ppragman
No pasa nada.
Yes, it is true that all flight ops has some amount of risk involved. Hell, even driving to work has some risk involved. The answer is not to avoid every situation that has an element of risk. The answer is to manage, minimize and mitigate the risk that you do accept. I try to not fly single engine if I don't have an out. If there is a low ceiling then I am screwed if my engine quits because I can not see and manuever around to a good forced landing field. Now if I have a ceiling high enough to where I can break out and still have time to manuever to avoid houses, trees, etc then I have more of that warm and fuzzy feeling that I like when I fly. Same for flying over mountains Single Engine... I fly high enough so that I can always glide to a survivable landing area. I hope to become an old pilot one day so I am trying to avoid the bold and reckless type of flying.
Note: FWIW, I did perform an actual 0/0 takeoff once a few years ago in a piston single and I knew that if the engine quit on me I was screwed. I had a sinking feeling in my stomach during the entire taxi, takeoff, and departure. I did not enjoy the thought of having no out if something went wrong and I decided afterwards that I would never again put myself in that sort of situation.
What good does that VFR airport or the option to get vectored back do for you if you lose your engine on departure SE? You are not going to glide to either one of those options and if you have 0/0 then you have zero control in what the plane goes into when it hits the ground. Good Night!
If you lose your engine on departure VFR you're probably just as screwed. Yeah, you might be able to make it if you're lucky, but if you're flying a fully loaded bird out of a max performance field (or to be honest, even a lightly loaded bird out of a fairly long field), then you are probably going to be SOL when you lose a motor because guess what, most airplanes don't really glide that well. Basically, if you lose a motor in the first 500' in general you're probably SOL unless you're taking off out over a field, warm 2' deep tropical water, or an empty city with wide boulevards and underground powerlines. If operational needs dictate the departure, you're legal (e.g. 0/0 135 is a no-no), and you feel that you won't be overly taxing your abilities as an airman (e.g., maybe you don't want to take off into the 50kt winds at night IFR over the mountains in a steam guages only airplane with half of your equipment MEL'd, a baby on the way, a divorce in progress, and a bad case of the brown bottle flu), then launch.