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Perhaps we should cut the man a little slack, Yeah, we probably should he has a cronic case of cranialrectitis.
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But then, I am speaking for those of us who are less than perfect, so what do I know.
John
Well, there are little screw ups, then there are really big screw ups. This guy used lousy judgement and ran out of fuel. However, he did a great job of using his superior flying skills to land on a road. Once the plane was refueled his superior flying skills failed him when he hit the truck, but he was still using his sub par judgement skills.As is often the case, the full story may never be publicly released. Even an investigation can miss a critical point or two unless very sophisticated equipment records the event in question along with instruments, voice recording, etc.. For all we know, the fuel starvation could have been anything from a clogged line, to a leak.
As for the takeoff... I've worked on a flightline before and you usually have wing walkers when in that close proximity of an obstacle and that is just to tow a plane. This was a very unusual circumstance to have to take-off from and any pilot knows, surprizes are avoided as much as possible when flying.
I have close to 900 hours and I can't recall any "close proximity take-off" procedures included in my training
Perhaps we should cut the man a little slack, if not for the unusuall situation, then for all the times we forgot to remove all the wheel chocks, or flipped to the wrong departure frequency or screwed the oil cap on so tight we needed pliers to get it off after the flight or forgot to call Clearance delivery before getting in touch with Ground - all of which can happen when one is tired, over-stressed, and over-worked or maybe just a little distracted by an unexpected and unfamiliar event.
But then, I am speaking for those of us who are less than perfect, so what do I know.
John
Running out of fuel and then trying to take off without checking to make sure you have enough room is not a little mistake on par with forgetting the well chokes. There is no slack to give he has all he needs and he hung himself with it.Perhaps we should cut the man a little slack, if not for the unusuall situation, then for all the times we forgot to remove all the wheel chocks, or flipped to the wrong departure frequency or screwed the oil cap on so tight we needed pliers to get it off after the flight or forgot to call Clearance delivery before getting in touch with Ground - all of which can happen when one is tired, over-stressed, and over-worked or maybe just a little distracted by an unexpected and unfamiliar event.
As is often the case, the full story may never be publicly released. Even an investigation can miss a critical point or two unless very sophisticated equipment records the event in question along with instruments, voice recording, etc.. For all we know, the fuel starvation could have been anything from a clogged line, to a leak.
As for the takeoff... I've worked on a flightline before and you usually have wing walkers when in that close proximity of an obstacle and that is just to tow a plane. This was a very unusual circumstance to have to take-off from and any pilot knows, surprizes are avoided as much as possible when flying.
I have close to 900 hours and I can't recall any "close proximity take-off" procedures included in my training
Perhaps we should cut the man a little slack, if not for the unusuall situation, then for all the times we forgot to remove all the wheel chocks, or flipped to the wrong departure frequency or screwed the oil cap on so tight we needed pliers to get it off after the flight or forgot to call Clearance delivery before getting in touch with Ground - all of which can happen when one is tired, over-stressed, and over-worked or maybe just a little distracted by an unexpected and unfamiliar event.
But then, I am speaking for those of us who are less than perfect, so what do I know.
John
The emergency vehicle caused the crash??
The emergency vehicle was stationary with its lights on!
WTF was the pilot doing trying to do a takeoff run w/o getting the truck to move first?
The emergency vehicle caused the crash??
The emergency vehicle was stationary with its lights on!
WTF was the pilot doing trying to do a takeoff run w/o getting the truck to move first?
And you guys think helicopters are dangerous!
Piston helicopter, you get low on fuel, you land at a gas station, take on some 93 octane mogas (which Lycomings run on just fine, and there's even an STC for Robinsons, which is nothing more than a placard), and then you take off again. No ground roll, no whacking into trucks
No wonder I don't fly them arr-planes no more
That's kinda cool when I think about it...
Then I picture the rotors clipping the shelter over the gas pump, me falling sideways onto the crowd of onlookers below...
Ugh. Seems less cool now.
NO MATTER HOW MUCH FUN GA IS, TOTAL CONCENTRATION (serious/professional) IS MANDATORY FOR THE PARTS OF AVIATION THAT CAN KILL YOU (or others...). (i.e. taking off with sufficient fuel, airspeed on final, etc.)
Debate is always welcome - mostly good - and, here anyway, always entertaining/informative!
As is often the case, the full story may never be publicly released. Even an investigation can miss a critical point or two unless very sophisticated equipment records the event in question along with instruments, voice recording, etc.. For all we know, the fuel starvation could have been anything from a clogged line, to a leak.
As for the takeoff... I've worked on a flightline before and you usually have wing walkers when in that close proximity of an obstacle and that is just to tow a plane. This was a very unusual circumstance to have to take-off from and any pilot knows, surprizes are avoided as much as possible when flying.
I have close to 900 hours and I can't recall any "close proximity take-off" procedures included in my training
Perhaps we should cut the man a little slack, if not for the unusuall situation, then for all the times we forgot to remove all the wheel chocks, or flipped to the wrong departure frequency or screwed the oil cap on so tight we needed pliers to get it off after the flight or forgot to call Clearance delivery before getting in touch with Ground - all of which can happen when one is tired, over-stressed, and over-worked or maybe just a little distracted by an unexpected and unfamiliar event.
But then, I am speaking for those of us who are less than perfect, so what do I know.
John
I missed the mirror strike... good eye !
I missed the mirror strike too
But gosh, If the authorities close the road for him to take off, couldn't they at least get the vehicles off the closed road too?
It's easy to pressure yourself into stupid pilot tricks when you are wanting to attend a certain event or get home by a certain time.
I have been at RDU and witnessed that "small-error" of forgetting to remove the chock. On one occassion, the pilot apparently thought his plane required more power which shot the plane straight out of the chocks and into some parked planes. The pilot stopped the plane just shy of an accident occuring.
I said that to say the size of an error seems to be based on your perception which is skewed by the results of that error but each error, given the right situation can be huge and even life-threatening. So what converts a mistake to a moron by your definition because from where I'm sitting your human (having not met you I assume this) and therefore flawed yourself. What level of stress would it take for you to make a moronic error?
B)John