GlennAB1
Ejection Handle Pulled
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GlennAB1
I doubt that, he had a instrument rating, but he might have broke the airplane.
I doubt that, he had a instrument rating, but he might have broke the airplane.
Man, I hope he wasn't trying to aggressively get back to his assigned altitude and broke the airplane.
Fixed:
He apparently received his type rating only 3 weeks before the accident.And it is likely, since he bought the plane in October, that his type rating is on a paper certificate right now.
Just keep in mind the NTSB reports are opinion. When you read a report like this causes such as insufficient training /experiance come to my mind.
Private multi instrument with 1205 hours (Total, all aircraft), 919 hours (Pilot In Command) in a Cessna 525 jet.
I'd have felt better if they'd have addressed the possibility of a pitch trim runaway and ruled it out, especially with these facts from the report:Read the entire report. Rather inexperienced pilot for the equipment and possible lack of proficiency with the displays and auto pilot. Add lack of instrument skills.
Read the entire report. Rather inexperienced pilot for the equipment and possible lack of proficiency with the displays and auto pilot. Add lack of instrument skills.
You didn’t answer the question. What objectively measurable items would you require he do that weren’t covered in his training?
So, what exactly would be "the experiance level for safe operation" of this plane? (misspelling copied from original post)“Just keep in mind the NTSB reports are opinion. When you read a report like this causes such as insufficient training /experiance come to my mind.
Private multi instrument with 1205 hours (Total, all aircraft), 919 hours (Pilot In Command) in a Cessna 525 jet.”
This pilot, IMO, did not have the experiance level for safe operation of the machine he opted to buy. Irregardless if you believe the training was adequate, he failed on game day a short period after he completed training.
I believe he mishandled setting the autopilot as the steps/buttons were different from his Mustang (prior jet). As a result he was trying to engage/set it to level the plane while flying it and lost control.
What a very sad accident -the whole family is gone.
What ever you guys want to believe, my opinion is this guy had no business in that aircraft given his experiance and his training was not effective.
So your story just changed and the training itself was adequate but magically wasn’t “effective”. Okay. Nice pivot.
You still haven’t answered the question about what you specifically think should have been included in his training that wasn’t done, since you apparently have access to that and the NTSB didn’t.
The report is just “their opinion” though. We know. Yours is based on more information than they had available to them, I’m sure.
Still waiting to hear what we should be training people to make sure they’re not pushing the wrong button in a jet. Sounds like someone already told him he did it wrong twice when checking him out. Can’t really do more than that.
Unless you’re saying the guy who checked him out should have kept him from passing for pressing the wrong button twice. I’m fine with that if that’s your opinion. But you haven’t elaborated. You just attacked the NTSB report with no backing besides your own opinion, which was basically a platitude. “Pilot didn’t have enough experience and killed themselves.”
Not exactly news. Certainly not interesting enough to not read the NTSB’s “opinion” and vibe it more weight than an internet opinion.
I’ve seen some good internet opinions that had great backing and facts from people who knew a particular airframe, or similar, but so far you’ve stated the obvious that could be the “cause” of every accident that wasn’t an equipment failure.
By the way, "irregardless" is incorrect usage. Correct usage is "regardless".
You can’t buy experiance and for training to be effective you must also have a base level of experiance. They go hand in hand.
Did the guy complete training and retain it or just complete training? When you kill your family in a CFIT accident because you couldnt or didn’t fly the plane, it really doesn’t matter.
Bill, I thought the correct usage was "disirregardless"?
right back atcha!
-Skip
It does matter. Either the training was wrong and needs fixed or the training was fine and the pilot needed to buy more of your as-yet undefined “experience”.
Your assertion you keep conveniently forgetting was that the NTSB report was “just an opinion”, and yet you haven’t provided an objective measure of either what was trained, what was tested, or what experience the pilot should have been mandated to have.
Feel free. List off what he needed to know, demonstrate, and have done prior to making that flight. Prove he didn’t meet it with his logbook, too, since you still haven’t defined what was wrong with NTSB’s “opinion” and apparently have information the investigator didn’t have.
(In other words, taking pot shots at the NTSB report without any objective commentary is useless emotionalized garbage. All you’ve got is pandering to the “but somebody died and it’s sad” emotional response. We all have that.)
There is no Fortune 500 company flying Part 91 that would put their employees in a plane with that pilots experiance and training level.. if you feel comfortable putting your family in a plane with a pilot having that training and experiance level, have at it.
That’s mandated by their insurance company and yes, companies have gotten it waived for more money and used lower time pilots when they wanted to.
You still haven’t answered the question you brought up. What was wrong with the NTSB’s “opinion” you apparently didn’t like. And what was wrong with the pilot’s training? You’ve asserted both then ran away when someone called you on your BS.
Because you don’t know, do you?
When you fly a perfectly good airplane into something as flat as Lake Erie after takeoff you were not properly trained in the aircraft and that is what the NTSB should have said in their report.
So let’s call you on your bull crap. What outcome from this crash leads you to believe this pilot was properly trained? The accident was the result of failing to act as the pilot should have with effective training. That is why he and his family are dead.
Uh, ya know it IS possible to be properly trained and make an error....So let’s call you on your bull crap. What outcome from this crash leads you to believe this pilot was properly trained? The accident was the result of failing to act as the pilot should have with effective training. That is why he and his family are dead.
Uh, ya know it IS possible to be properly trained and make an error....
Yes it is, but basic aicraft control is Instrument training lesson 1.
I'm still trying to wrap my head around @Clip4 's continual moaning that because the dead pilot made a mistake resulting in his death that he wasn't properly trained and didn't have enough experience. The many times that @Clip4 has misspelled "experience" confirms, by his own reasoning, that his own education was deficient, he should quit his job and go back to school and study bpth Spelling and Typing, because "experiance" isn't in any dictionary I've ever seen, despite the dozen or more times he has typed it in his posts above. Or is making mistakes a characteristic of all humans?
As long as @Clip4 is back in school, he should fill his day with classes in logic, so that his circular reasoning can be corrected and he can learn how to back up his assertions with something other than repeating the same assertion all over again. Yelling it in person also is not persuasive.
And lastly, for @Clip4 's knowledge, every time my family and / or friends go flying with me, they are flying with someone who has much, much less "experiance" than this pilot had at the beginning of his last flight. My own Total Flight Time, PIC Time and Time in Type are all much smaller numbers. So how much longer should I fly alone before daring to put someone in the plane with me? In the past 11 years I've gone from zero to ~850 hours, but it looks like I need >1200 hours before risking a passenger . . . There's no way that will fly in my house, my wife would pitch a fit! She's been flying with me for the last 800 hours.
Speaking of errors, how can True airspeed be 25 kts less than equivalent in fig 3 of the performance study in the accident docket?
No, TAS should be pretty close to EAS not a nominal 25 kts slower, give or take. Remember the ICE-T formula? At a density altitude near sea level they should be close to the same.The 2700 fpm descent from 3000 tells you all you need to know.