GlennAB1
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GlennAB1
I have heard it is surprising how many people are killed just walking along railroad tracks.
Research death while sitting on the toilet...
In previous threads, it was described as being roughly the same as general aviation.I would be interested in seeing the fatality rate of motorcycles. That mode of transportation just seems to be by far the riskiest method of transportation. I have come upon several motorcycle accidents and it is really hard to have a "minor" one of those.
Motorcycle fatal rate is approx 7x automobile.In previous threads, it was described as being roughly the same as general aviation.
Motorcycle fatal rate is approx 7x automobile.
Just doesn't seem all that relevant - if I was interested, I might weed out the fatals from the ways I won't kill myself in GA, like running out of gas, continuing VFR into IMC, or spinning out of the base to final turn.I'd guesstimate there are around 450,000 GA pilots, and in 2015 there were 229 fatal accidents. That's roughly one fatal accident per 2000 GA pilots. That's not encouraging.
Maybe the numbers will be slightly better for 2016, but they've been stuck in a range for the last few years.
I disagree. Most of the GA accidents that I've read reports on could easily have been avoided. That implies that a pilot who scrupulously follows the known safety rules can most definitely improve his or her personal odds.Yes, but it goes waaay down if alcohol is not consumed, if the rider is trained, and if protective gear is worn. A rider who does those three things improves his odds considerably. Aviation safety isn't so easily improved.
The value in making ourselves aware of GA accident rates is that it helps motivate us to avoid becoming complacent about safety in our flying.Just doesn't seem all that relevant - if I was interested, I might weed out the fatals from the ways I won't kill myself in GA, like running out of gas, continuing VFR into IMC, or spinning out of the base to final turn.
I imagine the "rate" would improve quite a bit in that case, for my personal odds. But safety isn't a primary objective for me. Flying is.
I'm not reckless, but mincing numbers or hand wringing over the entire spectrum of GA pilots, or the Feds bothering people, based on the lowest common denominator, isn't of much value really. . .
At least she didn't do this:Many years ago l drive my wife's Suburban one day and asked her why the hood had a huge scratch across the top of it. She hesitated and one of the kids shouted out that the crossbar came down on the Suburban as she tried to outrun it coming down.
I'm not seeing that. Knowing the rates doesn't affect my propensity to become complacent, or not. The rates seem useless, for the most part - knowing the causes may be of some value, if you would otherwise fly your tanks dry, or push into IMC without an IR, or horse a turn with rudder at low altitude. It is probably good to know where the most frequent dangers lie. . .The value in making ourselves aware of GA accident rates is that it helps motivate us to avoid becoming complacent about safety in our flying.
I read where around 10% of fatal air crashes are also believed to be suicide.
I would be interested in seeing the fatality rate of motorcycles. That mode of transportation just seems to be by far the riskiest method of transportation.
Research death while sitting on the toilet.
Just doesn't seem all that relevant - if I was interested, I might weed out the fatals from the ways I won't kill myself in GA, like running out of gas, continuing VFR into IMC, or spinning out of the base to final turn.
Any comparison of GA to other modes of transit is thrown off by poor data regarding hours flown and suspect assumptions about speed. Vehicle stats are measured in miles, and we have odometers, so accident rates are easy. We simply have no idea what GA miles flown are, and the assumptions you make to try to get there cause the stats to turn to mush in a hurry. I tried diligently the 6 years I was doing Aviation Safety magazine, and none of the methods I found nor invented passed my personal sniff test.I looked into this a couple of years ago, reading the most authoritative reports I could find.
Fatality rates per 100k miles are higher for motorcycles than general aviation, but the difference almost vanishes if you exclude three of the biggest risk factors for bikes: drunk, no license, and no helmet.
I always think about that, when considering giving a ride on the plane: it might seem safer than a ride on my bike, but it’s not.
Flying small planes is simply a dangerous mode of transport.
Yes, but it goes waaay down if alcohol is not consumed, if the rider is trained, and if protective gear is worn. A rider who does those three things improves his odds considerably. Aviation safety isn't so easily improved.
Take out similar behaviors in aviation to improve it: aeromedical factors, training (currency; no VFR flight into IMC), bad weather, and heck even a chute (vs helmet/protective gear). I thought something like 2/3 of accidents were caused by weather and VFR into IMC?
It's all apples to oranges comparison at best anyway, no? But fun to discuss.
The train "trespassing" thing is obviously railroad crossing accidents.
At least she didn't do this:
That accounts for many of them, but . . . When I lived in WV (moved back South in 2014), we lost one hughnschool student just about every year, walking down the tracks as a shortcut going home. Ear buds blocked out the train's horn . . . One year was safe, no dead kids, but the next year there were two abiut a month apart . . . . Don't mess with trains, they never lose . . . .
