Wouldn't have happened if he'd gotten whistle tips installed.
Riddle2012,
See you at the creek. :beer:
Where did I say that?So all this "Real Planes have Priority" gives the bipe flyer carte blanche to be stupid???? Huh??
I absolutely agree that this happened as a result of poor coordination and planning by the organizer. But I'm having a bit of trouble with the RC guy is a victim part the same way I have trouble when I hear about a girl walking through a known seedy park alone at 3 AM and getting raped because of it is a victim. Does she deserve to get raped? Nope. Should she have known better? Yep. So if you want to call her and your RC guy victims, go right ahead. But neither of them are victims that I'm ever going to feel sorry for because both of them could have prevented the malady that befell them if they had just educated themselves a little bit and used some good sense.poor coordination and planning by the organizer and the bipe pilot... RC guy is a victim.....
Really? 91.13 is almost always tacked on in addition to another violation. 91.119, it was at an airport. Purpose of take off or landing, at a sparsely populated area. (Airports are aways considered that.)
91.111. Quit grasping at straws. I think we both know theres not a law judge on the planet that would put a RC in the same category as a full scale.
Ignorance does not make someones actions right. Ask the guy in the lawn chair with the six pack of beer over LAX.
I used to be huge into model rockets, and they were very controlled, even out in the middle of no where. Why should RC planes at an airport be any different? If you wanna fly your in toy, go out into a god damn field.
ZOMFG Yur RC toy aeroplanez video wuz sooo allsome!!!111!!one!one!!!11
Sorry, but a toy is still a toy, no amount of whining can change that.
An RC plane "operator" is not a pilot. Fact.
You have your opinions on the matter, I have mine. Move on.
Riddle2012,
See you at the creek. :beer:
Hmmm.... at every event I have flown RC at, (though tower controlled in my cases).. when it was RC Demo time.... the runway was CLOSED unless there was a mayday
several have commented that the biplane pilot surely saw the crowd of people on/next to the runway.. and apparently there is a rule about flying within 500 feet of people....
The organizers and the biplane pilot screwed up.... the poor RC pilot was just flying his demo when the management told him to.
Really? 91.13 is almost always tacked on in addition to another violation. 91.119, it was at an airport. Purpose of take off or landing, at a sparsely populated area. (Airports are aways considered that.)
91.111. Quit grasping at straws. I think we both know theres not a law judge on the planet that would put a RC in the same category as a full scale.
Ignorance does not make someones actions right. Ask the guy in the lawn chair with the six pack of beer over LAX.
I used to be huge into model rockets, and they were very controlled, even out in the middle of no where. Why should RC planes at an airport be any different? If you wanna fly your in toy, go out into a god damn field.
I speak from personal experince. I went to a friends NTSB hearing who did just this, at the Camrillo airshow two years ago, before the airshow had started. He departed about an hour before the airshow started in his Extra, made a pass before it started with is smoke on, and had his certificates revoked. He is a retired Delta captain, with 17,000 plus hours. The airboss even came up to him after he had landed and was at selfserve and aksed if he'd like to do a couple of fly by's durning the show. And these were exactly the violations he was charged with. And the tower had cleared him to do it.
One of the things that blew me away was the FAA's "expert" said you climb out in an Extra 300 the same way you climb out in a C172.
If someone can point me towards where I can search an online database, I'll show you.
ahh ha ha ha.... ... relax Dawg... it is all good... and even though you apparently have no respect for toy planes, I still love everything that flies... prolly even the plane you rent for 2 hours every other saturday too!!
With an attitude like that, I bet you have a few affliction shirts yourself. Do you wear them in the Cherokee as well?
They could just all be crack-heayyyds at that fly-in.
That's nice and all, but I don't rent any plane, I own one. If you were paying attention at all you probably would have seen that in my
sig line.
I never said I hated RC planes, I simply said I have much more respect for actual aerobatic "pilots", than remote control operators.
That is all.
.............
As I've previously posted, I DO NOT hate RC aircraft. I do, however, think it is silly to compare them in any form to real aerobatic pilots and aircraft, which is what the previous poster was trying to do.
Perfecting a model may take as much skill as flying a real plane to ILS minimums, but how many lives do you have in your hands while piloting that RC model? Zero. The consequences of failure in a real aircraft are much more grave. And therein lies the difference.
........
With an attitude like that, I bet you have a few affliction shirts yourself. Do you wear them in the Cherokee as well?
I feel safe to say I can see both sides of this. I've done demos similar to this one with my models. (I actually have the same model as this guy). I've also flown full scale air shows, plenty of acro time, and maybe even witnessed first hand several "go arounds" similar to this.
I've been fortunate to have well rounded experience from gliders, seaplanes, and everything in between to my current Intl Corporate Jet gig. Still fly a lot of small stuff, and plenty of RC planes/helis as well.
I can without a doubt tell you that hovering and other forms of "high alpha" flight that the upper echelon of modelers have perfected takes as much skill as flying an ILS to minimums. You can teach a monkey to do either quite well.
Watch that Heli video posted above. That's not most peoples cup of tea, but the reflexes, coordination, and situational awareness it takes to accomplish that is absolutely incredible.
The ranks of the serious RC modeler include an incredible percentage of professional and GA pilots. I assume that a lot of them are like me and hate that there is rift between two forms of the same thing, aviation.
With that out of the way, I'd like to point out of few of my opinions:
These models are no more a "toy" than a Pitts or Starduster. With a few exceptions on both sides, we buy these "toys" with surplus money to fill our spare time with a pastime that is enjoyable to us.
The RC pilot was young and uninformed. He didn't know the finer points of the situation, or the potential consequences. In a court of law that won't mean squat. I wonder if any "young and uninformed" aviators have ever found themselves in a pickle. In all of aviation, we learn with age and experience. Please keep in mind that this event was organized and run by FS pilots.
In my estimation, the person that deserves an apology the most is the pax in the bipe. The pilot knew the risks. Everytime you buzz a strip, event or not, your hanging your tail out the window. Do you think his heart rate and adrenaline were elevated before he met the model? H3LL Yeah!
This was an unfortunate event. Luckily everybody walked away. Hopefully we can learn from this for future events. I can tell you that the Modelling Community are already drafting guidelines to give the pilots the information they need to have before providing demonstrations at full scale events. The FAA might even look at this video and realize it needs a similar AC for those wishing to hold a non-waivered event at an uncontrolled airport. These guys obviously needed some guidance. (and at least a NOTAM!)