Maybe you should threaten to do barrel rolls if they don’t.Just in case The FAA is monitoring this thread. I promise to not do barrel rolls if they will just issue my medical!!!!!!
Bullhocky. Neither a barrel roll or an aileron roll are constant 1G manouvers. It is impossible that they are. A barrel roll (properly executed) is a small number of positive Gs throughout, but it goes as little as .5 and as much as 2.5 or 3. Still within the normal category g limits.
An aileron roll *can* be done maintaining positive gs, but also can go through zero. It's still not going to be 1G throughout.
I agree. From the positions of the visible landmarks in the photo, it looks to me like the lake could have been directly below the plane, which would have been consistent with doing the maneuvers where they would be seen by the greatest number of spectators at the hydroplane races....I can only assume the photo was taken over Lake Washington, because that's where Allen was, and where the barrel rolls took place. It wasn't over Puget Sound. Whether the lake was directly below the plane or in the photo I don't know.
It’s impossible to maintain 1g.I thought a properly done barrel roll maintained 1g positive? What’s with the zero g floating glasses?
Conspiracy for what? There's been no crime committed. And with no crime, what judge is issuing a search warrant?
What about this law the pilot endangered the 3 other passengers.
14 CFR § 91.13 Careless or reckless operation.
(a) Aircraft operations for the purpose of air navigation. No person may operate an aircraft in a careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the life or property of another.
Conspiracy in federal law is "Just having an agreement between two or more persons to commit a criminal offense" Then one or both actually commit the crime. If the woman who published the video made an agreement to have the pilot violate 91.13 for the purpose to create a ticktok video then that is a conspiracy.
18 U.S. Code § 371 - Conspiracy to commit offense or to defraud United States
If two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense against the United States
That's a regulation. And violating it is not a crime. Since it's not a crime, there's no conspiracy.
A pilot could take a 737 and perform a roll like in the video with 300 people on board worst that could happen is loss of his certificate and a civil penalty?
A pilot could take a 737 and perform a roll like in the video with 300 people on board worst that could happen is loss of his certificate and a civil penalty?
If that pilot had 1000 acro hours he wouldn’t have floated everything in the plane….
I was 18 miles NW of the lake when that happened. But, as I was only 22 months old, I have no independent recollection...In August 1955, the unlimited hydroplane Gold Cup races were taking place on Lake Washington, and Boeing CEO William Allen had invited several VIP customers aboard his yacht on the lake for the event. He had directed test pilot Tex Johnston to overfly the event in the Dash 80 to showcase it to those clients.
Johnston decided to exhibit the plane's topside to those below, performing the maneuver that placed him in the pantheon of test pilot greats.
I can only assume the photo was taken over Lake Washington, because that's where Allen was, and where the barrel rolls took place. It wasn't over Puget Sound. Whether the lake was directly below the plane or in the photo I don't know.
The FISA Court will give warrants to anyone, even if the supporting evidence is forged. They're easy.Conspiracy for what? There's been no crime committed. And with no crime, what judge is issuing a search warrant?
it's a different spanks for different ranks. Yes, double standards exist in our admin and criminal system. Shocker. Yes, the airline pilot would get in more criminal trouble than the recreational piston driver.
What is the exact federal criminal statute the Airline pilot could be charged under I can't find anything.
What is the exact federal criminal statute the Airline pilot could be charged under I can't find anything.
While you are arguing about doing a simple roll in this fictional 737, you all completely glossed over the 300 passengers on it.
The fictional pilot already broke the regs by overloading the 737, so who cares if he now does a roll or 15 to.
Lets say it's a 50 passengers. The point I'm making is that there is no criminal statue against operating an aircraft unsafely in a way that endangers others.
The story goes that during the CEO's retirement ceremony a couple of years later, someone presented him with a framed enlarged photo of the Lake Washington shoreline and nearby area taken from the cabin of the inverted Dash 80. He supposedly left the photo at the dias when the ceremony ended, not appreciating the humor.
Reckless endangerment is a crime in all 50 states. Most have misdemeanor and felony versions depending on degree of egregiousness.
If nobody was injured, it would be difficult to prove in court.
Heck if I was on the jury, I would be wanting to high five him, and say well done.
Actual injury is not a required element of the criminal statue.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endangerment#:~:text=In some U.S. states, such,or serious injury to others.
"Reckless endangerment: A person commits the crime of reckless endangerment if the person recklessly engages in conduct which creates substantial jeopardy of severe corporeal trauma to another person. “Reckless” conduct is conduct that exhibits a culpable disregard of foreseeable consequences to others from the act or omission involved. The accused need not intentionally cause resulting harm. The ultimate question is whether, under all of the circumstances, the accused's demeanor was of that heedless nature that made it actually or imminently dangerous to the rights or safety of others."
How many of those things are intentional regulatory violations?Then every time an airline pilot taxis out to the runway, that is reckless endangerment.
Just pulling onto the runway is dangerous, what if another airliner crashes into it while sitting there.
But attempting take off is really dangerous, as is flying.
A lot of people have been injured or killed in plane crashes, so it is a dangerous thing.
Which is why I said, if nobody was hurt, to me it would be hard to prove. Not impossible to prove, but difficult.
Now if a pilot hits another plane on the runway, slides off the runway, and someone gets hurt, that to me should be a slam dunk case to win.
How many of those things are intentional regulatory violations?
I find it interesting that you defend intentional violators, but condemn those who tried to do things right.
Safety has never been defined solely by the outcome.If nobody is hurt, how reckless was it really.
But if you hurt people, it was very likely reckless behavior.
Don't crash the plane, good job...do crash the plane, bad job.
That is what a jury is likely going to hear, and react to.
Driving my tractor around my property, and nobody gets hurt, no problem.
Drive my tractor over a family having a picnic in my hay field, who shouldn't have been there, because its my private property, but still i ran over them, so problem.
Safety has never been defined solely by the outcome.
Only in whether it’s noticed or not.But it plays a significant role in it.
Only in whether it’s noticed or not.
If nobody is hurt, how reckless was it really.
But if you hurt people, it was very likely reckless behavior.
When you figure out how to guarantee the outcome of a stupid, careless, reckless, or illegal action, I’m sure the governments of the world would love to know about it.Hard to not notice the bent plane, and injured or dead passengers.