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Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt

 
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Mark Sletten



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 43
Location: St. Jacob, IL (Near St. Louis, MO)

PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:27 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

Beware, this is an op ed post,

There is no question that this was a tragedy almost beyond comprehension. I
feel badly for the victim, the victim's family, anyone who witnessed it
personally and, lastly, the TBM's PIC. That being said, I think it's
important that we, as pilots, don't let this tragedy lead us somewhere -
emotionally, intellectually or literally - someplace we don't want to go; we
must keep our eyes on the ball. There is no question that wing walkers
and/or ground spotters could have (most likely would have) prevented this
accident. The bottom line in this case is there were none.

I know I'm going to hear from those of you accusing me of armchair
quarterbacking. That's as may be, but I felt compelled to comment in light
of Linn's (maybe unintentional - see below) hints that someone other than
the PIC might be responsible for the safe movement of his or her aircraft on
the ground. Even *WITH* ground spotters, taxiing safely is still the
responsibility of the PIC. To even hint, however faintly, otherwise is to
open Pandora's Box.

Intimating that someone other than the PIC is responsible is the 1st step to
in the process wherein someone other then the PIC decides how to safely
operate our aircraft.

Taxiing an aircraft that dwarfs most others at the show, with limited
visibility outside the aircraft, and knowing he was going to mix with many
different kinds of aircraft on a crowded, busy taxiway *WITH NO SPOTTERS*
should have spurred the Avenger pilot to take appropriate precautions - he
was the PIC.

Quote:
From the victim's point of view, and in light of the number of pilots who've
made who-woulda-thunk-it comments, it's a safe bet that neither he, nor many

others of us have considered this kind of accident before now. I'd say the
majority of us will definitely think about it, and take appropriate
precautions (a mirror, stopping on a slant to allow aft visibility, etc.,
let's keep those comments coming), should we find ourselves in a similar
situation.

Additionally, I believe adamantly it is in no way the responsibility of the
EAA, or any other AirVenture organizer, to provide ground crews to prevent
taxi accidents. Volunteers help direct the flow of traffic and, as a side
benefit, might be in a position to *HELP* prevent ground accidents. Both of
these aircraft were on an established taxiway and knew where they were
going, therefore, no ground crews were provided. And that's as it should be
unless the PIC decides otherwise.

Further, *ANYONE* can volunteer to work at OSH during AirVenture - there is
no way to determine qualifications or expertise. If you *MUST* have a ground
crew to taxi safely, then the only way to be sure the crew is competent is
to bring your own.

IMHO, by providing safety observers specifically to "help" pilots safely
taxi their aircraft, the EAA and AirVenture would become just as responsible
as the PIC. That kind of liability coupled with a tragic event such as this
can effectively kill large events like AirVenture. I wouldn't accept it -
nor, do I think, will they. If we pilots demand that the EAA and AirVenture
organizers take steps to *HELP* us avoid future accidents of this type, we
shouldn't be surprised at what we get - like scheduled departure times by
type.

Mark Sletten
Legacy FG N828LM
http://www.legacyfgbuilder.com
Linn Walters said:

I read the NTSB report and understood exactly how it happened. The addition
of volunteers with paddles to regulate the flow on the taxiway could have
prevented this accident. It may be as simple as a golf cart on the grass to
aid those pilots with forward visibility problems .... and as I said, it
doesn't reside only with the warbirds ..... would go a long way to prevent a
reoccurrence. The only other solution would be to set up departure times by
type and I'm sure nobody wants that. What saddens me me about this accident
is that it truly was preventable ..... like most accidents are.


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Dave Johnson



Joined: 11 Jan 2006
Posts: 7
Location: Erie, CO (48V, BJC)

PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 8:50 am    Post subject: Re: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

I agree, Mark. The reponsibility must be ours as pilots for the complete operation of our aircraft, including taxiing at an aviation event. Neither the EAA nor the FAA can or should take on that responsibility. Perhaps that should also be made clear in the NOTAM for next year, so there is no question in anyone's mind.

No doubt the TBM pilot is profoundly sorry right now as well. I can't imagine dealing with that sort of thing on my conscience.

Dave


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 10:01 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

I'm sorry, but I disagree with some of these sentiments. No, I don't
want a shift in overall responsibility. However, Oshkosh has deaths
every year, it seems. If there are steps that can be taken to reduce
those deaths that aren't terribly onerous, I think it makes sense to
take those steps.

