Nick Geber
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Oct 10, 2022
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NIckG
If the Cub had a portable, battery operated Stratus and an Ipad, there's a good chance they may have seen the traffic. No electrical system needed.
From looking at the recent AOPA video I think there's a good chance they DID see the traffic on downwind, presumed that if they could see the Cherokee, the Cherokee could probably see them, lost it in the sun as the Cherokee turned base, reacquired it too late for a successful avoidance maneuver.If the Cub had a portable, battery operated Stratus and an Ipad, there's a good chance they may have seen the traffic. No electrical system needed.
From looking at the recent AOPA video I think there's a good chance they DID see the traffic on downwind, presumed that if they could see the Cherokee, the Cherokee could probably see them, lost it in the sun as the Cherokee turned base, reacquired it too late for a successful avoidance maneuver.
I see the point if you are staying right there at that lake. But if you fly off to somewhere else you maybe should have an as close to accurate reading as possible whether or not you interact with others.Newly rated Seaplane pilot here. The setting altimeter to 0 sitting on the water is what I was taught. Since there’s no published altitude for lakes, etc. and the level varies it makes sense for those operations. Once you start interacting with ATC and other aircraft not so much.
In Washington State (from sea level to 14,000 feet within 60 miles) that's vital.I see the point if you are staying right there at that lake. But if you fly off to somewhere else you maybe should have an as close to accurate reading as possible whether or not you interact with others.
I didn’t know that, unadjustable altimeters. Do they even make them anymore?In Washington State (from sea level to 14,000 feet within 60 miles) that's vital.
In Florida? Not so much.
Also, a stock J-3 altimeter has just one arm...and VFR aircraft are not required to have altimeters that are adjustable for barometric pressure.
Ron Wanttaja
Not that I've seen, though there seem to be a lot of used ones for sale. Those looking for a perfect J-3 restoration would be searching for one.I didn’t know that, unadjustable altimeters. Do they even make them anymore?
But if you fly off to somewhere else you maybe should have an as close to accurate reading as possible whether or not you interact with others.
Obviously, a ~50 foot difference in field elevations isn't going to be too noticeable.
Agreed, but how would you get that altimeter reading if you don't have a radio?
Not really. It's not like NORDO aircraft collisions are an everyday occurance. Really, a lot of us fly planes that are minimally equipped quite a lot. It's not statistically as bad as it looks.At a time like this, it's really a hell of a thing.
Yup. That would be the point. You couldn’t interact with others to get it. So you should at least try to set it as close as you can to the altitude you are at. Not just arbitrarily zero.Agreed, but how would you get that altimeter reading if you don't have a radio?
You can play the "what if" altitude game for any midair...or near mid-air. Luck might have put one plane 140' higher or lower, regardless of what accuracy of altimeter they had. We don't know if one or the other airplane was changing altitude, which would throw that right out the window. The Private Pilot standard is +/- 100 feet, so these planes could have been as much as 200 feet difference in altitude even with precision altimeters. There's a lot of chance in midairs; one reason I think they upset pilots so much.No, but KGIF is at ~140' and a few other local airports may be a bit higher. Would 140' matter? In this instance, probably so.
I wish I had a dollar for every time that ATC called out traffic, we had them on ADS-B but still never saw them — with 2 of us looking. I like having ADS-B but it’s not a panacea IMO. If it could issue an RA like TCAS, maybe it would be more useful.
I'd never considered it for acro use before Dana mentioned it, but in that application QFE could make a lot of sense. Many competitors all needing to stay in the same box with the same floor, many chances for mistakes due to an erroneous setting. Simply zeroing the altimeter to the field is easy and consistent.
Makes sense when you’re staying close by the airport you departed from and will be landing back at that airport. Got me wondering though how much ‘range’ altimeters have. Like if you departed Leadville KLXV, elevation 9934, would you even be able to set it at zero?I always set altimeter to zero for acro flights. Eliminates the need to do math while pulling 5G.
A Thunderbird pilot crashed in an airshow because he did the math wrong. https://www.f-16.net/f-16-news-article968.html
ADS-B was never intended for pilots. It is for ATC. That is why there is only an OUT mandate, not an IN mandate.
Makes sense when you’re staying close by the airport you departed from and will be landing back at that airport. Got me wondering though how much ‘range’ altimeters have. Like if you departed Leadville KLXV, elevation 9934, would you even be able to set it at zero?
You won't even get close.. Most Kollsmann Windows have an adjustment range of slightly less than 3000', typically 28.1 - 31.0 inHg.I know this is more of a theoretical question but the next time I fly to Bryce KBCE elevation 7590 I’ll try to remember to test this.
NORDO needs to end, at least with a required receiver; a hundred bucks can change the world.
...please tell us where you are buying these receivers for a hundred bucks...
Eighty percent of the midair collisions that occurred during "normal" flight activities happened within ten miles of an airport.
That sounds cool, but if you are in a state like Florida, you are almost always within 10 miles of an airport and not talking on a radio.
Perhaps initially that could be said to be true but it's quite obvious that ADSB is a good tool for ATC & pilots.
Side comment: a cub on floats is just marginally faster and more agile than a Chinese "weather" balloon. And it is bright yellow. My gut tells me the Cherokee CFI and student had their heads down and were preoccupied with instrumentation.
Good luck telling people your position on the radio you linked.https://www.amazon.com/Uniden-BC75X...t=&hvlocphy=9010192&hvtargid=pla-524029635345
There are plenty of other examples.
And a Yaesu FTA550 transceiver is only a couple of hundred bucks or so.
Since airplanes tend to congregate around airports, that's not much of a surprise.
Yes, almost always near an airport here in Florida. And anytime I'm flying near a busy airport, I monitor its CTAF or tower if I'm low or not using flight following.
As I've said previously in this thread, radios are not a panacea but they do provide an additional layer of safety. Otherwise, why use them at all in VFR flight?
Good luck telling people your position on the radio you linked.
But if the collision happened in the turn, before the turn, they weren't necessarily on a collision course. Assuming they were higher than the Cub, I think it's plausible that the Cub might have seen them and hoped that they had been seen, possibly even lost them in the sun, then been in quite a fright as they came out of the sun directly towards them.Plus, the target on a collision course is not moving with regards to your line of sight. It just looks small and stationary in the windscreen until suddenly it isn't.
Got curious about that.Not really. It's not like NORDO aircraft collisions are an everyday occurance. Really, a lot of us fly planes that are minimally equipped quite a lot. It's not statistically as bad as it looks.
Nobody is talking about taking away radios and ADSB from planes that have them, so I don't see the relevance. If the question is whether more planes should have radios, the answer will be found in the statistics on planes that don't have them today.What those figures don't tell, though, (and in fact cannot tell) is the number of mid-air collisions that were avoided because pilots were communicating their positions over the radio, nor do they show how many were avoided because of assists from flight following or ADSB.
Nobody is talking about taking away radios and ADSB from planes that have them, so I don't see the relevance. If the question is whether more planes should have radios, the answer will be found in the statistics on planes that don't have them today.
pilots who give good radio.