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#31
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On Nov 13, 2:01 pm, "JGalban via AviationKB.com" u32749@uwe wrote:
I know some pilots that are using the terrain features of their Garmin 396/496 to keep them clear of mountains at night. I think they're nuts. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) John, Good call on your terain avoidance tactics. As for your GPS comments, the next time you fly on an airliner go tell the crew they are nuts. The use of MAP mode is actually required in mountanous terain. |
#32
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On Nov 13, 7:53 pm, wrote:
On Nov 13, 11:20 am, "Marco Leon" wrote: wrote in message ... What's really sad is both of them being locals should have known better. I know the USAF has many Standard Operating Procedures to prevent this kind of stuff. Does CAP follow the USAF SOPs or do they have their own? Marco The CAP has quite a few SOPs. I've never been an AF pilot so I wouldn't know much about the differences. Of course, at least one difference would be that the CAP doesn't get to shoot things down.... There is an incredible amount of pre-flight planning and paperwork that is required for any CAP flight. Obviously, something went quite wrong. I could come up with a couple guesses, but I prefer not to outwardly speculate until some of the investigation is complete. While there are a few smartalec comments in the thread, there is one inescapable fact: A couple of pilots who, by their position and air time, had spent much time and money in volunteer service, have been lost. I offer condolences to their families, friends, and squadrons. And the taxpayers lost a pretty expensive new plane in the process. Between this one and the two crashes in Wyoming the CAP is painting a dismal picture of safety. Godspeed to the lost pilots.... Ben. www.haaspowerair.com |
#33
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... On Nov 13, 3:21 pm, "Watson" wrote: I refused a visual mountain search at night for a found out later to be a false ELT. I was a Mountain Mission Pilot with CAP for some 20 odd years. I and my squadron were punished for the refusal. "I order you to fly this search!" No, thank you. Be happy to launch at first light. No longer with them. Since you were with CAP for 20 years, you are aware (and others might not be) that all members are volunteers, and each and every mission is a volunteer mission that can be refused because it is unsafe, or you are tired, or your dog is sick. I understand that, too bad it did not work as advertised in the real world. We would be pressured many times to take a questionable sortie in marginal weather in the mountains or at night. If you refused or were reluctant they would say things like: "Maybe you need more training?" or "If your skills are not adequate to handle this situation, then your certification in this area may not be appropriate." That kind of "subtle" pressure gets people killed. All the hours in the logbook and all the experience in the world will not make that mountain any softer. Shaking your logbook at death never works. While there are "politics" in the CAP wings, there is no way anyone should have been punished, by any definition. If the situation is as you described, someone should have run this all the way to National. Sorry we lost you. I'm not. The "politics" in that wing are out of control. I was a Chief Check Pilot for a group. I saw numerous violations of their SOP reg (60-1). If the offender was a favored son, then everything was swept under the rug. The wing vice pobah took an airplane at an USAF evaluated SAR exercise with absolutely no paperwork. The mad scramble was on behind the scenes trying to cover his tracks with made up forms and to keep the AF in the dark. An owner/member with a helicopter would got away with violating many regs because the wing thought it was neat to have a helo at their disposal and the wing commander was an employee in the helo owner's business. I took my own airplane to a SAR at Wing CAP's request, when I refused to hand over the keys of my airplane to the Mission Coordinator I was asked - "ordered" to leave. When I got the engine started he changed his mind. My former squadron was nearly decimated by a money grab in which locally donated money was required to be sent to wing hq on the other side of the state. That did not sit too well with our local benefactors who expected their donated money to benefit their community. The wing commander wanted a new HQ building and couldn't stand to see principal earning interest over which he had no control. These are some of the many horror stories. I can't beleive they have pulled the wool over their funding agencies eyes; the state legislatures and US Congress, for so long. These are just the highlights. Film at eleven. But I'm not bitter, not much. Watson |
#34
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![]() Like I said, assholes. Most of them are little tinpot power freaks who are too crazy to get clearance to be security gaurds at pillsbury bakeoff. Bertie |
#35
