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At 13:30 22 April 2005, Don Johnstone wrote:
Heresay evidence, blind assumption and lack of experience in the glider concerned all put together is enough for a hanging is it. I don't think anyone has suggested that the pilot here was directly at fault, rather that it was maybe unwise (even in the absence of an accident) to send passengers up with a relatively inexperienced pilot. In the case of an inexperienced pilot coming to grief, you have to look at the training he received (in this case recently) to find out what could be done better. This is not a world champion that pushed his/her luck too far. If the poor bloke was still alive you could lock him up in Guant�namo. He may have been al-Qaida, a mass murderer perhaps or anything else you care to pull out of the air. .....1...2...3...4...5... Why can you not wait for the results of the enquiry and decide on the evidence instead of speculating about the guilt of someone who cannot defend himself. Land of the Free? Prove it. I'd say open speculation (and disagreement) and the fact that people make it is pretty much proof that it is land of the free. Any speculation made now is (in the reasonable persons mind) just that, speculation, it can (and will) be revised as more evidence comes to light and the NTSB inquiry progresses. And as a previous poster said before, if I died in a glider, I'd rather that the causes were gone over and any lessons learnt, rather than my case being brushed under the carpet. Accidents, and there causes shouldn't be taboo, we can all learn something from them (unfortunately), even from speculation. If we were all perfect pilots then we could carry on as normal without looking at these incidents (but then again there shouldn't be any incidents then should there?). I haven't actually expressed an opinion (intentionally anyway) on the pilots ability and/or failings but to shout down honest and open speculation is unwise and possibly foolish.... Jamie At 04:30 22 April 2005, Btiz wrote: I remember that glider on the beach posting shortly after it happened.. I do have some very limited time in the 2-32... the one I flew I felt it was very honest.. giving plenty of warning before the stall with rumbling and stick shaking.. one report that came from our local witness.. that is not addressed in the preliminary report... and taken with a few grains of salt or sand...is that the passengers reported that the stick was full back the entire time when the spin started... no forward movement to stop the spin.. In less than one month.. this individual went from Student Pilot certificate issue.. to Private Pilot to Commercial Pilot... and crashed. No mention is made of his experience prior to receiving his student pilot certificate. But based on the documentation provided, one can expect that he had worked up to pre-solo before getting his student certificate and quickly completed two written exams and check rides. Not a good position to put an insurance company in. BT 'F.L. Whiteley' wrote in message ... I don't disagree, but there are other possibilities. 2-32 gives zippo spin warning, it tends to flick over the top from a tight turn. I thought the local operators were a bit more discriminating, requiring some referral. However, as I told my young friend, break one and drop in the ocean, the next week it would be old news there and the rides would continue. Different operator, same location http://www.soarcsa.org/glider_on_the_beach.htm FWIW one suggestion was the 'extreme return'. Vertical speed limiting dive to the numbers, rotate to landing. My young friend thought this would be a big seller. But parachutes would cut down on useful load. Shoe-horning them in was the order of the day. Frank BTIZ wrote: based on a witness report.. that is now flying here... minimum experience.. lack of spin training... I'd go with the lack of Airmanship.. BT 'F.L. Whiteley' wrote in message ... Ramy wrote: As usual, the NTSB report is useless. Doesn't even attempt to analyze the cause for the accident. One of my younger soaring friends hauled rides there for a couple of stints. He clocked over 100 hours a month in 2-32's which we reckoned may have 20,000 to 40,000 hours on them in all that salt air. Airmanship or lack of it may have had nothing to do with this sad incident. |
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