denverpilot
Tied Down
Really, I think we'd all be a lot happier if you guys would just go ahead and agree with me.
About Kate Upton?
Really, I think we'd all be a lot happier if you guys would just go ahead and agree with me.
I said if I got to a certain age and didn't have any dependents that I wasn't going to worry about how long I lived or did not live after that. That goes for flying that goes for coming down with a disease that would empty my bank account but save my life, or any number of other things. I've reached that age and I'm not going to seek treatment if I get something and I'm not going to worry about my flying because I'm not leaving any wife or kids behind.I guess it's not really a black and white issue, but the nobody lives forever and I flew yesterday and didn't die attitudes seem like they would be at odds with a mentality that's conducive to maximizing safety. Maybe I'm just jealous that some of you can partake in GA without any concerns about safety, it's certainly something that I think about a good bit.
I said if I got to a certain age and didn't have any dependents that I wasn't going to worry about how long I lived or did not live after that. That goes for flying that goes for coming down with a disease that would empty my bank account but save my life, or any number of other things. I've reached that age and I'm not going to seek treatment if I get something and I'm not going to worry about my flying because I'm not leaving any wife or kids behind.
I'm not looking to die but I'm not worried about it either.
Absolutely fair. I mentioned above that I still have a 4 year old and a wife that are both counting on me, so i'm not there yet...but I can understand the mentality for sure.
yup....me neither. I'm ready....whenever the Lord tarries.I'm not looking to die but I'm not worried about it either.
Things that will likely kill you:I'd just like to see more pilots acknowledge the risk involved, I think it makes it safer for all of us. I'd be more comfortable sharing the pattern with someone who respected the risks involved with GA than someone who didn't even pause to reflect on the possibility of a mid air.
The author of the killing zone should stick to writing and let others compute his math...his calculations have been proven false.From The Killing Zone: "...a person is 10.9 times more likely to be involved in a fatal general aviation aircraft accident than in a fatal car accident."
The author of the killing zone should stick to writing and let others compute his math...his calculations have been proven false.
Sounds like you might be worrying about it to much.I guess it's not really a black and white issue, but the nobody lives forever and I flew yesterday and didn't die attitudes seem like they would be at odds with a mentality that's conducive to maximizing safety. Maybe I'm just jealous that some of you can partake in GA without any concerns about safety, it's certainly something that I think about a good bit.
It seems there's two good ways to combat the high accident statistics that plague General Aviation:
Easy
- Ignore the statistics.
- Don't care about dying.
Was being contentious and pointing out that none of the analysis I've seen seems to indicate that driving is more dangerous than GA https://blog.aopa.org/aopa/2009/02/27/its-safer-than-driving-a-car-not/
At the end of the day, I just want to understand the risk inherent in GA as best as I can. I own a plane and put myself, my wife and 4 year old in it after all, and they're relying on me in my role as PIC. It's certainly a role that I take seriously, even though aviation is a very enjoyable activity for me.
Hazardous Pilot Attitude: Invulnerability
I guess it's not really a black and white issue, but the nobody lives forever and I flew yesterday and didn't die attitudes seem like they would be at odds with a mentality that's conducive to maximizing safety. Maybe I'm just jealous that some of you can partake in GA without any concerns about safety, it's certainly something that I think about a good bit.
You joke, but at some point it would be too risky for me to participate. I don't know what that number is, but if the chance of dying was 50% every time I went up, I wouldn't fly.
Let's think about this another way: imagine you were given the opportunity to make love to Kate Upton, but there was a 50% chance of dying while doing so. Would you do it? Okay, bad example
everything is honky dory.
That sounds like a fun condition
Have to factor in the fatal rate during training, also. You only got to fly missions if you survived training, and numbers on training fatals for WWII are almost as high as KIA numbers at certain training facilities.
Well I’ve been called a honky a few times by folks of a different race and never took offense. I enjoy life to much to take myself to seriously.Sounds racist.
It was a joke.Well I’ve been called a honky a few times by folks of a different race and never took offense. I enjoy life to much to take myself to seriously.
Oh. Sorry. Missed that...It was a joke.
The reason that most can't agree on here is because we each have our own risk/reward priorities to balance. Mine are getting very much skewed towards the risk side. I don't care what the statistics say, personally I have had a few close calls and am having a really hard time justifying to myself why I should continue to fly even if my plane took 9 years and countless hours to build. I love flying and thought I would be spending many weekends at the airport just boring holes in the sky once I finished my plane. The issue is that I started to see what happens to people and their families when things don't go as planned and then I look at what it would do to mine. I can't help but think about what would happen to my wife and daughter were I to die doing something I justified for no reason other than because it was fun. The consequences are far beyond just financial. There are plenty of other things to do in life that could provide just as much enjoyment without nearly as much risk. To put it in perspective, all the below happened to me in the first 100 hours and I don't think my experience is completely unique:
1) 2 close family friends died when their plane crashed into the ocean while out doing some sightseeing (cause never determined)
2) 1 friend died when the engine in his homebuilt airplane (same as mine) stopped running and he came up short of the runway
3) 1 friend was seriously injured when the engine in his homebuilt airplane (same as mine) decided to stop producing power a few hundred feet off the departure end of the runway
4) I had a near midair when someone came blasting into the pattern behind me without listening to my radio calls or looking for me in the pattern. I never saw him (impossible since he was behind and below me) or heard him (since he didn't use the radio) until I turned final and he popped out just a few feet underneath me. There was probably less than 20' of vertical separation between us.
