If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
On 10/1/2018 2:06 PM, Steve Koerner wrote:
I'm sick and tired of reading about glider crashes and never knowing what actually happened. We badly need to be able to learn from the misfortune of our soaring compadres. I'm "all-in" on the sentiments of both the above sentences. Have been since well before I took my first lesson (1972). With the sentiments below...not so much (and I'm being politely kind, here). - - - - - - The obvious answer is that we all have a camera mounted over our right shoulder that will simultaneously monitor the scene out the front canopy, monitor the panel instruments and monitor the pilot's flight inputs. Such a camera would be effective even if operating at a low frame rate -- perhaps something like 5 frames/sec. With today's technology such a unit could be quite small and the cost would be reasonable. The camera automatically goes on when flight is detected and off when flight stops by any of several easy detection means. Flight video would be logged to a micro SD that is looped over after some number of hours: 10 hours, 24 hours, whatever. The only technological challenge would be making such a recorder fireproof. The latest horrible crash did ignite an incinerating fire. But fires are a rarity in glider accidents. Step one could be a video logger that does not necessarily address fireproofing. Just because something may be an "obvious answer" doesn't make it universally good. "Technology as panacea" isn't...as the history of aviation continues to make abundantly and intrusively and expensively clear. - - - - - - How can we make this happen? Clearly individuals will not be highly motivated to go out and buy one since they are unlikely to personally benefit from their own camera. It needs to be somehow mandated. I would hate to look to the government for a mandate as it would take too long among other issues. How about a mandate from SSA? Contests? Clubs? OLC? or tow operators? Every glider needs to have a video logger running on every flight. One other sociological factor would be that there not be discrimination allowed on the release of the data. The data needs to be available for anyone and everyone to analyze upon its retrieval. Pilots, attorneys, widows, government entities and insurance companies should not have say in that matter. We need to think up a good solution to that. Maybe the pilot doesn't actually own the logger and media. Maybe the SSA owns the logger and leases them on condition of data availability upon any reportable accident. No more mysteries! We need to know what is causing our accidents so we have a chance to fix the problems. My knee-jerk response to this "flagpole idea" is, "Surely you jest!"...but I'm pretty certain you don't. Personally, the engineer in me finds many mysteries are also life's joys, a philosophical rabbit hole I won't enter just here and how, beyond noting that sport soaring contains *many* such enjoyable mysteries. Meanwhile, I'm OK with the risks...known, conjectured, and unknown. Draconian "solutions" (and devils ALWAYS lurk in the details) have no place in a voluntary, self-funded, sporting activity containing very little "overall societal risk," and undertaken by a minuscule percentage of humankind to boot. Respectfully, Bob W. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
"I'm only talking about giving up my privacy when I have a reportable accident."
Sorry Steve -but life and litigation don't work that way. Once you "mandate" the creation and maintenance of the data source it is out there for anybody to subpoena: The insurance company that doesn't want to pay a claim, The FAA when it wants to revoke your license for busting airspace, the divorce lawyer who wants to see if you really were on a gliding vacation that weekend, the crazy lady who bought a house on airport road but doesn't like towplane noise, . . . they all can get the videos. And how do we do it? What percentage of the glider fleet now has FLARM (which makes infinitely more sense if something must be "mandated")? 1% maybe? My A&I has to take a course in video installation? CDs have to check video samples before a contest like ENLs? And to what end? Do you really need a video to diagnose a stall spin in? Would a video explain the Arcus/Nephi accident that an experienced pilot who watched and felt it happen can't explain? Is a guy screwing around before his (unexpected) fatal accident not going to disable the camera? Is it coincidence that police and military body cameras have a remarkable failure rate in the field? Let's all get behind this idea and push it out the window . . . ROY |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
Steve Koerner wrote on 10/1/2018 1:06 PM:
I'm sick and tired of reading about glider crashes and never knowing what actually happened. We badly need to be able to learn from the misfortune of our soaring compadres. The obvious answer is that we all have a camera mounted over our right shoulder that will simultaneously monitor the scene out the front canopy, monitor the panel instruments and monitor the pilot's flight inputs. . .. .. .. No more mysteries! We need to know what is causing our accidents so we have a chance to fix the problems. There is always the possibility of a medical event, which is hard to discern from examining the flight trace. A camera on the panel or glare shield, aimed at the pilot, and recording in a, say, 20 minute loop would make it much more likely a medical event (including oxygen issues) would be discovered. The camera could start automatically when the panel power was turned on, and a single push of a button on it could erase the video after landing. That would allow the pilot to protect privacy in non-accident landings. Maybe we could all wear Apple Watches (or similar), to monitor our vitals as we flew? A smartphone could store and process the info, perhaps alerting us to dangerous situations, like too high or too low pulse rates, low oxygen saturation, and even EKG events. I suspect this idea is too far-fetched compare to the "pilot cam". -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Dec 2014a" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://soaringsafety.org/prevention/...anes-2014A.pdf |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
Roy B. wrote on 10/1/2018 6:06 PM:
"I'm only talking about giving up my privacy when I have a reportable accident." g Sorry Steve -but life and litigation don't work that way. Once you "mandate" the creation and maintenance of the data source it is out the there for anybody to subpoena: Even if privacy was protected, the incentive to use a cockpit camera is almost entirely altruistic; unlike a FLARM or parachute, it doesn't protect the pilot, though it might help another pilot, or ease the pain of relatives and friends. So, I suspect few pilots would bother to use one. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Dec 2014a" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://soaringsafety.org/prevention/...anes-2014A.pdf |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
The mixture of paranoia and stupidity in the responses in this thread beggars belief.
