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#1
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Second, a recollection: it's my recollection that ATC radar is
designed to filter out slow-moving targets. That's primary radar, because of ground clutter problems. It would be a most unusual situation to eliminate a transponder return. They certainly don't do it out here in the Pacific Northwest - I've asked. I've asked to, not quite as northwest as you are. The answer I got is it depends on how the controller sets up there radar. At most Class C airports there probably is no filter turned on. At larger airports they might turn it on to eliminate the returns from aircraft taxing on the ground. I was also told the can select the speed at which it will filter the return but typically they might set it up for 25kts. Typically they have the primary radar turned off unless we tell them there are gliders or non-transponder equipped aircraft in the area. Brian |
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#2
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In the UK the recommended repack period is 6 months.
It is only a recommendation, it is not an offence to fly with a parachute which is out of repack. The problem with this sort of requirement that the rules are drawn up for the worst case scenario. A club parachute which is worn by many people all day and everyday, and is subject to a high degree of wear and tear requires regular inspection, and I would be the first to say that this is good. You do want it to work. Compare that with my parachute, lives in its bag, not thrown around, worn perhaps one or twice a week, does that require the same intensive maintenance? The rules say yes, in practice is safety compromised at all if the period between repacks is longer. Most riggers I have spoken to say no. Given the choice between sitting on a cushion which will not protect you from the impact of a crash and sitting on a serviceable chute which just happens to be a day over it's due repack I know what I would choose. At 14:30 23 February 2004, Tim Mara wrote: your answer was 100% exactly why they have made the rule...... tim 'Mark James Boyd' wrote in message news:4039b164$1@darkstar... In article , Tim Mara wrote: now, I am not going to try to justify the cycle period, and in fact this can vary from country to country, and even most manufacturers will probably say the 120 day cycle is too frequent for our typical use, but I can understand the FAA rule on this, and anyone who doesn't see the reasoning is why they have the rule... plain and simple, if it were legal to wear an out of date parachute, would you, or anyone else bother to have it inspected or repacked?? I rather doubt it....in fact you're already suggested you wouldn't... There's no rule requiring me to change my tidy-whities every week either, but I DO IT! :P For health reasons, you know... Same for a chute. I wouldn't just sit on the thing for 12 years and drip jelly on it and drag it through the dirt all day and think it would open. But if it's my own G*****n chute in a G*****n single-seat glider, whose business is it anyway? Rules are never a simple matter or what's right for the masses, but made because some one or a few people have done something that was questionable, or wrong. If we were all perfect, and always right we'd have far fewer rules, regulations and restrictions.... tim A coupla guys weighing in heavy on an expired reserve on a tandem skydiving jump is a hell of a long way from me in my itsy-bitsy glider wearing an emergency chute I don't even intend to use. Who'll convince me that the extra safety of having the more frequent repack outweighs the lack of safety when I fly twice without the chute each year (while I wait for the packer to send it back)? |
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#3
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Tim,
You wrote: "you're trying to re-write everything to sway what I have said....and what I have said is that this is a regulation....ands without this regulation there would be (some.fill it in again) who would/could/might never have their parachutes inspected by someone who can find difficulties, problems... Speak with any good rigger or manufacturer, you will find that all of them have found chutes that have had problems, could fail.....if you are suggesting leaving this up to individuals "judgment" then I guess it would also be OK for pilots to do their own annual inspections and the like also... tim BTW; I have had to use a parachute from a glider...maybe if you had this same experience you might not be so willing to strike up this argument." Honestly, I'm not trying to change what you said, I played back what you said in an effort to get you to think about it. From your reaction, I think you're shocked by the replay. The law doesn't say "pack your damn chute, you idiot." It says "no pilot of a civil aircraft shall allow a parachute that is available for emergency use to be carried aboard unless..." That's a shocking statement. You're right to be shocked. I hear what you're saying: of course recently-packed parachutes are safer (although at least one rigger has told me that in her opinion all the re-packing is the biggest source of parachute wear and tear!). But I imagine a parachute that was packed 2 years ago is at least 90% likely to work, and I know a seat cushion is 0% likely to work. Why cite someone for taking the safer, albeit imperfect option of bringing the out-of-date parachute? I understand people SHOULD re-pack their chutes, but GIVEN that they notice their chute is now out-of-date, what choice, from a public policy point of view, do you want them to make about whether or not to bring it in the aircraft? Is that even a real question? No, it's not like annual inspections, because they are REQUIRED and a parachute isn't. If we REQUIRE parachutes then you're absolutely right: there has to be a definition of what an acceptable parachute is. Perhaps that's what you're suggesting, and maybe it's not a bad idea. But we don't require them, so we certainly shouldn't prohibit someone carrying a less-than-perfect one when we allow them to carry none at all. It's like having a radio and using it: it's optional, and we should encourage people to do it, not cite them for technicalities when they're trying to do the sensible thing and doing no harm in the process. Your belief is that this law causes more people to keep their parachutes safe. I may be wrong, but I doubt it. My belief is that anal types like myself, who worry about whether or not they're legal, are anal about their parachutes too, and people who aren't... aren't. The problem is that, being anal, I HAVE wondered whether I should fly with an out-of-date chute and risk getting fined on landing - or just leave it in the car and avoid risking the hassle with the FAA. That shouldn't even BE a question! I like to hope that, if the situation ever arises, I'll bring the chute rather than obey the law. But that's a ridiculous statement to have to make. You've had to use a parachute to exit a glider. I'm very glad it worked. I'm very glad you had it. And I oppose any regulation that would have made it illegal for you to have had one, under any circumstances whatsoever - not even if it hadn't been repacked in a decade! I assume your chute had been repacked within the preceding 120 days, but if it had been out of date, it might have worked anyway. If it had been in your car, it wouldn't have. |
