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"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message
... "Ron Lee" wrote in message ... Matt Whiting wrote: Ron Lee wrote: The real cause was he was an idiotic and inept pilot that day who left his wife without a husband and kids fatherless. Fortunately, being an idiotic and inept usenet poster is more forgiving... Matt I suppose you would fly with a pilot like him? Would you let your wife or kids fly with him if he were alive and just narrowly missed the building? Maybe you would like to fly with the pilots who crashed at LEX? There are idiot pilots and we have seen a few cases lately. Unfortunately they take people with them instead of just themselves sometimes. Ron Lee Ron; Let me explain to you how this works in the real world. Even the most highly trained pilots in the world screw up from time to time. Trust me, I know quite a few of them :-) Flying is an endeavor where you operate in an environment that is constantly trying to kill you and everybody in the airplane with you. Its that simple! The "trick" as we say in the business, is to get yourself to the point where you can handle this environment on a constant basis. This means that a pilot, from the beginning student to the long time ATP and CFI, has to be constantly up to the task. A pilot's level of competence changes from day to day; actually minute to minute really. You can be sharp and on top of things one minute and off your edge the next minute just long enough to kill yourself. Keeping this edge sharp as a pilot is really a full time job, and even then there's no guarantee that you won't have a 2 second lapse and forget something that will kill you. Flying an airplane is controlling a moving object that includes you and the people with you in a 3 dimensional area that exists at very high speed. This can be likened to having someone throw random knives at you from twenty feet away while you constantly try and duck out of the way and not get hit with one. Given those conditions, you can get some idea of how long one could do this without dodging the wrong way and taking a knife right in the face. All this doesn't mean a pilot can't prepare for, and be able to function properly in the midst of all this potential danger. It does mean however, that all of us....and I mean ALL of us, have those moments in flying where we do exactly the wrong thing. If we're lucky, and what we screwed up on wasn't at the exact wrong time, we survive, learn from what happened, and truck on trying never to replicate THAT mistake again. These two guys in the Cirrus had one of the moments I'm talking about here. They weren't stupid, and I'm sure they didn't want to die. They screwed up, and the numbers played out against them. Instead of having one of those "experiences" I'm talking about, they didn't make it. What we have to do as pilots is learn from their mistake so that WE become just a little bit safer and our edge gets just a little sharper. This preconception some people have about pilots having to be perfect just doesn't wash in the real world. I've seen pilots with thousands of hours flying the hottest airplanes in the world that I knew to be the best of the best killed right in front of me; the result of an instant of distraction. It happens. Instead of putting these guys down which doesn't bring them back or enhance the flight safety issue, just realize they were two guys who made a mistake. God knows they paid for it. Just learn and move on. Concentrate just a bit more on sharpening your own edge and at least something good will have come from this accident. Dudley Henriques Hear, Hear. Al G |
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