Ground handling accidents are easy to avoid. Adding a requirement
for an extra ground crew to assist any aircraft with over-the-nose
visibility issues wouldn't be onerous. The ground control frequency
could also warn people to maintain a larger distance when following
smaller aircraft. They could erect signs to this effect or simply
include it in a briefing to all large tail draggers.

Or they could have a 10-minute window every hour for certain types of
aircraft to queue up. So all the big aircraft would be clustered
together.

There are dozens of different steps that could alleviate the
likelihood of repeated ground handling accidents. A failure to take
any of them is an acknowledgment of spinelessness on the part of the
folks shirking the opportunity to increase safety.

I don't blame the EAA guys for this accident. The fault rests solely
with the pilot of the TBM. If you can't taxi your aircraft without
running over some poor guy in front of you, you have no business at
the controls of the aircraft. But the EAA could take fairly simple
steps to prevent it happening again.

I don't know about anyone else, but I'd happily pay a $2 safety fee
to help provide for the types of ground crew that might prevent a
repeat. I sure as hell don't want to be run over by someone driving
his oversized toy up my back side.

-Joe
On Aug 7, 2006, at 11:50 AM, Dave Johnson wrote:

Quote:


I agree, Mark. The reponsibility must be ours as pilots for the
complete operation of our aircraft, including taxiing at an
aviation event. Neither the EAA nor the FAA can or should take on
that responsibility. Perhaps that should also be made clear in the
NOTAM for next year, so there is no question in anyone's mind.

No doubt the TBM pilot is profoundly sorry right now as well. I
can't imagine dealing with that sort of thing on my conscience.

Dave


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jeffpoint



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 72
Location: MKE

PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 10:59 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

OK, I've pretty much sat this one out, but I feel like I have to jump in
here. Joe makes a few good points, but some that I flatly disagree with.

Many listers have put some level of blame on either the ground
volunteers, or the "system" in which they work. I feel qualified to
comment on this. I'm the guy in charge of RV parking at Oshkosh, and I
am very familiar with the workings of the ground operations.. I didn't
witness the accident, but I was on the scene within minutes, and for
several hours afterwords. I assisted the fire dept. in doing their
recovery operations, helped them go over the wreckage and look at the
integrity of fuel lines etc, and showed them where not to cut. I got to
spend more than plenty of time looking close up at the accident site, so
I feel somewhat qualified to comment on the accident (as much so as
anyone else on this list, anyway.)

Some have suggested that large warbird types have a "wing walker" to
escort them to and from the runways. That's an idea which looks good on
paper, but in reality is probably unworkable. To do this would require
a large increase in the number of people working the flight line, and a
coresponding increase in the number of vehicles. Keep in mind that
every one on the ground crew is a volunteer; we can't just go out and
hire another 100 people to increase our ranks. We face dwindling
numbers every year as it is. Mike (aka Suzie Q, and my OSH counterpart
down in Antique/Classic) has already addressed this on this list.

As for some of the other changes Joe suggested, such as departure slots
for warbirds, again this looks good in theory, but in practice is
unworkable. If we were to shut down the airport for 10 minutes every
hour to allow warbirds to do their thing, that would create huge backups
in the system, all the way out to Ripon. Anybody want to spend another
45 minutes taking the Rush Lake scenic tour? If we did this, and
imposed even greater delays into the system, I think it would have a
devastating effect on the convention. People would begin to stay away
in droves, in particular the warbird types. I think onerous is the
right word to describe this situation.

What happened here was absolutely a tragedy. However, it was a freak
accident, one that has never happened previously in the 36 years of OSH
shows. Do we want to go down a path that could have a devastating
effect on the future of the show, based on one accident? Anybody
remember that one single accident, between an airliner and a Cherokee,
resulted in the onerous rules that we deal with today, TCA's,
transponders etc. I'm not trying to minimize the seriousness of what
happened, but I am try to suggest that we not throw the baby out with
the bathwater, based on a single, freak accident.

FWIW, us parking volunteers are having this very debate right now, over
on our own forum. We are trying to come up with a workable solution,
before something bad is forced down out throats.

