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Marc Ramsey wrote:
Bruce wrote: Here a top pilot has effectively told us how he got into a very dangerous situation - partly because of a rule designed to ensure his safety. We should learn from it. Bottom line is to keep the pint of blue muck between your ears on-line. I try to continuously evaluate my decisions to see if they are deteriorating. If so - why am I getting tired or dehydrated, or not concentrating. I don't fly contests but I can see how a hard race could get you into a bad decision making mode - irrespecive of the rules to protect you. No, this isn't really an argument about rules or safety, it is an argument about philosophy and ego. I agree fully with Casey and everyone else that you can't "legislate good judgment". What we have here, however, is the last vestiges of procedures that made some sense when there was actual gate crews sitting on the ground and timing the gliders as they finish. Well, we've been doing GPS finishes for several years, yet some folks still need the rush of making that final red line dive through the finish gate, despite the fact that it serves no function that I can see other than stroking some egos. It's sort of like when I was a kid, and thought it was cool to drive my Alfa at 120 MPH on empty highways in the middle of the night. It was a rush, but it was also a pointless, stupid thing to do, even if I never managed to kill myself or anyone else. I've flown in enough contests to know that those few minutes after the finish are when I'm going to be the least attentive to what is going on around me, and I suspect there are quite a few other pilots in the same state. Throw in a little dehydration, plus some bad luck, and the scene ain't going to be pretty. I, for one, would rather blunder around for the last few minutes of the flight at 60 knots and 500 feet, than 120 knots and 100 feet... Marc Hi Marc No disagreement - just the observation that rules are not going to stop you, or me or anyone else occasionally doing something stupid. Humans do that - we find all sorts of reasons after the fact, but the fact remains. |
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