Checkout_my_Six
Touchdown! Greaser!
They don’t work at towered airports either. A good many midair’s occur at towered airfields.
So we should stop using radios at controlled fields to improve safety?They don’t work at towered airports either. A good many midair’s occur at towered airfields.
I agree, one cannot make things perfectly safe. We pilots all know that, more than anyone. Flying is a hazardous activity. Don't need to make it more hazardous than it already is. But the good pilots work at making it safer each flight. The good pilots do preflights. The good pilots visually check the fuel level. The good pilots perform a run-up. The good pilots practice emergency procedures. The good pilots communicate with the other pilots in the pattern. Good pilots know that making accurate position reports in the pattern, that we all share, is not an unreasonable expectation. The bad pilots say "I don't have to". I will call out every SOB that says that.
I get making mistakes, we all have. But NORDO is a deliberate act.
@SixPapaCharlie is absolutely correct. There is no defensible argument for not using all available means.
So we should stop using radios at controlled fields to improve safety?
You totally missed my point. It ain’t the radio that prevents accidents.
This is binary. All else aside, either the use of radios improves safety of flight or it does not. If they do, use them. If not then turn them off. Yes or no, good or bad. There is no grey area.
Okay, maybe a bit of an overstatement...he made sure I knew how to use it...I just wasn't allowed to during training and cross countries.
He hated GPSs...likened them to video games. He was an army aviator in both Korea and Vietnam and got by fine without at both.
In that particular case. What about any midairs that were avoided with the use of accurate radio communication that never get reported because there was no crash?Listen to some of the midair’s from towered airfields....you’ll see the radio was not a safety mitigation....even when told where to look for traffic.
This is binary. All else aside, either the use of radios improves safety of flight or it does not. If they do, use them. If not then turn them off. Yes or no, good or bad. There is no grey area.
Everything is fine , until it is not.
So because aircraft accidents are inevitable, there is no point in trying to be safe? Really? because that is what I came away with.
Car crashes at night are inevitable even with headlights, so I am just not going to turn them on at night? This is what I am hearing from your line of reasoning. Do I understand you correctly?
I get making mistakes, we all have. But NORDO is a deliberate act.
The cost to install a shielded ignition so a radio is actually usable? Could be big problem.Right; a Sporty's PJ2 is $199. J3 or Champ without electrical system? No problem.
I’m sure there are relatively few nordo planes/pilots out there.
Yep; could be, but I wonder how many A-65s, C-65s, A-75s, and C75s flying still have unshielded ignition wires.The cost to install a shielded ignition so a radio is actually usable? Could be big problem
Yep; could be, but I wonder how many A-65s and A-75s flying still have unshielded ignition wires.
I understand why people are not wanting one and all that, but it's close to crazy to not have a way to communicate in this day and age.
I've seen experimental that are no more than a guy flapping his arms with a radio.
Why not eliminate risk when you can? It's counterintuitive on many levels.
People using the CTAF wrong are probably more common.
Seriously! If your going to fly NORAD, at least call on the radio and let everyone know!
Got to love auto correct!! I fixed it.Well....you could be shot down....or at least intercepted.
Not out here on the east side of the Rockies . Rural roads work fine for the coffee drains needed once in a while.Shouldn’t the question simply be shouldn’t radios be required to fly? What goes up must come down and the only place to come back down is an airport.
Many Canadian airports have that. It’s listed as MF, for mandatory frequency. But what is the consequence of breaking that rule, compared with the consequence of violating see-and-avoid?In between our idea of an uncontrolled field and a class D airspace in Australia (probably other Commonwealth countries) is the Mandatory Broadcast Zone (MBZ). These are fields where traffic reports are obligatory though there's no ATC involved.
I don't understand the point you're making, but the "consequence" of not using a radio at an MF airport is a collision with aircraft entering downwind on a 45° angle. Standard entries in Canada are across the 'drome in the middle, of course. Canadians seem to understand (FAA doesn't) that heading toward the same spot in the air from opposite directions is unwise unless radios are utilized to yield the right of way.Many Canadian airports have that. It’s listed as MF, for mandatory frequency. But what is the consequence of breaking that rule, compared with the consequence of violating see-and-avoid?