USMCmech
Well-Known Member
He was reckless. He was in a rush to get it out of there due to weather and hadn't secured a generator in the rear of the plane, and didn't even have fire extinguishers on standyby for the fire that consumed the airplane. It had been up there for nearly 50 years at the time, whats one more year?
That is more than a fair critisim with his plan. I personally think he should have waited till the next summer, finished the work, and flown it out of dry land. However that is hindsite talking.
He made a judgement call. One that cost him dearly personally, and financially.
I hope you never have to make a judgement call that turns out badly, but as pilots that is the risk we take every time we fly.
Greenamayer has a history of reckless operations. .....
Risking life for a record attempt, when you know what the problem is and can fix it, nah, that aint wreckless, or nuts.
Taking large and/or stupid risks with you own life is your own buisness.
The Red Bull air races are/were a tragedy waiting to happen. Oshkosh kills a handful of pilots every year. Pilots die in airshows every year. There is no justifiable reason to climb Mt Everest, but people do and people die every year. Base jumping, horseback riding, high school football, swimming, driving to the grocery store.
All of these activities kill people every year.
Nobody gets out of this game alive.