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#81
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On Tuesday, October 30, 2012 1:12:54 PM UTC-7, Sean F (F2) wrote:
Bravo Falken. +1 again and again! I wish we had more folks like you over here. Bravo! I second that. The problem with some folks is that they are clueless about the risks and as such are in a higher risk. They believe that the reason they did not have any midair yet is due to their good scanning technique, while in fact it is 99% luck due to the big sky theory. For a good reading on the subject of see and avoid check http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/gener...s/bca0107c.xml (this link is few years old and currently not working, hopefully temporary) Also a list of youtube videos showing how much we can trust our eyes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJG698U2Mvo -note: let it buffer all the way first, without letting it run, then watch it full screen and really count! http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...ion-25/1416088 -blind spot, eek... http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...sion-5/1400321 -relative shades http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...ion-14/1408013 -implied green http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...sion-3/1400187 -false center http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...ion-15/1408125 -false spiral http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...ion-22/1414565 -implied square http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...ion-19/1412692 -parallel lines http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...sion-6/1400351 -parallels http://videogames.yahoo.com/events/b...ion-18/1412564 -wiggling ovals |
#82
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On Tuesday, October 30, 2012 2:25:20 PM UTC-7, Don Johnstone wrote:
At 17:13 30 October 2012, folken wrote: On Tuesday, October 30, 2012 5:00:04 PM UTC+1, Don Johnstone wrote: I do not disagree with you, FLARM does help, with the emphasis on help, it does not replace or indeed lessen the necessity for a good lookout. My argument was contering the statement that, "The difference between midairs and all other cause of accidents is that it is the only type which you can do almost nothing to prevent it, except using flarm." which I think you will agree is a load of total ********. FLARM can assit the aware pilot, it is NOT the answer to preventing mid air collisions. Statically it is. Midairs, once the number 1 accident cause, are now almost nonexistent in Switzerland, since the introduction of Flarm. You can also assume that no pilot wants a midair collision and maintains good look out. But there are limitations to the human senses, as stated by Gerhard. We have to stop threating the glider pilot as a luminous all seeing perfect elite being. (paron the pun.) We make mistakes. Hundreds each flight. In fact its a human quality to err. Yes it helps, it does not provide the answer as the statement to which I objected intimated it might. The only solution is better lookout and bettter situational awareness however THAT can be achieved, not replacing them with technology. In answer to the assertion that mid-air collisions in Switzerland have been eradicated, mid air collisions are very very rare and relying on statistics with such a small sample is futile. As I recall the only mid air I can recall in Switzerland over recent year was between two FLARM equipped gliders, go figure. Here is where technology helps. It maintains its constant SA and fills in our human attention gaps. - Folken I hope no one takes Don comments seriously. It is evident he doesn't know what he is talking about with gems like: midairs are very very rare, see and avoid is the only solution to midairs, flarm was designed for wave etc. Please spare us. Ramy Ramy |
#83
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Don,
In answer to the assertion that mid-air collisions in Switzerland have been eradicated, mid air collisions are very very rare and relying on statistics Switzerland is a small country. I have an incomplete list here with midairs between 2006 and 2007 in Central Europe. The list implies a lower bound of: 14 mid-airs 24 fatalities. I'm not aware of a centralised European accident database, so statistics is a bit tricky indeed, but it can theoretically be done by wading through a few 1000s of reports from various national authorities. recall in Switzerland over recent year was between two FLARM equipped gliders, go figure. http://www.bfu.admin.ch/common/pdf/2012.pdf Mid-air between an ASH 25 and a Stemme near Samedan, April 2007: 1.3 Information concerning the aircraft Motorglider HB-2XXX was fitted with a traffic and collision warning system FLARM F4 which was not operational because its UHF antenna was not mounted. [ the ASH had an operational FLARM ]. The only mid-air events I'm personally aware of where both involved aircraft had an operational FLARM on board was Finland 2011 and Uvalde 2012. FLARM helps, but it doesn't provide 100% protection. Best --Gerhard |
#85
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On Wednesday, October 31, 2012 3:00:04 PM UTC+1, Don Johnstone wrote:
FLARM is like the flashing blue light and sirens on a police car, it does not in itself provide any protection at all. Both the above rely on the human beings being able to interpret what they see, a flashing light and or a sound, and take the necessary action. There are those who believe that there is a technology solution which makes looking out less of a priority.. Nobody, right in their head actually believes that. Nobody that has been instructed in FLARM usage does believe that. I particularly like the statement that people do not see the other aircraft before it hits them, of course they don't, if they saw it the collision would not take place. Which is exactly the situation where FLARM comes in and tells you the pilot to pay attention and prevent the collision. So these stories will be a thing of the past. Of course FLARM can help, IF it is used as intended and the human bit understands what he is bing told. If you fly in an aircraft where you do not understand what each instrument on your panel does, and are unfamiliar with the procedures that this entitles (for example pulling out right with a imminent head on collision) You do _not_ belong into this aircraft. These are the very basics. It still relies on good old fashioned lookout. Flarm does not replace the pilot or good airmanship. It augments the pilot's senses. It is not unknown for two aircraft hitting each other when under radar control, it is not the technology that is the problem. Accidents happen because we are human, and sometimes fail to do what we should. My comment about FLARM aircraft being involved in collisions was not a critism of FLARM, more a comment that despite FLARM it can still, and will happen. Since flarm doesn't pilot the aircraft for you: of course it can. But a critical situation is 1. far less likely to arise. 2. The outcome of a critical situation far less likely to cause an accident.. Statistics from .ch: Note the dip from 2004 onwards. http://www.segelflug.ch/d/6safety/pd...atistik_CH.pdf And i checked the accidents reports from 2007 onwards: There hasn't been a midair since the introduction of FLARM in Switzerland. (Flarm equipped and _in working order_ aircraft.) - Folken |
#86
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Don, the statement said " can not see the one which will hit them" not the one which hit them! You misunderstood again. What the statement means is that your eye can barely detect non moving target, and the non moving target is the one which will hit you. I suggest you do some research before posting more BS.