Jeff Point
RV-6
Milwaukee
do not archive


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 11:36 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

I'd like to point out I didn't suggest shutting down the airport for
10 minutes an hour. I suggested a 10-minute departure timeframe for
large aircraft to queue up. This is a little different. If I'm in a
small airplane, i would know not to fire my engines up from xx:30 to
xx:40 every hour, but that if I were in a large aircraft (or whatever
the criteria would be) that's the only time I should fire up my
engines. This would cluster departing aircraft of the type to run
over little aircraft all together. That big warbird is far more
likely to see another big warbird than he is a tiny RV.

It's only one idea, and if it's not workable, then find ideas that are.

They could also rework parking or taxiways somewhat so that large
aircraft are less likely to be following small aircraft. Perhaps.

And who says you can't hire some extra crew if you can't get enough
volunteers? Charge every landing aircraft $2 safety fee to cover the
cost.

Or have a staging area for large craft. Have a golf cart with some
tall tall flags on the back. Make all the big aircraft collect
together, then follow the hard-to-miss golf cart to the runway. This
is a small inconvenience to departing big aircraft, a minor amount of
volunteer staff, and virtually guarantees no repeats of this type (at
least for departure). For arrival, you could do something similar by
having large aircraft depart the landing runway in the opposite
direction from small guys, and then have a golf cart to follow to the
parking area.

Lots of ideas that could be kicked around. I wasn't suggesting that
any particular idea was the best possible. But I am suggesting that
there's no excuse to just toss our hands in the air and say, "It's
someone else's problem."

Note that I don't blame the volunteers for this accident. But I do
blame anyone who anticipated accidents like this, was in a position
to do something about them, and didn't. None of my ideas are
horribly onerous, and folks who know the operations better could take
some of them, rework them into some sort of practical nature, and
save lives in the future.

-J

On Aug 7, 2006, at 1:59 PM, Jeff Point wrote:

Quote:


OK, I've pretty much sat this one out, but I feel like I have to
jump in here. Joe makes a few good points, but some that I flatly
disagree with.

Many listers have put some level of blame on either the ground
volunteers, or the "system" in which they work. I feel qualified
to comment on this. I'm the guy in charge of RV parking at
Oshkosh, and I am very familiar with the workings of the ground
operations.. I didn't witness the accident, but I was on the scene
within minutes, and for several hours afterwords. I assisted the
fire dept. in doing their recovery operations, helped them go over
the wreckage and look at the integrity of fuel lines etc, and
showed them where not to cut. I got to spend more than plenty of
time looking close up at the accident site, so I feel somewhat
qualified to comment on the accident (as much so as anyone else on
this list, anyway.)

Some have suggested that large warbird types have a "wing walker"
to escort them to and from the runways. That's an idea which looks
good on paper, but in reality is probably unworkable. To do this
would require a large increase in the number of people working the
flight line, and a coresponding increase in the number of
vehicles. Keep in mind that every one on the ground crew is a
volunteer; we can't just go out and hire another 100 people to
increase our ranks. We face dwindling numbers every year as it
is. Mike (aka Suzie Q, and my OSH counterpart down in Antique/
Classic) has already addressed this on this list.

As for some of the other changes Joe suggested, such as departure
slots for warbirds, again this looks good in theory, but in
practice is unworkable. If we were to shut down the airport for 10
minutes every hour to allow warbirds to do their thing, that would
create huge backups in the system, all the way out to Ripon.
Anybody want to spend another 45 minutes taking the Rush Lake
scenic tour? If we did this, and imposed even greater delays into
the system, I think it would have a devastating effect on the
convention. People would begin to stay away in droves, in
particular the warbird types. I think onerous is the right word to
describe this situation.

What happened here was absolutely a tragedy. However, it was a
freak accident, one that has never happened previously in the 36
years of OSH shows. Do we want to go down a path that could have a
devastating effect on the future of the show, based on one
accident? Anybody remember that one single accident, between an
airliner and a Cherokee, resulted in the onerous rules that we deal
with today, TCA's, transponders etc. I'm not trying to minimize
the seriousness of what happened, but I am try to suggest that we
not throw the baby out with the bathwater, based on a single, freak
accident.

FWIW, us parking volunteers are having this very debate right now,
over on our own forum. We are trying to come up with a workable
solution, before something bad is forced down out throats.

