so what it actually does can be put into the AIM as well as standards for malfunctions, Notams for out of service conditions, someone to monitor it and fix it. All our current airport lighting systems already have such standards.
Does the ops truck need to go out and drive up and down the runway and ask someone to go check in another truck that all the lights are blinking their important warning?
Like all POA posters Nate is correct. If you doubt this assertation, just ask any poster if they are correct. Of course this gets us to the point of conflicting positions with all parties being correct. At that point we hand out participation awards and eventually move along. Of course some of the participation awards have negative value and others contain derogatory references. As always YMWV.So, let me get this straight. On the one hand, according to Nate, implementations exclude targets on the ground. On the other hand, airports install ADS-B on snowplows. Is that how it works?
So, let me get this straight. On the one hand, according to Nate, implementations exclude targets on the ground. On the other hand, airports install ADS-B on snowplows. Is that how it works?
What is coming to light is just how large an effort the NextGen is. I initially laughed at the following statement from the FAA website, but as you read the technologies and tools that are being developed you realize it is possibly correct:
On February 16, 1994, a significant milestone in American aviation occurred when the Federal Aviation Administration certified the first GPS unit for use in IFR (Instrument Flight Rules) operations. Twenty years later, GPS has become the dominant form of en route navigation as well as the primary technology for guiding aircraft in low-visibility approaches to landing.Today, airports that could not afford anything except possibly an NDB Circling approach, can have GPS and even vnav to lower mins.
Wow, relying on TCAS instead of using the radio. Just sad.NTSB preliminary info came out.
https://app.ntsb.gov/pdfgenerator/R...D=20180403X00427&AKey=1&RType=Prelim&IType=FA
There were 3 witnesses in the pilot lounge that were listening to the unicom 2 of them seemed to give statements, and the Cessna 525 jet has a cockpit voice recorder that is now in the possession of the NTSB. The surviving pilot of the Cessna 525 does not recall making a call to the unicom, and was relying on TCAS.
Not much more said. it did discuss some of the signs posted on the runway environment and none of the passengers saw the C150.