Ramy |
#87
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On 10/31/2012 6:46 AM, Don Johnstone wrote:
Of course FLARM can help, IF it is used as intended and the human bit understands what he is bing told. It still relies on good old fashioned lookout. If Flarm alerts you, it's probably because your "good old fashioned lookout" has not alerted you. Flarm does depend on you finding the other glider that caused the alert, but finding a threat after it's position is given to you is not part of "good old fashioned lookout". The pilot should continue to use his "[not really so] good old fashioned lookout" after he has installed a Flarm unit, because there are still aircraft that don't have Flarm or a transponder, and because Flarm isn't perfect. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
#88
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At 16:53 31 October 2012, Ramy wrote:
Don, the statement said " can not see the one which will hit them" not the = one which hit them! You misunderstood again. What the statement means is t= hat your eye can barely detect non moving target, and the non moving target= is the one which will hit you. I suggest you do some research before posti= ng more BS.=20 Ramy Yes Ramy I do understand that. FLARM was originally designed to alert pilots flying in wave, where the relative movement of soaring gliders is very small, and their direction of travel, (track) is often unrelated to their heading (direction they are pointing) to an outside observer. FLARM is very good at alerting us of that situation and quite often the rate of closure is very small. That is just one situation where FLARM is excellent however it does not necessarily mean that it is good in other situations. |
#89
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At 16:35 31 October 2012, folken wrote:
On Wednesday, October 31, 2012 3:00:04 PM UTC+1, Don Johnstone wrote: FLARM is like the flashing blue light and sirens on a police car, it does =20 not in itself provide any protection at all. Both the above rely on the =20 human beings being able to interpret what they see, a flashing light and = or =20 a sound, and take the necessary action.=20 There are those who believe that there is a technology solution which makes looking out less of a priority= .. Nobody, right in their head actually believes that. Nobody that has been in= structed in FLARM usage does believe that. =20 I particularly like the statement that people do not see the other aircra= ft =20 before it hits them, of course they don't, if they saw it the collision =20 would not take place.=20 Which is exactly the situation where FLARM comes in and tells you the pilot= to pay attention and prevent the collision. So these stories will be a thi= ng of the past. Of course FLARM can help, IF it is used as intended and the human bit understands what he is bing told.=20 If you fly in an aircraft where you do not understand what each instrument = on your panel does, and are unfamiliar with the procedures that this entitl= es (for example pulling out right with a imminent head on collision) You do= _not_ belong into this aircraft. These are the very basics. It still relies on good=20 old fashioned lookout. Flarm does not replace the pilot or good airmanship. It augments the pilot'= s senses. =20 It is not unknown for two aircraft hitting each other when under radar =20 control, it is not the technology that is the problem. Accidents happen =20 because we are human, and sometimes fail to do what we should. =20 My comment about FLARM aircraft being involved in collisions was not a =20 critism of FLARM, more a comment that despite FLARM it can still, and wil= l =20 happen.=20 Since flarm doesn't pilot the aircraft for you: of course it can. But a cri= tical situation is=20 1. far less likely to arise.=20 2. The outcome of a critical situation far less likely to cause an accident= .. Statistics from .ch: Note the dip from 2004 onwards. http://www.segelflug.ch/d/6safety/pd...atistik_CH.pdf And i checked the accidents reports from 2007 onwards: There hasn't been a = midair since the introduction of FLARM in Switzerland. (Flarm equipped and = _in working order_ aircraft.) - Folken and 99% of people who enter a retirment home die there, does not mean that retirement homes are dangerous places, just that the statistics are meaningless. In the case you put forward the sample is far too small to draw a meaningful conclusion. There could be other factors at work, like less flying taking place, more conspicuous markings, better understanding by pilots of the problem ad nausea. Better lookout and situational awareness is they key, anyone who thinks otherwise should stay at home in a locked room, they are far too dangerous to be allowed out. |
#90
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On Wednesday, October 31, 2012 2:00:03 PM UTC-7, Don Johnstone wrote:
and 99% of people who enter a retirment home die there, does not mean that retirement homes are dangerous places, just that the statistics are meaningless. In the case you put forward the sample is far too small to draw a meaningful conclusion. There could be other factors at work, like less flying taking place, more conspicuous markings, better understanding by pilots of the problem ad nausea. Better lookout and situational awareness is they key, anyone who thinks otherwise should stay at home in a locked room, they are far too dangerous to be allowed out. Ad nauseam is the right characterization - this comes across as continual nit-picking and nay-saying in denial of available facts and logic - and in contradiction of some of your own prior statements regarding admitted effectiveness of Flarm as an aid to situational awareness specific to traffic conflicts. I've flown with it, I know it works - in my retirement home people live longer than in Don's so I'm moving there. 9B |
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