Double jeopardy. Wow. So senseless.
Looking at it a second time it appears she made it?
Alex,
I'll take trains for $500.00.
Oh she didn't then. Can I get an almost made it then for $100?
EDIT: Wow, and her POS mother tries to sue the RR for her daughters stupidity. I’m disgusted.
http://www.nwitimes.com/news/local/...cle_1db4bddc-cc9a-5b33-830d-4400bc429f17.html
Dollars to doughnuts, a bunch of those were suicides. The rest were likely people doing stupid stuff near tracks or on bridges.More people died from trespassing on railroads than from all of aviation.
That’s a weird one.
Years ago when I worked in a hospital lab there was a woman who drove to a rail crossing but got there as the train was rolling by so she drove to another crossing, got out, and stood in the middle of the tracks. The train hit her, knocked her down between the rails, then never touched her again. She was brought into the ER alive but that one hit kinda messed up her innards so she died later that night. I had to draw blood from her and was amazed at how little she appeared to be damaged. OTOH if she'd been knocked perpendicular to the tracks... FWIW, I don't think she was in any pain.Death by train seems like a gruesome way to go.
'Mercia Bill!
I started my career (first 3 Years actually) working for the grand trunk railroad police. I’ve been to literally hundreds of pedestrian/train or car/train accidents. ALWAYS very messy...and it often amazed me that people wouldn’t get out of the way.Hank,
Writing this from the perspective of one who went to high school in the late fifties and my familiarity with railroads.
Other than the stresses associated with being a teen these days (which are a lot different than back when) and feeling the need to not be left out of the group there are many reasons for the young to commit suicide by train [in particular] given that other means may not be as quick, more painful, or less sure. A 400,000 pound or more locomotive is a quick and assured death should one be between the rails when the train is traveling forty MPH or more.
Some inadvertently get hit by trains because of the earbuds but, (and I'm sure @tawood and other LEO's may have some experience dealing with this) is the prevalence of smart phones most teens now have and the instant communication they provide culpable? Kids have used them to taunt each other to the point they feel like they are useless and unwanted and that is what convinces them suicide is the way out. For lack of a better word, teens are still impressionable. I know that in my formative years I was but I never felt the need to bend to meet the norms of the day. I pretty much walked to my own drummer and not wishing or wanting to be part of the clique in high school. They went their way and I went mine. I find it sad our culture has descended into making people feel they are of no worth to society unless they are conformists to conventions of the day.
I have been a rail fan for several decades and have contacts at both railroads near me. They fill me in on the gory details and the fact that train crews have to live with the fact they couldn't stop their train in time to spare the life of a suicidal teen or adult. Their deaths are usually investigated both by railroad police and the Sheriff's office or local police. Sometimes the information found on those kid's smart phones leads the cops directly to the reason for them doing so.
Said with respect for both the deceased and the train crews who will remember the incident for the rest of their lives.
No, I don't think that; truly, I don't have any idea how they regarded themselves as pilots. And it's not clear how that's relevant to the discussion? I've paid attention, and it seems to me that avoiding these particular risks improves your my survival chances in GA; beyond that, I do not see the value in spending a lot of $$$ and effort in a big push to "do something" about GA's accident propensity. At some point, the next incremental improvement comes at exponential cost.Do you think that the pilots that died from these causes thought themselves the kind of pilot that would run out of gas, or continue that VFR flight just a tad too long, or who would spin in the pattern?
Yes, I would remove myself from the class of intoxicated pilots that die in accidents, let’s say. But those other things have an insidious element to them. Yes, we can all plan and train in such a way so as to to minimize those risks. But these things will continue to kill pilots who, before that fatal day, like you would have sworn that could never happen to them.
I'm not advocating more spending, nor more government mandates, if that's what you're implying.But I'm not convinced that investing a lot more in reducing the accident rate is worthy - I suspect doing so would exponentially increase hassle, cost, and so reduce the joy of flying. Most of us past the solo stage know what the real dangers are, and if some of us accept taking those risks, so be it.
Not necessarily. Usually standing on the road isn't going to be trespassing just a failure to observe the crossing signals.The train "trespassing" thing is obviously railroad crossing accidents.
Check out death by hammers. Those things are deadly and should be banned.
A lot of times photography is involved.
In any event it's gross stupidity on those killed and not the fault of the railroad.
Not necessarily. Usually standing on the road isn't going to be trespassing just a failure to observe the crossing signals.
The trespassing is usually people walking down the tracks (or on train bridges/trestles). A lot of times photography is involved.
In any event it's gross stupidity on those killed and not the fault of the railroad.
RR, fair enough - I went too far afield. . .I'm not advocating more spending, nor more government mandates, if that's what you're implying.