I leave a sleeping bag, groung pad, gortex parka and warm gloves in the
airplane during the winter. I have needed all of them at one time or
another and I haven't even crashed!
Mike
MU-2
"Gary Drescher" wrote in message
news:qCfJc.90480$XM6.20444@attbi_s53...
"Rick Durden" wrote in message
m...
Gary,
For a serious discussion on what to carry when you are flying, go to
the website dedicated to evaluationg survival equipment for pilots:
www.equipped.org It is part of a nonprofit called Equipped To Survive
and is run by the aviation survival guru Doug Ritter.
There is finally an excellent pocket survival kit that includes a
signaling mirror and whistle designed for volume and distance that has
been put together by Ritter (his research indicates that if the
survival equipment isn't physically on your person you probably won't
be able to find it after an accident). The pocket survival kit is
available through www.aeromedix.com which also has a medical kit that
I carry in the airplane.
It's worth going to equipped.org if only to read the detailed reviews
on survival knives and the stuff to avoid because they don't work,
break or cannot be opened with one hand. Also, take a look at the
information on ditching. It punctures some of the myths on the
subject.
Thanks, I'll have a look! I've already got some of the basics (rescue
whistle, compass, mirror, foil blankets) but I'm undecided about the
cost-benefit tradeoff for more expensive items.
A question for anyone here who carries a survival kit when you fly: have
you
ever needed to use it?
--Gary
All the best,
Rick
"Gary Drescher" wrote in message
news:hLwGc.16623$JR4.7695@attbi_s54...
A pilot crashed on a NH mountain in fog yesterday. He survived, but
his
17-year-old son did not. Rescuers were able to find him in part
because
he
was blowing a whistle. I just added one to my flight bag.
(http://makeashorterlink.com/?J3AA12BB8)
--Gary