Airparks; Living On The Beaten Path?
On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 10:19:45 -0600, Neil Gould wrote:
Having read many of your posts, I have to agree with Morgans'
suggestion that you argue less and listen more. Once you start your
flight training you will find that many of your current concerns in
areas such as this are unwarranted. [...]
I appreciate the thought Neil but it's not like I haven't had a few
hundred hours in single/twin in the left seat.
I apologize for thinking you were pre-flight student, but your few hundred
hours of flying doesn't show in your concerns in this thread.
No apologies necessary.
In that
amount of time, it would seem to me that you would have flown into
airports with far less tolerance than 60' off centerline. To me, 60' is as
good as a mile, since the wingspans of the planes I fly are far less than
that and many runways have trees and other obstructions closer than those
houses.
A few, not many even though 1/2 the T/Os and lands were in very small
eown USA.
First, most everyone assumed that I have some kind of irrational
problem with airparks. The irrationality I find is that few, one or
two, wanted to discuss the very real possibilities of serious person
and property damage. Let's take the recent Velocity-RV incident, put
that in an airpark and you have major, potential carnage.
From my perspective, and those of several others, the issues are risk
management and judgement rather than some inherently difficult
circumstance of the layout you described. As another person pointed out
during this discussion, those living in an airpark would get a lot of
practice flying into and out of that strip, which further reduces the
risks.
Best,
Overall, I believe that you are correct, surely that would be the ase if
your own house was on the strip. lol
Btw, the layout is interesting part of the airpark development. There
may be a higher justification for concern if planes have to use the
developments' road system, instead of a segregated access for planes
only.
--
Remove numbers for gmail and for God's sake it ain't "gee" either!
I hesitate to add to this discussion because I'm not an instructor,
just a rather slow student who's not qualified to give advice that
might kill someone.
|