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#4
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I know of one incident where a chute saved a life after not being packed in
seven years. Any legislation that makes it less likely that someone will have a chute available, even if it is no longer current is immoral in my view. Pity about the Ventus... Finbar wrote: Tim, You wrote: "you're trying to re-write everything to sway what I have said....and what I have said is that this is a regulation....ands without this regulation there would be (some.fill it in again) who would/could/might never have their parachutes inspected by someone who can find difficulties, problems... Speak with any good rigger or manufacturer, you will find that all of them have found chutes that have had problems, could fail.....if you are suggesting leaving this up to individuals "judgment" then I guess it would also be OK for pilots to do their own annual inspections and the like also... tim BTW; I have had to use a parachute from a glider...maybe if you had this same experience you might not be so willing to strike up this argument." Honestly, I'm not trying to change what you said, I played back what you said in an effort to get you to think about it. From your reaction, I think you're shocked by the replay. The law doesn't say "pack your damn chute, you idiot." It says "no pilot of a civil aircraft shall allow a parachute that is available for emergency use to be carried aboard unless..." That's a shocking statement. You're right to be shocked. I hear what you're saying: of course recently-packed parachutes are safer (although at least one rigger has told me that in her opinion all the re-packing is the biggest source of parachute wear and tear!). But I imagine a parachute that was packed 2 years ago is at least 90% likely to work, and I know a seat cushion is 0% likely to work. Why cite someone for taking the safer, albeit imperfect option of bringing the out-of-date parachute? I understand people SHOULD re-pack their chutes, but GIVEN that they notice their chute is now out-of-date, what choice, from a public policy point of view, do you want them to make about whether or not to bring it in the aircraft? Is that even a real question? No, it's not like annual inspections, because they are REQUIRED and a parachute isn't. If we REQUIRE parachutes then you're absolutely right: there has to be a definition of what an acceptable parachute is. Perhaps that's what you're suggesting, and maybe it's not a bad idea. But we don't require them, so we certainly shouldn't prohibit someone carrying a less-than-perfect one when we allow them to carry none at all. It's like having a radio and using it: it's optional, and we should encourage people to do it, not cite them for technicalities when they're trying to do the sensible thing and doing no harm in the process. Your belief is that this law causes more people to keep their parachutes safe. I may be wrong, but I doubt it. My belief is that anal types like myself, who worry about whether or not they're legal, are anal about their parachutes too, and people who aren't... aren't. The problem is that, being anal, I HAVE wondered whether I should fly with an out-of-date chute and risk getting fined on landing - or just leave it in the car and avoid risking the hassle with the FAA. That shouldn't even BE a question! I like to hope that, if the situation ever arises, I'll bring the chute rather than obey the law. But that's a ridiculous statement to have to make. You've had to use a parachute to exit a glider. I'm very glad it worked. I'm very glad you had it. And I oppose any regulation that would have made it illegal for you to have had one, under any circumstances whatsoever - not even if it hadn't been repacked in a decade! I assume your chute had been repacked within the preceding 120 days, but if it had been out of date, it might have worked anyway. If it had been in your car, it wouldn't have. |
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#5
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#6
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In article ,
Fred the Red Shirt wrote: (Finbar) wrote in message . com... ... Not to disagree with you on anything you wrote but here are some alternatives: Buy two chutes. Stagger the repack dates so one is always current. Or go together with some buddies and buy one common 'loaner' that is kept current. Get yourself certified as a rigger--make a little extra cash on the side. Does this make sense? Ummm...with more time and money, this problem goes away, of course. I think what we are arguing is that the regs and the repack requirements are marginally silly, and unneccesarily expensive. Not extremely silly or horifically expensive, just that it would be better if a few tweaks were introcuced. A little nudge for the reg and for the repack dates... -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
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#7
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Ummm...with more time and money, this problem goes away, of course.
I think what we are arguing is that the regs and the repack requirements are marginally silly, and unneccesarily expensive. Not extremely silly or horifically expensive, just that it would be better if a few tweaks were introcuced. A little nudge for the reg and for the repack dates... No, the expense really wasn't my point. The questions of what the repack dates should be, that's a whole different topic. I don't know what they should be. My point was that the regs prohibit a pilot from doing something that is safer than the legal alternative. Given that a parachute is out of pack date, the pilot CAN legally fly WITHOUT it, but CANNOT legally fly WITH it. Since flying with it is either safer than flying without it or, in the worst case, no less safe than flying without it, the law requires behavior (leave it on the ground) that is LESS SAFE than the illegal alternative (bring it anyway, but without the same confidence that it will work). Laws that require unsafe behavior as an alternative to safer behavior are an abomination. That was my point. The connection to the transponder regs was that we all KNOW it's safer to have a transponder aboard and use it only when it makes sense, but it's illegal, and sooner or later someone will get ticketed for it. Just ask the guys who got ramp-checked for the pack dates on parachutes they weren't even required to have on board. On the other hand, I have no objection whatsoever to requiring parachute pack dates for parachutes that are REQUIRED to be aboard the aircraft for use in an emergency. If you're doing aerobatics you must have a parachute. It makes sense, then, that there be some legal definition of what constitutes an acceptable parachute. |
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#8
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Why is the petition on behalf of "SSA members" and not "glider
pilots?" -Pat |
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#9
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The SSA has no standing to speak for all glider pilots.
"Pat Russell" wrote in message ... Why is the petition on behalf of "SSA members" and not "glider pilots?" -Pat |
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