5) Came within a few feet of clipping a tree when taking off from an unfamiliar airport heavily loaded. Thought I had plenty of runway but did not take into account how heavy I was, how hot it was, or that the runway had an uphill slope. Totally preventable but the fact that I did not notice it before it was happening is what bothers me.
There are others but those are just the highlights. I would bet that every pilot out there that has died in their plane probably regretted it just before impact. I would also be willing to bet that everyone that ran out of gas also told themselves that they would never be that guy. It is just too easy to be complacent or think that bad things will never happen. Statistics don't really matter when it happens to you. You can do things to try and minimize those risks but alot of them just can not be avoided. If I were single with no family I would probably feel alot different as the only person I would be hurting would be me. Yes, I could die driving my car or falling off a bicycle but so far neither of those have tried to kill me and there is far less margin of error in flying than there is in any of those two or many other activities.
Keith
1) 2 close family friends died when their plane crashed into the ocean while out doing some sightseeing (cause never determined)
2) 1 friend died when the engine in his homebuilt airplane (same as mine) stopped running and he came up short of the runway
3) 1 friend was seriously injured when the engine in his homebuilt airplane (same as mine) decided to stop producing power a few hundred feet off the departure end of the runway
4) I had a near midair when someone came blasting into the pattern behind me without listening to my radio calls or looking for me in the pattern. I never saw him (impossible since he was behind and below me) or heard him (since he didn't use the radio) until I turned final and he popped out just a few feet underneath me. There was probably less than 20' of vertical separation between us.
5) Came within a few feet of clipping a tree when taking off from an unfamiliar airport heavily loaded. Thought I had plenty of runway but did not take into account how heavy I was, how hot it was, or that the runway had an uphill slope. Totally preventable but the fact that I did not notice it before it was happening is what bothers me.
There are others but those are just the highlights. I would bet that every pilot out there that has died in their plane probably regretted it just before impact. I would also be willing to bet that everyone that ran out of gas also told themselves that they would never be that guy.
It is just too easy to be complacent or think that bad things will never happen.
Statistics don't really matter when it happens to you. You can do things to try and minimize those risks but alot of them just can not be avoided. If I were single with no family I would probably feel alot different as the only person I would be hurting would be me. Yes, I could die driving my car or falling off a bicycle but so far neither of those have tried to kill me and there is far less margin of error in flying than there is in any of those two or many other activities.
Keith
There aren't many other hobbies out there where a few moments of inattention or a missed minor detail can end up quickly killing you.
I guess I'm an anomaly or things aren't quite as rare as most think. In addition to coming that close to a midair I also witnessed the immediate aftermath of one at a local airport when I was still a student pilot years ago. It was a classic high wing / low wing incident where the high wing was taking off and the low wing was landing. Nothing quite puts the risk in perspective like being the first on the scene of an accident and seeing a teenage son running across the ramp to his dads airplane that just crashed while looking at the dad and his CFI sitting dead in the cockpit.
I too thought that knowing / seeing someone that died in an airplane accident on a clear sunny day was just a rare anomaly. That is what I told my wife and also what kept me going to get my license after seeing that horrible accident. Now having my license and having seen all the other incidents I listed above I just understand how people can go flying thinking it will never happen to them because "flying is safer than driving to the airport". It only takes once. I understand people seeing and accepting the risk, just not the people that think it can't happen to them as long as they "don't do what those other pilots did".
As far as that accident rate with my homebuilt I have already decided that I will no longer fly it with the current engine and haven't in about a year. It has never faltered or given me reason to doubt it but with two factory built aircraft crashing due to engine issues plus loosing a friend to an engine issue it just isn't fun anymore. The desire to keep flying is strong so I am debating on replacing the engine with something else in order to keep flying but may just end up selling the whole thing and starting a different hobby that is more tolerant of mistakes. There aren't many other hobbies out there where a few moments of inattention or a missed minor detail can end up quickly killing you.
Keith
Keith
Sounds like it is time to give it up!
It's just that the average person drives a vehicle on a daily basis and don't fly in small aircraft, so they're more than comfortable accepting the risks from being on the road, because most folks don't even think about them, since it's routine. When it comes to airplanes, the average person thinks about the probability that they're going to get killed since they don't engage in the activity very often and they're uneducated when it comes to aviation. It's basically a mind game.Yeah, aviation has risks.
Any parents in the house? Around 1 in 4 accidental child deaths is motor vehicle accidents. Someone speeding through Omaha hit a car last night critically injuring 2 kids, fled the scene. I think a lot of risks are just taken for granted.