Firebird2XC
Well-Known Member
Could you not say that with regard to every accident.
No. Not every accident is attributable to pilot error, and even the ones that are are not necessarily precipitated by external human factors.
Could you not say that with regard to every accident.
If you're not prepared to pack up your kit bag and walk away from a loaded aircraft when you know somebody is crossing a line they should not, you don't belong in this profession. If Shaw or Renslow had done that, maybe we wouldn't even be having this discussion.
So your saying if one pilot packed up his flight kit and went home the flight would still go and crash?No. Not every accident is attributable to pilot error, and even the ones that are are not necessarily precipitated by external human factors.
So your saying if one pilot packed up his flight kit and went home the flight would still go and crash?
What would tell us it wouldn't have happened again a month later if one of them had walked away from a loaded aircraft?
But this rules doesn't help the problem of pilots having type A personalities.What I'm saying is that there are times when pilots allow themselves to be put in compromising positions because they lack the wherewithal to walk away when they know they should.
But this rules doesn't help the problem of pilots having type A personalities.
Yea, look at how many good planes pilots have put into the ground because they didn't walk away from the airplane. Then look how many times is was because "mission mentality" vs not having the experience to walk away.Explain? Are you referring to the 'mission mentality'?
I think of this as:But this rules doesn't help the problem of pilots having type A personalities.
I don't think anyone would disagree with that. Clearly your average military pilot is a better flyer at 500 hours than I am with with 3000. And even though I just passed my ATP checkride in a light twin, I don't know squat about flying a jet.
But, how exactly do you weight the different types of experience? Is an hour of crop dusting more or less valuable than an hour of instruction? How about the military guys who flew F-15s in combat vs the C-5 crews who are basically flying a 747? When Astronaut Hoot Gibson retired from the Navy and NASA with three space shuttle flights and who knows how many carrier landings, was he qualified to fly 737s for Southwest?
The more skilled and more broad experienced a pilot is, the better. But how exactly do you force the airlines to hire such pilots instead of the cheaper and very inexperienced Gulfstream grads?
Yea, look at how many good planes pilots have put into the ground because they didn't walk away from the airplane. Then look how many times is was because "mission mentality" vs not having the experience to walk away.
I agree that 1500 hours is an arbitrary number, but there has to be a line drawn somewhere. You obviously can't legislate actual "experience", but you can certainly increase the likelihood that an airline pilot will be more capable by implementing a minimum hour requirement. At the very least, accumulating that time ensures that you take the career path seriously and have put some effort into getting to an airline. There are no such guarantees with a 250hr 90-day wonder, which is what some airlines were getting in the hiring boom.
If they're supposed to be more or less interchangeable, why not require the same minimum standards?
I don't think anyone would disagree with that. Clearly your average military pilot is a better flyer at 500 hours than I am with with 3000. And even though I just passed my ATP checkride in a light twin, I don't know squat about flying a jet.
Then get rid of pay scales for FO's and Captains. Get rid of FO and Captain in general. Pilot flying is PIC, Pilot monitoring is SIC.
Being 'Type A' or task oriented does not necessarily predispose a pilot to causing an accident. The anti-authority, macho, "it can't happen to me, let's just get it done..." mentality does. It's the most insidious form of pilot pushing- there are incentives in place to get it done, so a pilot pushes themselves into an impossible scenario.
What specific hull losses in recent memory were a direct result of an anti-authority attitude?
I'm not familiar with any that were the result of intentionally flying an un-airworthy aircraft, or intentionally flying into an impossible scenario.
At the risk of sounding unpopular, perhaps there are some folks flying that shouldn't be - period. It just doesn't benefit anyone in the short term for them to walk away and not come back. I'm among the worst of the worst out there, so I'm qualified to suggest so![]()
Not trying to start anything here, but honestly trying to get a sense from the collective on what a fresh CMEL can do. I'm all for safety reform, but what I'm not all for is pulling up the ladder.
My point is to say that it was his idea to go to Congress instead of the FAA and think of that as a break through idea that has never been done is disingenuous at best. Also, look at the timing issues AND the fact that the families were already on their way to push for change before the project really took form. Finally, Congress was already moving towards pushing the FAA to do something which is evident from the Boccieri letter.
Not trying to start anything here, but honestly trying to get a sense from the collective on what a fresh CMEL can do. I'm all for safety reform, but what I'm not all for is pulling up the ladder.