Jeff Point
RV-6
Milwaukee
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PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 11:59 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

In a message dated 8/7/06 12:53:31 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
rv(at)discursion.com writes:

Quote:
Neither the EAA nor the FAA can or should take on that responsibility.
============================

Dave:

Playing lawyer ... Check you local listings for the 2PM slot.
The EAA automatically takes on responsibility by sponsoring the event and
even more responsibility by providing Ground Crew. Either way they are
responsible and what is the definition of Class D Tower operations? Control of
aircraft departing and arriving while on the ground and advisories when in the air
within the air space.

It is akin to parking your car via a Valet or checking your coat. If the
service is provided the risk is assumed. ASSUMED not as in making an ass out of
you and me ... But, as in taking on the responsibility!

YET, by FAA definition the accident would not have happened IF the pilot did
not get in the plane.

Barry
"Chop'd Liver"

"Show them the first time, correct them the second time, kick them the third
time."
Yamashiada


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PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:06 pm    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:12 pm    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

On 7 Aug 2006, at 14:59, Jeff Point wrote:

Quote:


What happened here was absolutely a tragedy. However, it was a
freak accident, one that has never happened previously in the 36
years of OSH shows. Do we want to go down a path that could have a
devastating effect on the future of the show, based on one
accident? Anybody remember that one single accident, between an
airliner and a Cherokee, resulted in the onerous rules that we deal
with today, TCA's, transponders etc. I'm not trying to minimize
the seriousness of what happened, but I am try to suggest that we
not throw the baby out with the bathwater, based on a single, freak
accident.

You seem to be saying that one fatality in 36 years is an acceptable
loss rate, so no changes are needed. What loss rate would it take
before you would conclude that changes were warranted?
Quote:

FWIW, us parking volunteers are having this very debate right now,
over on our own forum. We are trying to come up with a workable
solution, before something bad is forced down out throats.

I'm not familiar with the taxi way widths of the various taxi routes
at OSH. The crux of the problem appears to be that some taxi ways
are too narrow to allow large tail draggers to S turn. Given that
most of the large tail draggers are in one area, is there any hope of
giving them taxi routes during peak traffic periods that keep them on
wider taxi ways, maybe at the expense of funneling them all to 09/27?

Why not throw this problem over to the EAA Warbirds division? They
seem to have a good supply of volunteers. "Simply" require that they
provide wing walkers for large taildragger warbirds. If they don't
have enough wing walkers, then they would have to back off on the
number of warbird arrivals and/or departures.

Kevin Horton
Ottawa, Canada
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jeffpoint



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 72
Location: MKE

PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 5:53 pm    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

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PostPosted: Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:53 pm    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

On 7 Aug 2006, at 21:51, Jeff Point wrote:

[quote]

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PostPosted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 8:27 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

Quote:
snipped
Obviously, the large tail dragger pilot also has full responsibility
to taxi safely, but the "system" should make every effort to put him
in a situation where that is possible. If the taxi way is too narrow
to allow S-turns, then the only way a large tail dragger can taxi
safely is with some outside assistance. The Avenger pilot was put in
a very difficult situation. Once he was marshalled onto a narrow
taxi way with no wing walkers, he had two choices: press on and hope
for the best, or shut down and become a road block. He gambled with
option 1, and he lost.

Kevin Horton RV-8 (finishing kit)
Ottawa, Canada
http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8

Kevin,
He could have asked his wife to get out and act as a spotter. He had a choice.
Just playing devils advocate
Charlie Kuss


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PostPosted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 9:48 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

Just because the controllers at the airfield tell you to do something doesn't mean you have to do it.  In my one trip to Oshkosh, I was told that I'd be directed to a run up area.  Instead, the ground controllers basically "pushed" me onto the runway with no run up.  I didn't know what else to do, so I just ran off the other side of the runway and told the tower I'd like a run up before takeoff.
Optimal?  Certainly not.  And to this day, I don't know what I was supposed to do.  I don't think doing a run up in the parking area is the right choice.  Maybe I was supposed to do it during the taxi.  But I really expected a chance to pull over and do a proper run up.  It wasn't until they gestured me onto the runway that I realized I was about to take off on an IFR flight plan without finishing my pre-takeoff checklist.

But my point -- you CAN interrupt procedures if you don't think they're safe, regardless of how annoying doing so might be to the controllers.  And difficulty in seeing the guy in front of you definitely counts.