Nowhere did I see the OP mention mandating a camera. Having one present voluntarily would be just as useful. I don’t fly in a manner that I want or need to hide, do you? |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
On Monday, October 1, 2018 at 11:26:10 PM UTC-5, Charlie Quebec wrote:
The mixture of paranoia and stupidity in the responses in this thread beggars belief. Nowhere did I see the OP mention mandating a camera. Having one present voluntarily would be just as useful. I don’t fly in a manner that I want or need to hide, do you? The OP was pretty clear that a camera mandated by the SSA or others, Not owned by the pilot be used for every glider flight. also that the data would be open sourced. He even used the phrase "It needs to be somehow mandated" At least in the OP I read. Respectfully |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
I use a camera in the cockpit. I find it an objective training tool.
Reviewing my flights and landings has led me to make changes in my flying that have improved performance and safety. Cost under $100. I commend them to y'all. Jim |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
On Mon, 01 Oct 2018 18:06:51 -0700, Roy B. wrote:
And how do we do it? What percentage of the glider fleet now has FLARM (which makes infinitely more sense if something must be "mandated")? 1% maybe? Speaking of which, and not wishing to side track this discussion, but I thought this video was interesting: https://flarm.com/learning-series-basel-flight-school/ ..... its a Swiss power instructor talking about how and why he uses FLARM and, as an instructor, why some he has a portable unit. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
I think it's been pretty well established that the vast majority of
accidents are the result of pilot error.Â* A few examples: Weather did not cause that accident; the pilot's decision to take off into it or continue into it was the real cause. That stall/spin was not the cause of the pilot's death, it was his poor manipulation of the controls and his inability to recover from the results of his actions that caused the stall/spin that killed him. Mechanical failure was not the cause of that accident, it was the pilot's decision to fly too close or into that thunder storm that caused the in flight breakup. I could go on but I won't.Â* Folks are simply too quick to place blame anywhere but on themselves when the stuff hits the fan.Â* I won't likely be crashing my Stemme due to flying up a box canyon under a decaying cumulus (big down draft).Â* It's my firm belief that it was not the weather that killed Bob Saunders, but his decision to fly his aircraft into a situation from which there was little prospect of recovery. On 10/1/2018 5:05 PM, Steve Koerner wrote: On Monday, October 1, 2018 at 2:38:26 PM UTC-7, Dan Marotta wrote: Is it April 1st already? There is no way a camera will be in my cockpit, car, home, bathroom, you name it, without my consent.Â* And I don't care what "safety" terms you couch it in.Â* That's simply idiotic. You're have the absolutely right to give up your privacy, but not mine. Dan, I'm a bit of a privacy freak too. Yet, I'm only talking about giving up my privacy when I have a reportable accident. Consider that it's already in the natural working of our society that we give up a whole lot of privacy when we have a serious accident. And as you weigh such things, please consider your overall personal cost to benefit. We really need to start getting to the bottom of all these damn accidents. You may be the very person that has the next Stemme accident because it was never actually determined why Glider Bob crashed his Stemme. It just might have been a mechanical problem or a controllability problem that could have been determined had a video been available. -- Dan, 5J |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
Cockpit video recording -- the time is now.
You should get your head out of your ass and read before you open your
mouth.Â* Just for you, here's a paragraph from the original post: "How can we make this happen?Â* Clearly individuals will not be highly motivated to go out and buy one since they are unlikely to personally benefit from their own camera. It needs to be somehow mandated. I would hate to look to the government for a mandate as it would take too long among other issues. How about a mandate from SSA? Contests? Clubs? OLC? or tow operators? Every glider needs to have a video logger running on every flight. " Note the word "mandated" in the above.Â* You seem to take pleasure in tossing garbage at any discussion rather than contributing useful information.Â* Go back to bed. On 10/1/2018 10:26 PM, Charlie Quebec wrote: The mixture of paranoia and stupidity in the responses in this thread beggars belief. Nowhere did I see the OP mention mandating a camera. Having one present voluntarily would be just as useful. I don’t fly in a manner that I want or need to hide, do you? -- Dan, 5J |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
OT 4 airport round robin - time lapsed / real time with ATC COMS -video | A Lieberma[_2_] | Owning | 0 | August 30th 09 12:26 AM |
Blackwater 61 Cockpit voice recording | ned | Piloting | 7 | November 7th 07 05:01 PM |
Video surveillance / recording of airport operations (landings, etc)? | Fly Guy | General Aviation | 1 | August 5th 05 01:20 AM |
Recording cockpit voices | Glenn Westfall | Piloting | 20 | January 27th 04 03:09 PM |
Recording your flight time | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 50 | December 23rd 03 03:23 PM |