I'd imagine your insurance company might have something to say should you try and file a claim without a current medical.
Bingo....
I'd imagine your insurance company might have something to say should you try and file a claim without a current medical.
No, but having your life insurance invalidated (or your aircraft insurance), you being sued, your estate being sued, etc. does change things.
A medical cert doesn't make you worthy to fly. Not possessing a medical doesn't necessarily make you unworthy. Most pilots have self-grounded for illness or injury. What I'd find interesting is a review of self-grounding and how it might differ between pilots with medicals and those legally flying without. There's no good way to gather that information, though. Personally I doubt there's a significant difference. And that supports my attitude for dismissal of the third class medical.
So there's no good way to gather the data, but it supports your position for ending the class III?
I personally would guess (and it's just that) that there is a difference. A big one. Someone who has no problem knowingly and willfully breaking the law is less likely to stand down because they took OTC allergy meds in my opinion.
I'd imagine your insurance company might have something to say should you try and file a claim without a current medical.
Someone who has no problem knowingly and willfully breaking the law is less likely to stand down because they took OTC allergy meds in my opinion.
It seems to me that the bigger risk is the threat of litigation following an accident. If someone gets hurt or suffers significant property damage, and the pilot is flying illegally, it could go very badly (very costly).
Just a supposition on your part. Medical or not, I believe most sane pilots will self ground if they feel they aren't capable of being PIC.
Of course there will always be the drugged up (like your Doctor example) or those with a death wish (Germanwings), but having a valid medical didn't prevent those accidents.
Possibly. I had a case (a mid-air collision) in Cincinnati where one pilot's medical had lapsed. The fact that his medical expired may not have ever gotten to the jury, had it been tried. It's generally irrelevant to the cause of the accident, unless you have medical evidence that the condition affected the ability of the pilot. In the end, there wasn't enough insurance to go around, so it finally got settled after the widows finally tired of glaring at each other during all of the depositions and came to their senses and took the little bit of money that was available.
I realize you did qualify your statement with "may not have", but I bet opposing counsel would have a different opinion.
Very possibly.
In many states, if a driver of a vehicle is in an accident, and has no drivers license, that fact is excluded from the jury. Same issue.
So, as some of us wait for some kind of supposed medical reform, I wonder what percentage of spamcan pilots are rogue pilots, i.e., flying without a valid medical. Anyone want to hazard a guess?
I fail to see the relevance of those to the seemingly pointless third class medical.
So there's no good way to gather the data, but it supports your position for ending the class III?
That's bizarre. How can that not be considered extremely relevant?
Then no-medical pilots must be 10 to 20 times better than pilots with valid medicals based on how often they show up in the NTSB data base.10-20% no medical, no annual, would be my guess.
I love my family and would never do anything to harm them, like flying them when I know I could keel over and kill us all. I would also be wary of flying illegally because of the liability, again, hurting my family. Having said that, I am at an age and with enough "ouch, that hurts" kind of things, to know that I could be denied. I always do a consultation first and when my AME finally tells me that it aint gonna happen, I wont try and as long as I feel that I can safely fly, I will under LSA rules.
It seems to me that the bigger risk is the threat of litigation following an accident.
That's bizarre. How can that not be considered extremely relevant?
Because the issue is whether the driver did something wrong to caused the accident, not whether the state registered him as a driver. Your thinking is exactly why courts would exclude it. If a guy with no license is T-boned by a drunk driver who ran a red light, what does the lack of a license have to do with anything?
Then no-medical pilots must be 10 to 20 times better than pilots with valid medicals based on how often they show up in the NTSB data base.
The available data does not appear to support the assumption that there are a lot of "them" out there (or that eliminating the third class medical will have a significant effect on accident rates).
The threat of litigation has absolutely nothing to do with a medical or even being licensed.
Ah, I see someone already addressed that point.
Because a piece of government-issued paper or plastic has no magical qualities. It doesn't change the facts about the manner in which the driver(s) or pilot(s) controlled their respective machines.
Rich
But in any scenario, I fail to see how doing something illegal is not relevant.
I think that depends entirely on the scenario.
Actually it's not. At least I don't think it is. At least not if your implying that it's representative of how many rogue pilots are out there.
The reason being...
Almost all rogue pilots I knew flew locally only, at most a 100nm trip to a fly-in, and only on nice VFR days. These aren't the type of trips that generate accident reports.
So what you are saying is that rogue pilots typically engage in excellent risk management and mitigation techniques and therefore are less likely to have an accident than a non-rogue pilot.
You may have something there.
I would agree, which is why I excluded from my statement above any accidents in which there is evidence that the medical issue was causally related to the accident.
The issue of no-medical pilots isn't the complete story. There are puh-lenty of pilots who show up in accident reports who obtained their medical through lying, i.e. had they been honest on their application they would have been denied (which they knew, hence the dishonesty). They count for the "no-medical" stats in my opinion.
First you need to define what you mean by "puh-lenty", I am not familiar with that term. I am assuming it references a certain quantity or percentage of a given group. Next, please provide evidence to your assertion that there is some proof that this defined quantity of pilots involved in accidents lied on their medicals.
First you need to define what you mean by "puh-lenty", I am not familiar with that term. I am assuming it references a certain quantity or percentage of a given group. Next, please provide evidence to your assertion that there is some proof that this defined quantity of pilots involved in accidents lied on their medicals.
I think that depends entirely on the scenario.