-J

On Aug 8, 2006, at 11:08 AM, Charlie Kuss wrote:
Quote:
Quote:
snipped
Obviously, the large tail dragger pilot also has full responsibility 
to taxi safely, but the "system" should make every effort to put him 
in a situation where that is possible.  If the taxi way is too narrow 
to allow S-turns, then the only way a large tail dragger can taxi 
safely is with some outside assistance.  The Avenger pilot was put in 
a very difficult situation.  Once he was marshalled onto a narrow 
taxi way with no wing walkers, he had two choices: press on and hope 
for the best, or shut down and become a road block.  He gambled with 
option 1, and he lost.

Kevin Horton         RV-8 (finishing kit)
Ottawa, Canada
http://www.kilohotel.com/rv8

Kevin,
 He could have asked his wife to get out and act as a spotter. He had a choice.
Just playing devils advocate
Charlie Kuss


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Mark Sletten



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 43
Location: St. Jacob, IL (Near St. Louis, MO)

PostPosted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:31 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

Quote:
From another lister:

Quote:
Obviously, the large tail dragger pilot also has full responsibility
to taxi safely, but the "system" should make every effort to put him
in a situation where that is possible. If the taxi way is too narrow
to allow S-turns, then the only way a large tail dragger can taxi
safely is with some outside assistance.

This argument, on its face, makes perfect sense - especially in light of
the possibility of "saving lives." Again I urge caution, I believe this to
be the first step down a slippery slope, at the bottom of which you'll
find Pandora's Box. I, for one, do not wish the “system” to do my job for
me, because the “system” rarely “makes an effort” to do anything, other
than to tell me what I can’t do. Do you see the "system' making the
taxiways wider in response to this accident?

Making a mandatory rule (for that can be the “system's” only response) to
deal specifically with this situation may very well prevent its
reoccurrence, but at what cost? We are all (those certificated at least)
qualified pilots, qualified to operate an aircraft from chocks out to
chocks in. We already have a plethora of rules whose boundaries we are
obliged to remain within - do we really want more?

The counter-argument is, "It's only one rule, and it just might save
someone's life." Those making this counter-argument seek to trump all
future arguments by making potential opponents seem callous and uncaring
about human life.

One of flying’s biggest draws is a marvelous sense of freedom. Part of
that sense of freedom comes from feeling the pride of accomplishment. It's
knowing we are engaging in a risky endeavor, risks we overcome through the
effective application of skills learned in training. Our training allows
us to bend an unruly aero-machine to our will. How long until "...just one
rule..." becomes too many rules? In Mexico one can't fly his or her
aircraft VFR at night. The Government thinks it's too risky...

We could save a tremendous number of lives in this country by making a
national 55 mph speed limit, and enforcing it with a speed governor on
every automobile. I don't know the specific ratios (I'm sure the hobby
physicists among us will correct me), but reducing the speed of an impact
by a factor of 1 reduces the force of that impact by a factor of 4 (Energy
= Mass times Velocity squared, I hate math...) The point is we don't have
a national speed limit; a deadly impact is a risk we are all willing to
accept - along with the freedom to drive faster.

As has been pointed out by another poster, this is the one and only time
an accident such as this has occurred at OSH in its long and storied
history. After this one, assuming *NO RULES* are added, how long do you
think it will be before another? How many of us will blithely sit on a
busy taxiway without knowing who or what is taxiing behind us? How about a
simple radio call, "Avenger taxiing south on Bravo, do you see the RV in
front of you?"

Quote:
You seem to be saying that one fatality in 36 years is an acceptable
loss rate, so no changes are needed. What loss rate would it take
before you would conclude that changes were warranted?

Another question designed to intimidate the opponent by making him or her
appear to be unconcerned about the loss of life - and is also very close
to a personal attack. Let me be clear, NO FATALITIES ARE ACCEPTABLE! The
question isn’t whether fatalities are acceptable; the question is what
reaction to this accident is appropriate. It’s not unusual to feel the
need to “do something” in the face of a tragic accident, but we must
approach the situation carefully so that whatever we do (or don’t do) is
appropriate!

Quote:
The Avenger pilot was put in a very difficult situation. Once he
was marshalled onto a narrow taxi way with no wing walkers, he had
two choices: press on and hope for the best, or shut down and
become a road block.

