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On Feb 7, 12:14*pm, BobW wrote:
On 2/6/2012 11:41 AM, Brad wrote: Snip... Not to be contentious, but more fodder for the safety monkeys Chortle!!! (I'll get back to this topic shortly...) ...................looks like this guy did a fantastic job getting the sailplane down safe and with all in 1 piece. Always a good thing when the landing can be walked away from; I've known of lots of others since getting into soaring that didn't end so serendipitously, even withOUT the stress this (as it developed over time) situation surely induced. Back to "safety monkeys" for a bit, I (and many others) well remember a long-time, opinionated, disputatious (contentious?), high-time pilot well-known in the experimental power aviation field, whose opinions were always crystal clear. He had built and test flown his own RV-?, and test flown at least one other homebuilt of which I'm aware. One of his opinions (which can presumably be found in the archives of the rec.aviation.homebuilt newsgroup) was that a monkey could be trained to fly airplanes...but probably not helicopters - they required more brains or SOMEthing. I'm not certain of his opinion regarding the brains to fly gliders, which I know he had flown IN (don't remember if he obtained the rating). In any event, he obviously had a pretty high opinion of his own skill set and cranial power...and I gather not without substantiating reasons. He died not long after a post-T.O.-crash of his Lancair (which I believe he purchased), which also seriously injured his wife. http://dms.ntsb.gov/aviation/Acciden...hb3my1iryqyoqd... Maybe we're too smart to safely fly, because evidently he crashed a flyable/flying airplane because he failed to latch/verify-latching the canopy, and was unable to aviate, navigate and communicate in that order. My point is, I'm OK with those who would rather kill the messenger in private than apply safety lessons which may one day help mitigate the severity of their own situation (regardless of how the situation may develop), but I'm not so OK with those who would casually and publicly use a contentions "throw away comment" ostensibly serving primarily as a means of ending discussion about something of critical importance to open-minded, thoughtful aviators. I am interested in learning how the "loss of air" caused this to happen. I will not be criticizing the pilot, as we are all prone to being in the news someday, despite the never ending articles in Soaring about safety. Brad "[N]ever ending articles in Soaring about safety" hunh? There's one sure way to end them, but our record strongly suggests the human race is unlikely to cooperate. Ignore such articles (and related lessons) if it floats your boat...but you'll be intentionally blowing off some possibility of learning from others' mistakes. Rotsa Ruck, Bob W. Unofficial Safety Monkey Are you making some kind of reference to my building and flying the Tetra-15 with the guy and his Lancair? rust rundering, Brad |
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