Boris Badenov
Fortis Leader
Figures the one time the proverbial "car full of Federales" really does just happen to be driving by, the guy crashes so they don't even get to violate him. Damn the luck?
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Have they found the wreckage yet? I'm sorry, wrong thread.Figures the one time the proverbial "car full of Federales" really does just happen to be driving by, the guy crashes so they don't even get to violate him. Damn the luck?
Have they found the wreckage yet? I'm sorry, wrong thread.
Fox expert has reported that a flight data recorder has not been recovered and there were no ACARS communications.Never the wrong thread for some speculation. Terrorism? Some bizzare systems failure? My money is on Martians.
Figures the one time the proverbial "car full of Federales" really does just happen to be driving by, the guy crashes so they don't even get to violate him. Damn the luck?
Never the wrong thread for some speculation. Terrorism? Some bizzare systems failure? My money is on Martians.
Irony or tip-off....or car-pooling.Is an interesting irony there.
I sometimes scoff at this notion that "this could be any of us." Yes, this could be any of us in the sense that we could be a smoking hole in the ground. No, this couldn't be "any of us" in the sense that we could bite it while performing aerobatics close to the ground and beyond what the FAA designates as a safe margin.
Have I broken FARs before? Sure
they are surprised when they look back with the benefit of hindsight and say, "wow, that was stupid...I'll never do that again".
No, that's exactly what I do mean -- it actually could be any of us.
And you prove my point to a T when you say:
Very few pilots' personality (self image) and airmanship has them saying, "oh yeah, I'm gonna go do something unsafe/illegal/stupid today". In fact, I've never met anyone who is that "that guy". Yet, despite that fact, there are a lot of pilots who are "that guy". It is sort of like that thing where most pilots view themselves as "above average", even though that is statistically impossible. Instances of bad judgment and airmanship are a result of a lot of varied factors that are subtle, insidious, and for many pilots completely ignored (the "it can't happen to me" crowd). I've met a ton of them...and I've even been one myself. I bet if you asked that Aerostar pilot, when he was alive, he would have told you that he wasn't "that guy", either.
What that says is that bad judgment and poor decisionmaking is not some big, black-and-white decision that a pilot just up and intentionally decides on one day. For some folks it might be, but for the vast majority of aviators it is not. Instead, it is a gradual process that sneaks up on them when they are denying it could ever be them, and they are surprised when they look back with the benefit of hindsight and say, "wow, that was stupid...I'll never do that again".
Good airmanship is recognizing it can be you, and doing everything in your power from allowing it to be you.
I've made mistakes in judgement and errors in execution that have placed myself and others at some level of increased risk despite my best intentions. I have failed to recognize an accumulation of factors that individually represented little risk, but collectively made an accident possible, if not likely.Good airmanship is recognizing it can be you, and doing everything in your power from allowing it to be you.
I was ready to hit the LIKE button when I remembered, he was performing hammerhead stalls with a recently purchased Aerostar. I'm sure I'm capable of stuffing it in with the best of them, but it's not going to look anything like this .... I'm sure of it, Professor Kingsfield.
I think it's all relative really. Some people say they wont auger it in like this guy, but they'll sneak down past mins. There used to be time when "beating up the patch" with your new airplane wasn't considered such a taboo thing to do... whether it was an old Jenny or Beech 18. There will be a time where people will probably view sneaking past mins as a completely unheard of thing for any pilot to do... yet most of us have done it a time or two. I've been in the whole low altitude aerobatic arena before and what many people don't understand is that you can get just as comfortable doing low altitude aerobatics as you can sneaking down past mins, taking an airplane you knew was slightly over gross, or any other variation that can be traced back to bad decision making that many pilots do or have done. It's completely relative to your pilot environment.
Either way, that controlled flight into terrain will kill you just as fast as the uncontrolled flight into terrain. But by the grace of God, there go I.
Who said any if us are comfortable with "sneaking past minimums?"
To br fair, I wouldn't do aerobatics in an Aerostar or any other non-aerobatic plane. I also wouldn't buzz a residential.area. My certificates are too important to me.
Sneaking past minimums or (insert here common FAR violation) was the point. Also, the Aerostar is actually one of the only twins capable of aerobatics (+6G).
Heh. Terrible as it may make me I do find that element of the story amusing.Figures the one time the proverbial "car full of Federales" really does just happen to be driving by, the guy crashes so they don't even get to violate him. Damn the luck?
If you read my post, I didn't agree that "sneaking past minimums" was acceptable or common.
Second, while I don't have the type certificate data sheet available, I'd be very surprised if the Aerostar was certified in the aerobatic category; regardless of the G tolerances it can survive. Without looking it up, because I'm on my phone, I presume an Aerostar is a normal category airplane. Even if it were certified in the aerobatic category, nothing permits a low level display over a neighborhood.
Okay Dr. Chomsky, it's all relative, we get that.I think it's all relative really. I.
Okay Dr. Chomsky
I think we kind of disconnected a while ago from the point I was trying to make. You seem to have it all figured out, good on ya.