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#31
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Aug 13, 9:43*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
If real pilots don't heed the wisdom that I am simply repeating from other sources.... What source, what source? Do tell please. Ricky |
#32
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Aug 13, 10:20*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
If it's valid in the book that it comes from, it remains so when posted here. 3rd time, 3rd request. What book? Simple. Ricky |
#33
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Wed, 13 Aug 2008 21:15:57 -0700 (PDT), Ricky wrote:
Was John Kennedy instrument rated? Anyone, seriously. Na. John John had a few hours towards an IR... clearly not enough however. -- Dallas |
#34
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Aug 14, 1:53*am, Dallas wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2008 21:15:57 -0700 (PDT), Ricky wrote: Was John Kennedy instrument rated? Anyone, seriously. Na. * John John had a few hours towards an IR... *clearly not enough however. -- Dallas Dallas, JFK Jr had lots of logged time toward his IFR rating -- see the NTSB report or the book "The Day John Died". It's simply that he had trouble passing the staged exams that his CFII used to demonstrate proficiency. I seem to remember in excess of 300 hours dual. He was also a known risk taker: his nickname among his friends was something like Master of Disaster. Some of his family members refused to fly with him. See the book mentioned above for the details. He was, at the time of his death, still recovering from a broken ankle that was a result of an ultra light crash on the Vineyard. In short, if you were going to select characteristics of a pilot who would have a greater than normal chance of crashing, JFK Jr would have fit the profile pretty well. |
#35
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
Bob F. wrote:
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... Ricky writes: Flying in IMC with visual reference is not dangerous. That's what John Kennedy thought. Puleeeze... inexperience flying a Saratoga in marginal VFR results in exactly what happened. He was simply not competent in flying that mission. This was a case of a person flying having more money than brains. I don't know about the money vs brains thing but what happened to Kennedy has happened to a lot of other VFR pilots operating out of, in, and around coastal areas, especially around dusk. Spatial disorientation in this scenario is now and always has been a killer. What has always bothered me about the Kennedy accident is whether or not his instructor(s) ever made a POINT of warning him about this. The fact that everyone in the world knew he would be operating any airplane he flew in and out of the Martha"s Vineyard Block Island area should have been a red flag to his instructors. So for me at least, the REAL issue with his accident has always been whether or not he had been SPECIFICALLY WARNED of the dangers involved with flying in this area at dusk. If he was warned, I would believe that then a case for the for the "money vs brains" thing would be warranted. -- Dudley Henriques |
#36
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
Nomen Nescio writes:
That's the way it works in the real world. That depends on the company you keep. |
#37
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Aug 14, 8:49*am, Dudley Henriques wrote:
Bob F. wrote: "Mxsmanic" wrote in message .. . Ricky writes: Flying in IMC with visual reference is not dangerous. That's what John Kennedy thought. Puleeeze... inexperience flying a Saratoga in marginal VFR results in exactly what happened. *He was simply not competent in flying that mission. This was a case of a person flying having more money than brains. I don't know about the money vs brains thing but what happened to Kennedy has happened to a lot of other VFR pilots operating out of, in, and around coastal areas, especially around dusk. Spatial disorientation in this scenario is now and always has been a killer. What has always bothered me about the Kennedy accident is whether or not his instructor(s) ever made a POINT of warning him about this. The fact that everyone in the world knew he would be operating any airplane he flew in and out of the Martha"s Vineyard Block Island area should have been a red flag to his instructors. So for me at least, the REAL issue with his accident has always been whether or not he had been SPECIFICALLY WARNED of the dangers involved with flying in this area at dusk. If he was warned, I would believe that then a case for the for the "money vs brains" thing would be warranted. -- Dudley Henriques John Jr flew that route with a CFII a number of times. If memory serves, he planned to take one with him on that trip too. As it happened, the ETA was chosen so that the entire trip would have been flown in daylight, but traffic and other delays made it a dusk take off. Worse than that, the night before (I'm using the book "The Day John Died" as a reference here, but I read it a few years ago) he had a major fight with his wife as well, and is magazine "George" was failing. I think he had 300 plus hours of dual -- but was not nearly ready to take the flight test. I don't know if he passed the written, but don't think so. It was the usual case of a sequence of bad decisions. Probably the worst one -- I'm guessing here, but there's good evidence it happened this way-- is he was VFR at 5500 feet or so between Point Judith RI and the Vineyard, close enough to his destination -- maybe 20 miles away? -- so that it would be a good time to start down. (Personal preference, I fly IFR has high as the winds will allow, and if traffic is light l like to let down at 250 or 300 feet per minute, so if I'm at 10,000 and want to be near the airport at 1,000 I start down 30 minutes out). the radar track suggests to me he disconnected the a/p, (until that point altitude was pretty much rock solid) started to hand fly, and impacted the water 30 seconds later. Other pilots in the area said there was no visible horizon, and there are NO lights in Rhode Island Sound. There are plenty of lights at Point Judith (ask me about Harbor of Last Refuge there sometime, but in a sailing newsgroup) and on the Vineyard. John Jr had taken plenty of chances in his life, and when you roll the dice as often as he did the odds are not in your favor. When there is no visible horizon, regardless of whether the conditions are VFR or IFR, a pilot had damn well better be able to fly with reference to instruments -rated or not. I really considered the training for the instrument rating having more to do with learning the ATC system, although my *&&^&%(_) CFII was really good at putting the airplane in unusual attitudes before telling me, with my head down under the hood, "It's all yours." |
#38
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Thu, 14 Aug 2008 04:52:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
I seem to remember in excess of 300 hours dual. Wow, that's just hard to believe. [shaking his head] -- Dallas |
#39
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Aug 14, 1:45 pm, Dallas wrote:
On Thu, 14 Aug 2008 04:52:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: I seem to remember in excess of 300 hours dual. Wow, that's just hard to believe. [shaking his head] -- Dallas My BIG error. He had 310 hours total time. See http://amelia.db.erau.edu/reports/misc/NYC99MA178a.pdf which states he was about half way through his instrument training. Elsewhere, I forgot where, I remember reading he had lots of CFII time. He did have about 35 trips to the vineyard. |
#40
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Anthony, question about IFR / IMC
On Aug 14, 6:54*pm, wrote:
On Aug 14, 1:45 pm, Dallas wrote: On Thu, 14 Aug 2008 04:52:52 -0700 (PDT), wrote: *I seem to remember in excess of 300 hours dual. Wow, that's just hard to believe. [shaking his head] -- Dallas My BIG error. He had 310 hours total time. See http://amelia.db.erau.edu/reports/misc/NYC99MA178a.pdf which states he was about half way through his instrument training. Elsewhere, I forgot where, I remember reading he had lots of CFII time. He did have about 35 trips to the vineyard. Final note -- the NTSB report seems to be hard to download. I probably have a copy in my files -- for purposes unrelated to this thread I did some research on the matter a couple of years ago -- so if you need it drop me a note. |
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