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On Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:32:32 -0800, "BT" wrote
in : What would the moon or lack of it have to do with this. I'm thinking the new moon would make the terrain difficult to see. They were both very high time instrument rated pilots. They were both experienced with mountain flying. They were flying with the G1000 system that highlights terrain. That's what makes the cause of the mishap so baffling. There was a "report" to ATC that they had a fuel problem.. that has yet to be confirmed. Are you able to cite a source for that information? This is the first I've heard of it. B "Larry Dighera" wrote in message .. . Could the lack of a moon have contributed to this tragic accident? TOP CIVIL AIR PATROL OFFICERS KILLED (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#196556) The FAA and NTSB are investigating how two seasoned pilots, both senior officers in the Civil Air Patrol, flew into a mountain near Las Vegas Thursday evening. Col. Edwin Lewis, director of operations for CAP's western region, and Col. Dion DeCamp, commander of the Nevada unit, died when their CAP Cessna 182 hit 8,500-ft. Mt. Polosi, about 12 miles southwest of Las Vegas. According to the FAA preliminary report (http://www.faa.gov/data_statistics/a...a/01_881CP.txt) visibility was listed as 10 miles when the aircraft crashed about 7:15 p.m. ************************************************** ****************************** ** Report created 11/9/2007 Record 1 ** ************************************************** ****************************** IDENTIFICATION Regis#: 881CP Make/Model: C182 Description: 182, Skylane Date: 11/08/2007 Time: 0315 Event Type: Accident Highest Injury: Fatal Mid Air: N Missing: N Damage: Destroyed LOCATION City: LAS VEGAS State: NV Country: US DESCRIPTION AIRCRAFT CRASHED INTO A MOUNTAIN, THE TWO PERSONS ON BOARD WERE FATALLY INJURED, 12 MILES FROM LAS VEGAS, NV INJURY DATA Total Fatal: 2 # Crew: 2 Fat: 2 Ser: 0 Min: 0 Unk: # Pass: 0 Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0 Unk: # Grnd: Fat: 0 Ser: 0 Min: 0 Unk: WEATHER: KLAS 090245Z 10SM FEW180 BKN250 33/M01 A2995 OTHER DATA Activity: Unknown Phase: Unknown Operation: OTHER FAA FSDO: LAS VEGAS, NV (WP19) Entry date: 11/09/2007 --------------------------------------------------- http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/mesowest/get...&num=130&raw=0 08 Nov 7:56 pm 69 32 25 WSW 3 10.00 FEW180 BKN250 1012.8 29.96 27.688 OK 08 Nov 6:56 pm 73 31 21 WSW 3 10.00 FEW180 BKN250 1012.9 29.95 27.678 OK --------------------------------------------------- http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/MoonPhase.php#y2007 2007 Phases of the Moon Universal Time NEW MOON FIRST QUARTER FULL MOON LAST QUARTER d h m d h m d h m d h m JAN. 3 13 57 JAN. 11 12 45 JAN. 19 4 01 JAN. 25 23 01 FEB. 2 5 45 FEB. 10 9 51 FEB. 17 16 14 FEB. 24 7 56 MAR. 3 23 17 MAR. 12 3 54 MAR. 19 2 43 MAR. 25 18 16 APR. 2 17 15 APR. 10 18 04 APR. 17 11 36 APR. 24 6 36 MAY 2 10 09 MAY 10 4 27 MAY 16 19 27 MAY 23 21 03 JUNE 1 1 04 JUNE 8 11 43 JUNE 15 3 13 JUNE 22 13 15 JUNE 30 13 49 JULY 7 16 54 JULY 14 12 04 JULY 22 6 29 JULY 30 0 48 AUG. 5 21 20 AUG. 12 23 03 AUG. 20 23 54 AUG. 28 10 35 SEPT. 4 2 32 SEPT. 11 12 44 SEPT. 19 16 48 SEPT. 26 19 45 OCT. 3 10 06 OCT. 11 5 01 OCT. 19 8 33 OCT. 26 4 52 NOV. 1 21 18 NOV. 9 23 03 NOV. 17 22 33 NOV. 24 14 30 DEC. 1 12 44 DEC. 9 17 40 DEC. 17 10 18 DEC. 24 1 16 DEC. 31 7 51 ----------------------------------------------- http://www.fox5vegas.com/news/14562845/detail.html Air Patrol Officers Killed In Potosi Plane Crash Men Brought Planes To Nellis For Air Show POSTED: 7:38 pm PST November 10, 2007 UPDATED: 8:34 pm PST November 10, 2007 LAS VEGAS -- Civil Air Patrol officials confirm that two of their own were killed in a plane crash into Mount Potosi, just outside of Las Vegas. Col. Edwin W. Lewis Jr., director of operations for CAP's Pacific Region, and Col. Dion E. DeCamp, commander of CAP's Nevada Wing, died Thursday evening when their CAP plane crashed into the mountain. Lewis had traveled to Nellis Air Force Base to drop off a CAP airplane to be used as an airshow display. He and DeCamp were apparently en route to Rosamond, Calif., Lewis' hometown, when the crash occurred. "The CAP family is deeply saddened by this tremendous loss," said Brig. Gen. Amy S. Courter, CAP interim national commander. "There were no finer members than Col. DeCamp and Col. Lewis. Their illustrious volunteer service, which collectively spanned more than seven decades, touched innumerable lives and now, in sorrow, consoles those left behind as a testament to their dedication and commitment to the citizens of their respective communities." The cause of Thursday evening's crash is unknown at this time. Officials from the National Transportation Safety Board are currently investigating the incident. ----------------------------------------------------- http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/n...laircrash.html http://www.lvrj.com/news/11142391.html Nov. 09, 2007 Small airplane crashes on Potosi Accident described as not survivable by LV police air unit