On Sun, 30 Jul 2006 22:12:28 GMT, Ed Rasimus
wrote in
::
On Sun, 30 Jul 2006 21:04:46 GMT, Larry Dighera
wrote:
In the four military/civil MACs at the links below, you'll find no
mention of military radar use for traffic deconfliction.
This is the second posting of the list in this thread. You're becoming
repititous and redundant. The last time and this time, the links were
not relevant to the point being addressed.
I posted them again for your benefit; you obviously didn't read them
the last time I posted them. From your comments, you seem unfamiliar
with their details.
While the aircraft may be so equipped, is the radar to which you refer
required to be used for _collision_avoidance_ during the time military
aircraft are operating in joint use airspace? Can you cite a
regulation that so mandates it?
Common sense, rather than regulations, mandates that the operator use
every method at his/her disposal to deconflict the flight path.
Lacking regulations that mandate the use of radar for traffic
deconfliction, Parker's lack of their use does not constitute a
violation of regulations. Such a regulation may have saved the life
of the pilot into whom Parker led his wingman.
And AWACS can see both.
Both, transponders and targets?
Another admission of cluelessness? Two in one post? YES! BOTH!
I just wanted to assure I understood you correctly.
How common is it for AWACS to be employed for MTR training flights?
Not common at all.
Exactly.
The reason being that ATC and military approach
control facilities are available.
Are ATC and military approach control facilities able to reliably
paint high-speed, low-level military aircraft on MTRs at 200' AGL?
Doubtful. Therefore, there should be a _regulatory_ requirement for
military aircraft on MTRs to employ on-board radar for traffic
deconfliction.
The source of my concern is strictly a matter of self preservation.
Then look out the window. Use common sense. Fly 20-30 hours per month
in day, night and weather conditions.
Spoken like the man with the bulletproof aircraft stout enough to
survive a MAC to the fellow with the aluminum eggshell bugsmasher. Not
only do you lack empathy for your fellow airmen, but insight into
their vulnerability to your high-speed, low-level operations. Are you
entirely incapable of objective, rational thought?
Military fighter aircraft pilots have little physical harm to fear
from colliding with a typical GA aircraft due to the weight and speed
differential as well as a much more robust airframe and ejection seat
to provide them with a safe landing.
Bull****! A mid-air in a high performance aircraft isn't a dented
fender.
My thought exactly, but Parker wasn't made to pay any restitution.
An ejection isn't a "safe" procedure and jettisoning a $50
million dollar aircraft,
Parker's wingman was taken to the hospital for observation and
released. The Cessna pilot was splattered over four acres of country
club fairways. Safety is relative.
The GA pilot is like a fluttering moth poised hovering above the
rush hour traffic in such a situation.
Not very wise of the fluttering moth to be in such a precarious
situation.
You're saying, GA aircraft should not be within Class B and C
airspace? Surely I've missed your meaning.
Seems like the moth should take some personal
responsibility.
The Cessna was in a right bank at the time of impact in the left/left
Florida MAC. The Cessna pilot was taking evasive action in an attempt
to comply with the see-and-avoid regulation. But that wasn't possible
because of the speed of the military aircraft. I'd say the Cessna
pilot was acting as responsibly as possible. Parker, on the other
hand ...
I agree there is a lack of responsibility being exercised in
high-speed, low-level military operations, and it is the military who
are shrugging responsibility commensurate with the hazard they cause.
His chances of survival in a collision are slight at best.
If you'd bothered to read the details of the four military/civil MACs
I cited, you'd know that all the military pilots involved survived
unscathed. The GA pilots often paid with their lives. Given those
statistics, I'd say your assessment above is in error.
I have to share the sky with the military, and their military/civil
MAC record isn't as good as one would expect.
How many mid-air collisions per year does the military have? You've
repeatedly cited four, but let's go back over 25 years. How many? How
many were with your fluttering moths? Oh, not many, heh.
Are you saying that the military/civil MAC rate is acceptable, and
there should be no effort to improve safety?
But what I find most
troubling is the lack of consequences a military aviator faces as a
result of carelessness, incompetence, recklessness, and regulation
violations.
A detailed investigation,
With a medical examination eight days after the MAC in the case of
Parker.
an accident board and a corollary board, plus possible court martial
don't satisfy you?
Parker's CO, Gen. Rosa, told the press, that Parker would receive a
verbal or written reprimand. That doesn't satisfy me. If Parker had
been adjudicated in a court of law, instead of having his CO give him
a talking to, he would be doing time.
If the military pilot thinks he can disintegrate a civil
flight, punch out, and live to fly another day without loss of rank,
pay, or freedom, what incentive does he have to watch out for us
little guys with whom he shares the skies?
That is such an outrageous statement that I feel I would be taking
advantage of someone to point out its ridiculousness.
What is to make a military pilot think otherwise? Not military
discipline in Parker's case.
If civilians read the NOTAMS, checked their charts (oh yeah - remember
those?), and did a little preflight planning, they could easily avoid
conflict with military traffic. But that would take some precious time
and effort, wouldn't it.
There are those civil airmen who do the things you suggest, and there
are those who are negligent, but none of those actions would have
prevented the for mishaps above.
The point being made was that there have been many more than four
instances of civilian errors leading to mishaps with military
aircraft. You don't seem as upset by them.
I'm not aware of them. Please provide links to their NTSB reports.
And it is completely unreasonable and negligent for the FAA to expect
a Cessna 172 pilot to have adequate time to search his windscreen for
conflicting traffic, identify it, and take effective evasive action
when the closing speed is in excess of 500 knots.
Yet, unreasonable and negligent or not that is EXACTLY what the FAA
requires you to do. Unfair, but if you don't like it stay on the
ground.
So, in your mind, changing the system so that military low-level,
high-speed operations would be safer is not an option?
Further, the inequity in expecting the civil pilot to evade the hazard
caused by high-speed, low-level military operations is unjust. The
military should be _solely_ responsible for the hazards they create.
Anyone who causes a mid-air is responsible. Assigning "sole"
responsibility indicates you live in some sort of fantasy world. You
can't be irresponsible on your side of the equation.
I understand what you are saying, and agree to a point. But isn't it
unjust to exempt the military from complying with the 250 knot speed
limit, and only assign half the blame to them. If they had been
operating within the speed limit, there might have been time to
see-and-avoid. I realize it is impractical for the military to
operate within that regulation, but that is not sufficient
justification to jeopardize the safety of civil flights, in my
opinion.
I would expect to see some true safety consciousness, and remorse for
the carnage and destruction of civil pilots and aircraft caused by
military/civil mishaps. Oh well...
Carnage and destruction my ass. Get over it. Look out the window. If
you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen. Flying is inherently
dangerous. That's what makes it so thrilling.
Ed Rasimus
Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret)
"When Thunder Rolled"
www.thunderchief.org
www.thundertales.blogspot.com
With that attitude, we can just eliminate ATC altogether.