denverpilot
Tied Down
and how would the pilot know how much oil was coming out below the plane?
They’re watching it on WiFi on their phone from the tail mounted GoPro and sending screenshots to Instagram? LOL!
and how would the pilot know how much oil was coming out below the plane?
They are not. Neither is declaring an emergency as simple as, "I need priority right now so clear everyone else out of the area immediately." Which is the level you seem to have brought it to.It wasn't expressed that simply Mark but thanks for the comment taking it to that level. I wish the world was binary and all decisions were that simple.
There is a movie with Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin, forget the title, where they end up crashed in Alaska. Hopkins makes this statement which I think is relevant here and which I think about alot: He says, people in that situation die of shame, they cannot admit to themselves they are in that situation and hence do not take the actions necessary to survive.That makes sense. Unfortunately.
In the pilot context there's that but also concern about usually nonexistent FAA repercussions.There is a movie with Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin, forget the title, where they end up crashed in Alaska. Hopkins makes this statement which I think is relevant here and which I think about alot: He says, people in that situation die of shame, they cannot admit to themselves they are in that situation and hence do not take the actions necessary to survive.
There is a movie with Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin, forget the title, where they end up crashed in Alaska. Hopkins makes this statement which I think is relevant here and which I think about alot: He says, people in that situation die of shame, they cannot admit to themselves they are in that situation and hence do not take the actions necessary to survive.
Would someone elaborate on the FAA ramifications of actually declaring an emergency - maybe use this case as an example if possible.
Would the CFI be looking at some type of enforcement action if it was ruled to be his fault? Does the plane become grounded and a nightmare to move and fly again? Does a NASA report help in this case? Is the aversion to declare based on some older tactics no longer used by the FAA? If declaring had no ramifications, why wouldnt a CFI of all people declare first and ask questions later. Stigma? Hmm?
Between the possibility of a totally obscured forward view and fire...you'd think you'd want helpful resources as close as possible in case the landing goes south or fire starts while trying to get out.
Wow! You are good!Ah, The Edge...great film!
But you forgot the last part - the one thing that they didn't do to save themselves: declaring an emergency!
OK just joking, it was "thinking"
While we're at it, best scene:
sounds more like a "pan pan pan" situation to me, but that may be splitting hairs a little fine.Declaring an emergency is an advisory to ATC you are having a problem which is or may become urgent enough to require priority, special handling, or deviation from rules and instructions. If it's not a "right now!" it at least lets ATC plan for the possibility. It is often followed by, "say intentions," IOW, "what do you want to do and do you need anything?" The answer might well be, nothing at the moment, but I might suddenly need something, so stay with me. It's a heads-up which, exactly opposite to your speculation about multiple emergencies, allows ATC to prioritize.
I won't presume to apply this situation to the discussion of this thread, but I can come up with a real-world example of two "emergencies" at the same airport...Sounds imaginary to me. Any real world examples?
Declaring an emergency is an advisory to ATC you are having a problem which is or may become urgent enough to require priority, special handling, or deviation from rules and instructions. If it's not a "right now!" it at least lets ATC plan for the possibility. It is often followed by, "say intentions," IOW, "what do you want to do and do you need anything?" The answer might well be, nothing at the moment, but I might suddenly need something, so stay with me. It's a heads-up which, exactly opposite to your speculation about multiple emergencies, allows ATC to prioritize.
That's what I did when I ran out of gas (stupid).I was happy as long as the oil pressure gauge was steady. If it had wavered I would have declared with words like "landing now". At an uncontrolled field after a mag failure I said "emergency inbound, get out of my way, mag failure"
??? You said "get out of my way, mag failure"????That's what I did when I ran out of gas (stupid).
I said 'Jabiru 2 east, low fuel, straight in 15'??? You said "get out of my way, mag failure"????
I really think that applies here even if you think he didn't require immediate assistance.A condition concerning the
safety of an aircraft or other vehicle, or of person on
board or in sight, but which does not require
immediate assistance.
Of course you did. That has not changed. But didn't you ask what the pilot wanted? What assistance the pilot needed? What the pilot wanted to do? That's what I was asked the two times I declared, and my point in saying the "conflicting priorities" rationale for not declaring is tenuous at best. Would you prefer the pilot in the story stay mum until the very last second?When I controlled Mark, a pilot declaring an emergency was given priority. I don't believe that has changed.
Hmm. How many of the crash crew are pilots.........Dang, that's got me feeling guilty for not having emergenciesWhen I used to race cars and the wreckers were sent for me, I always met each person, shook their hand and thanked them for coming out. If I was conscious.
I do the same thing at the airport.
And I declare because sometimes the budget is determined by the number of callouts that emergency crews get in one year.
Intro flight for the student, wind screen getting covered in oil, CFI didnt declare. start at 25:42
27:33 when the CFI first notices, i think it started before that, hard to see with the sun
Why on earth would you do something like that? what messege is being sent to the student (who i hope continued to become a pilot, donno).
Of course you did. That has not changed. But didn't you ask what the pilot wanted? What assistance the pilot needed? What the pilot wanted to do? That's what I was asked the two times I declared, and my point in saying the "conflicting priorities" rationale for not declaring is tenuous at best. Would you prefer the pilot in the story stay mum until the very last second?
Seriously, if you think this CFI shouldn't have declared, you are a danger to anyone who flies with you.
What about the part where he flew through traffic on final? In an emergency, you can do what you need to do. If you communicate, ATC can get everyone else out of your way. I skipped around, but it looked like he was upwind off the airport when he 180'd. If he'd declared, they would have given him straight in.I think I wasn't there, I don't know this guy, and I wasn't giving a ride to a prospective student and therefore I will not make a decision based on this one video about whether or not the CFI is a danger to everyone who flies with him. It's not clear to me that he would have gotten down any faster by declaring, but his passengers would have had all his friends saying "you had an emergency? Wow, it's lucky you didn't die, you'd be crazy to learn to fly".
I believe the instructor was probably trying to play it cool so as to not alarm his passenger and avoid scaring him away from aviation. My personal opinion is that it would have been more impressive to say "see how competent we are, this is how you'll get to be too, able to handle anything". That means declaring an emergency, but acting normal anyway.
What about the part where he flew through traffic on final? In an emergency, you can do what you need to do. If you communicate, ATC can get everyone else out of your way. I skipped around, but it looked like he was upwind off the airport when he 180'd. If he'd declared, they would have given him straight in.
Grumman with a strong burning rubber smell. Turned out to be a seized alternator and the belt melting.
Grumman with a seized exhaust valve, leading to very rough running and loss of power.
My Sky Arrow with very rough running. Likely some gasket goop getting sucked into the main jet.
Ok, I just watched the video. First, that CFI would drive me bonkers. At least the oil leak shut him up. And why did it have to take half an hourto get in the air after start up? What a miserable intro flight.