By BETH WALTON REVIEW-JOURNAL Click image for enlargement. Two people were presumed killed Thursday night when a Civil Air Patrol plane crashed into Mount Potosi, about 35 miles southwest of Las Vegas, officials said. A police air unit crew who flew over the wreckage said the crash was not survivable. The plane, a single-engine Cessna 172 , went off the radar at McCarran International Airport about 7:15 p.m., said Ian Gregor, spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration. It was the second small plane that disappeared from local radar Thursday night. The same thing had happened with a single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza at 6:37 p.m. Authorities later learned that plane had made a successful emergency landing several miles southeast of Jean, and its two occupants, who were headed to Phoenix from Las Vegas, were unhurt, Gregor said. A Las Vegas police air unit was searching the area around Mount Potosi when the crew heard an explosion and saw a plane burning on the mountain, Lt. Steve Herpolsheimer said. The crash was estimated to be about 2,000 feet from the top of the 8,514-foot tall mountain, Herpolsheimer said. Search and rescue crews tried to get to the crash site using four-wheel-drive vehicles, he said. Rescue air units were also sent out to the site, said Las Vegas police spokesman Bill Cassell. Late Thursday, police were considering pulling back and waiting until daylight to try to reach the crash site. Cassell said he had no idea why the Civil Air Patrol plane was flying Thursday night. The most common mission for the Civil Air Patrol is search and rescue. The crew of this plane was not believed to have been searching for the missing Beechcraft, so perhaps they were involved in a training flight, Cassell said. Civil Air Patrol representatives could not be reached for comment late Thursday. Mount Potosi is known as the site of a 1942 plane crash in which actress Carole Lombard and 21 other people died. Lombard, the wife of actor Clark Gable, had been returning to California after taking part in a national war bond campaign for World War II when the plane she was in, a twin-engine DC-3, slammed into a cliff near the top of the mountain. |
#36
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"Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote:
Oh I just love reading stuff like this. Two experienced (way more than me) pilots in the same cockpit auger it in. Makes me and my feeble skills feel real good...pause...NOT. Why worry? Two experienced pilots does not mean that they have common sense. I don't fly in the mountains at night...moon or no moon. Most likely the final report will indicate that they screwed up. Ron Lee |
#37
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"Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote:
"NW_Pilot" wrote in message ... Flying mountians at night with an overcast is looking for trouble! Would you do it with a TAWS equipped GPS? No. Ron Lee |
#38
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Larry Dighera wrote:
On Tue, 13 Nov 2007 18:32:32 -0800, "BT" wrote in : What would the moon or lack of it have to do with this. I'm thinking the new moon would make the terrain difficult to see. I take it you've never flown in the southwestern desert areas. Under a full moon the terrain is difficult to see. Under much less than a full moon the terrain is impossible to see. I Follow Roads is the only visual reference you have. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#39
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"JGalban via AviationKB.com" u32749@uwe wrote in message
news:7b2cb0da861fe@uwe... Peter R. wrote: And also the terrain database of the GNS430W/530W units, too, I would imagine. I might trust one of those a bit more than the handheld versions. At least they have RAIM. The handhelds do put a very large X over the screen when there is not enough data. I personally think the handhelds are pretty conservative in their depiction parameters. If you never let any yellow areas show up, you've given yourself at least a 1,000-foot cushion. That said, I almost always fly under IFR at night unless I'm doing practice approaches. Marco |
#40
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F. Baum wrote:
John, Good call on your terain avoidance tactics. As for your GPS comments, the next time you fly on an airliner go tell the crew they are nuts. The use of MAP mode is actually required in mountanous terain. Aren't airliners flying IFR? Terrain avoidance is built in to instrument procedures (assuming you follow the rules). I've also never seen a 396/496 handheld in an airliner cockpit. As someone else posted, the handhelds can give an indication when satellites become unavailable, but I don't think they are quite at the level of RAIM integrity in the IFR approved units. I've seen a 396 just freeze on position, with no error indication. Don't get me wrong, they are good. Just not up to the level that I'd be willing to trust my hide to one. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...ation/200711/1 |
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