This argument is a little specious. Assuming the Avenger pilot even
considered the dangers of taxiing on a narrow taxiway in a row of mixed
traffic, he had an infinite number of options. If he was feeling
uncomfortable with the situation he may very well have chosen to continue
due to percieved pressure to do so - this, of course, is mere speculation.
We could also speculate that the perceived pressure to taxi and avoid
becoming a "road block" would surely have paled in comparison to the
eventual outcome, if only he had the gift of clairvoyance.

So what is the final outcome? What if there are no wing walkers available,
do we prohibit taxiing without them? Can we make enough rules so as to
rule out the possibility of one of making mistakes? I submit that the
umbrella of rules under which we currently operate is quite broad, but not
so broad as to prevent any number of tragic accidents from happening on a
daily basis. How many more would do the trick?

No, the reality is the Avenger's pilot operated within the rules, and
still made mistakes - mistakes that proved fatal for the victim in this
case. We can argue what he, the RV pilot, the EAA and/or the FAA should or
shouldn't have done until the cows come home, and it won't change the fact
that this accident was a freakish tragedy exactly *BECAUSE* it was so
unexpected, unlikely, unusual and uncommon.

Everyone involved in our avocation knows (or should know) the risks. Every
time we "slip the surly bonds" we are risking our life, the lives of our
passengers and assorted potential victims on the ground. We've all heard
the cliché, "The only way to conduct a flight in complete safety is to not
conduct it at all," or something close to it.

It may be cliché, but there is a small seed of truth there if one cares to
look for it. You have to look beyond the irony, beyond the sarcasm and
think! You'll find one of the immutable truths upon which our system of
liberty and freedom is founded - the very system that allows us the
freedom of personal flight. That truth, simply stated, tells us that we
are responsible and accountable for our actions. To abdicate that
responsibility is to abdicate our freedom. My fear is that the little seed
of truth found in the cliché, a truth which can grow to understanding and
enlightenment, will wither and die if shielded from the sunlight of
freedom by the umbrella of rules.

IMHO, the *BEST* way to prevent this tragedy's reenactment is through
education, not legislation. In that regard, let’s keep the ideas coming
for what we as pilots, not as regulators, can do.

Mark Sletten
Legacy FG N828LM
www.legacyfgbuilder.com


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Gary.A.Sobek



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 217
Location: SoCAL USA

PostPosted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 1:44 pm    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

The taxiway is wide enough for a flight of 15 RVs to taxi staggard (side by
side). How wide are we to make it?

Everything we do in VFR flying is SEE and AVOID. Take all the space you
need behind other aircraft so that you can taxi without hitting someone. DO
NOT let others tell you to get closer than you want.

I purchased my REAR VIEW Mirror from Pep Boys over 4 years ago.
Gary A. Sobek
"My Sanity" RV-6 N157GS O-320 Hartzell,
1,932 + Flying Hours So. CA, USA
http://SoCAL_WVAF.rvproject.com


----Original Message Follows----

>From another lister:

> Obviously, the large tail dragger pilot also has full responsibility
> to taxi safely, but the "system" should make every effort to put him
> in a situation where that is possible. If the taxi way is too narrow
> to allow S-turns, then the only way a large tail dragger can taxi
> safely is with some outside assistance.

This argument, on its face, makes perfect sense - especially in light of
the possibility of "saving lives." Again I urge caution, I believe this to
be the first step down a slippery slope, at the bottom of which you'll
find Pandora's Box. I, for one, do not wish the “system” to do my job for
me, because the “system” rarely “makes an effort” to do anything, other
than to tell me what I can’t do. Do you see the "system' making the
taxiways wider in response to this accident?


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Dave Johnson



Joined: 11 Jan 2006
Posts: 7
Location: Erie, CO (48V, BJC)

PostPosted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 1:46 pm    Post subject: Re: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

You've summarized my thoughts perfectly. Nicely stated. Slippery slope indeed, and PIC responsibility is where me must stop the buck. It really is that simple. More rules are not the solution...obeying the cardinal rule *is*.

Dave

Do not archive.
Quote:

Making a mandatory rule (for that can be the ?system's? only response) to
deal specifically with this situation may very well prevent its
reoccurrence, but at what cost? We are all (those certificated at least)
qualified pilots, qualified to operate an aircraft from chocks out to
chocks in. We already have a plethora of rules whose boundaries we are
obliged to remain within - do we really want more?

