Please, MFT1Air, with all due respect if we don't learn from accidents we're doomed to repeat them.
Thank GOD none of our families were onboard that flight because if they were and after reading the NTSB report, I'd probably be in jail right now because I did something stupid.
. . .and you're absolutely correct. That's exactly my point. The NTSB reports are excellent reading material for me to learn from others what to do, but also I learn what not to do.
You're absolutely right. None of
OUR families were onboard, but here's the hypothetical . . .what if the captain's wife or the co-pilot's family were aviation enthusiasts who read this forum? What would
THEY deduce from this thread?
Perhaps
- My husband was a bad pilot because he paid for his job by flying with Gulfstream. . .or
- My husband disgraced the aviation profession by paying for his job in order to be a better providor as a husband, father, or aviator.
If I were to look the deceased families in their faces, I do not believe in good conscience I could make those kinds of statements as the reason why their loved ones are no longer with them. I could, however, in good conscience, say that to them those pilots took the airplane beyond the prescribed capabilities of the aircraft.
Yep, I read what the occurred in many of the accidents from the NTSB reports. I do this in order to become a better pilot. I, however, perceive myself as taking a more analytical, unemotional perspective about the "facts" not attempting to draw conclusions based upon perceptions of professional or unprofessional ethcial behavior.
So Doug, I have to ask you a "what if". . .worse case scenario. Say your family
was on the aircraft. What's going to put you in jail? The anger over PFT/PFJ or taking the airplane where it didn't belong?
Next time you fly commercial, are you going to query the pilot if they PFT/PFJ'd for Gulfstream? If so, I'd be curious if you receive a refund.
