Mike, you're missing the point. I've been there, with either a patient, our organs waiting, at go time. I've had to get back up out of my seat to double check stuff, because people make mistakes. Sumping the fuel is something we all learn from day -0- in a piston. And this is the exact rain why. Maybe it wouldn't have shown anything, maybe it would have. Speculating it's of little relevance now. It's already happened. The point I am making, it's when you are rushed, that's when it's time to slow down. Because that's when stuff like this happens.
I've been there, with a sick patient, and time sensitive organs, told to hurry up.
"What's the point of all of this if we never make it there because I missed something?"
I'm not missing the point at all. You think I not aware of mission accomplishment vs safety, and how extenuating circumstances affect the overall risk being accepted?
This was a unique situation whereby the pilot, even had he sumped the tanks, may
still have had light blue fuel, unless the plane was filled over probably more than halfway with Jet fuel. I've been fueled in the same airplane back in the day with 80 octane, 100LL, and 100; to where with the mishmash of colors, I couldn't tell you which was the majority in there. Granted those were all AVGAS, but as previously stated, JET fuel, if not in sufficient quantity, may not settle quick or mix well enough to turn blue into fully clear.
I fully understand slowing down when rushed, when reasonably possible. I also understand that sometimes, rushing happens, or multiple things need to be done at the same time. I'm telling you, you can't always check everyone's work all of the time. It's just not possible. In this situation, he may have been rushed to the point that he took what were
reasonable precautions for the situation at hand, for this one time. And it turned out that someone didn't do their job.
What if he did sump the tank and it was still light blue, and he still crashed after being misfueled (very possible to occur)? Would we suggest he wait about 30 minutes to let fuel settle to re-sump it? Ok, what if he keeps doing that in every fueling situation, taking a 30 minute delay each time, and was fueled correctly every time? That won't fly after awhile.
There's a point where you just can't micromanage everything around you all the time. That's real life. And real life isn't always a perfect world in
some cases. As I said, the primary causal factor of this accident was the misfueling,
not the fact that the PIC didn't catch the fact it was misfueled. Granted, dead is dead, sure; but barring some broken policy, the PIC didn't do anything legally wrong in this case. Just an unfortunate tragedy.