The counter-argument is, "It's only one rule, and it just might save
someone's life." Those making this counter-argument seek to trump all
future arguments by making potential opponents seem callous and uncaring
about human life.

One of flying?s biggest draws is a marvelous sense of freedom. Part of
that sense of freedom comes from feeling the pride of accomplishment. It's
knowing we are engaging in a risky endeavor, risks we overcome through the
effective application of skills learned in training. Our training allows
us to bend an unruly aero-machine to our will. How long until "...just one
rule..." becomes too many rules? In Mexico one can't fly his or her
aircraft VFR at night. The Government thinks it's too risky...


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gert.v(at)sbcglobal.net
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Aug 08, 2006 7:20 pm    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

But let's not forget we (the volunteers) WERE there. anytime the avenger
pilot felt unsafe, he could have stopped and waved any of the volunteers
along Papa and stated his problem and his request.
it would not be the first pilot and will not be the last pilot asking
for help. I myself have helped warbird pilots, as well as others, along
Papa who needed space, direction, urge to do a run-up then and there,
etc. All u have to do is ask and we will do our best to secure the area
for u.

And papa seems to get smaller and smaller as this thread moves along,
the main gear of a super conny fits on it, so did the B24 and the B17 as
well as the lancaster gear without running off in the grass on either
side, just to put width in perspective. The avenger is not that wide
compared to the above planes. Yes i know, they don't have to S-turn,
just pointing out other warbird tail draggers can and do on papa taxiway.

RV6 Flyer wrote:
Quote:

The taxiway is wide enough for a flight of 15 RVs to taxi staggard
(side by side). How wide are we to make it?

Everything we do in VFR flying is SEE and AVOID. Take all the space
you need behind other aircraft so that you can taxi without hitting
someone. DO NOT let others tell you to get closer than you want.

I purchased my REAR VIEW Mirror from Pep Boys over 4 years ago.
Gary A. Sobek
"My Sanity" RV-6 N157GS O-320 Hartzell,
1,932 + Flying Hours So. CA, USA
http://SoCAL_WVAF.rvproject.com


----Original Message Follows----

>From another lister:

> Obviously, the large tail dragger pilot also has full responsibility
> to taxi safely, but the "system" should make every effort to put him
> in a situation where that is possible. If the taxi way is too narrow
> to allow S-turns, then the only way a large tail dragger can taxi
> safely is with some outside assistance.

This argument, on its face, makes perfect sense - especially in light of
the possibility of "saving lives." Again I urge caution, I believe
this to
be the first step down a slippery slope, at the bottom of which you'll
find Pandora's Box. I, for one, do not wish the “system” to do my job for
me, because the “system” rarely “makes an effort” to do anything, other
than to tell me what I can’t do. Do you see the "system' making the
taxiways wider in response to this accident?


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cjensen(at)dts9000.com
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PostPosted: Wed Aug 09, 2006 4:16 am    Post subject: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

I suggest the responsibility lies with the Avenger's PIC, the fault is
shared by many parties.

Chuck Jensen


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low pass



Joined: 10 Jan 2006
Posts: 32
Location: Houston

PostPosted: Wed Aug 09, 2006 6:03 am    Post subject: Re: Oshkosh accident - Caution, on my Soapboxt Reply with quote

cjensen(at)dts9000.com wrote:
I suggest the responsibility lies with the Avenger's PIC, the fault is
shared by many parties.

Chuck Jensen
Respectfully, IMO, you're half right. The responsibility lies with the PIC (of the TBM) - period. The fault is not a consideration. All PIC's operating aircraft chose to come to Oshkosh and accepted the finite amount of risk. True, no death is acceptable, but there is in fact a certain number of accidents/incidents/collisions, etc. that are either acceptable or unacceptable. Apparently, one or two each year are acceptable. The show continues - for now. Doesn't make the losses good or something we should not try very hard to prevent (e.g., this discussion). But to say no accidents will occur or none should be expected in the plan is just not realistic. The goal should be to *minimize* risks.

Last comment with my turn, PLEASE don't advocate any more rules. After 20 yrs of flying, I actually gain more respect for those rules (OSH and system wide) the more I use them. If pilots would just do their #1 job of SEE AND AVOID, these human error risks would be pushed to near zero.

I'll step away from the horse. Flame away.

Bryan


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