mustangdriver wrote:
How come? Why is it O.K. to bash the national museums and anything that they do O.K on an open forum, but talk about the same stuff with flying warbirds, and it becomes a huge issue, and one that needs to be hushed up. What is good for one is good for another. This goes beyond just warbirds. Even beyond aircraft. We have all had that friend that owned a car that was way too much for him to handle and he ends up wrecking it.
Chris, it is very simple. People's lives and familes are involved...when you talk about a museum it is simply theory.
I think in order to properly discuss safety and incidents sometimes you have to discect the root cause of the accident. If your friend is one of those that is killed in an accident, do you want the details of his mistake, mechanical failure, etc, posted all over the web for his widow, his kids, etc. to read? Is that really necessary? Absolutely not.
No one is saying that we shouldn't call a spade a spade, but it should be done in a peer enivronment where it can be discussed openly with the ability to explain misunderstood points, etc. That isn't done well on the internet or in a magazine editorial. Randy Haskin can probably correct me, but I think he told me once that most of the USAF accident reports were classified for that very reason. They are discussed and dissected at the unit level, but they aren't printed all over the place for everyone to see. I think you would agree that the safety culture is pretty high at the USAF.
I have been involved in a large number of warbird debriefings after a flight where mistakes have been made. It is discussed, generally privately, and in the vast majority of cases the person steps up to the plate accepts responsibilty for their actions. If they don't accept the criticism and learn from it, they generally find themselves looking for new folks to fly with.
I hope that Vlado, FG1Dpilot, Bill, Eric Downing, DougR, Glenn Wegman and Jim Beasley will post to validate along with me that safety is being constantly discussed. We have all lost friends in recent years doing what we love. These aren't people we just know from reading Warbird Digest of another warbird magazine. They are folks we have dined with, flown with, stayed at their house, know their wife and kids, and on and on. We take it seriously. Most of us have families, nearly all of us have wives. Nobody is interested in ignoring the subject. When you have gone to the funeral of a fellow warbird pilot and given his grieving wife a hug, maybe you will better understand.