SaxMan wrote:
It seems there should be a happy medium between putting on an entertaining routine and staying within safe paramaters. The biggest problem with theory "a" is that as long as we put humans into the cockpits of airplanes, humans are going to make human errors. Still, I think all operators should strive for an accident-free year.
Thanks Saxman. As I said earlier, there
is a happy medium between too risk and boring/grounded.
Thinking about it, in fact 99% of airshow flights get it exactly right! - It's than notional 1% we still need to work at.
And an important clarification. It's easy to see pilots as ultimately responsible, or the human at fault. That's neither fair nor correct. It is
not pilots who are responsible for accidents, but a failure / failures somewhere in the process.
I think the shocking report of the Thunder City Lightning (as posed earlier by Fouga23) is a good case in point. The pilot was at fault to a degree, certainly, but the failures were complete around him,
guaranteeing an accident. Both the organisation (and horrifyingly) the civil aviation authority neither had effective oversight nor were carrying out their agreed responsibilities properly
at all. What's interesting is how that is a comprehensive system failure; if you read it (link below) I feel you can't see any place where someone could have effectively said "stop" and prevented the accident; they would've got no backup. We all complain over over-regulation at times, but this is a perfect example of how such mundane work done mostly right prevents deaths and destruction.
http://www.caa.co.za/resource%20center/ ... 9/8706.pdfPilots do make errors, like us all, but they also (ultimately whatever their responsibility is) have to
trust others to have done their jobs properly. Conversely, the systems can (mostly) work and the pilot not be at fault, In the case of the BAe Mosquito, for instance, the errors were mostly by others, long before, far away and not evident until too late.
I'm not a pilot, nor an authority in any aspect, but we can all make a difference by encouraging a safe and managed warbird community and environment. Mostly we already do. (For instance, not supporting "Hey, watch this" kind of behaviour is an example where we can help). If anyone reads one of the accident reports I've linked to or one of the many good points made here by the various posters, and it prevents an accident, that's great.
And that's the irony; we are
mostly, pretty good, and
most accidents "don't happen" - standards of safety and accident prevention are higher in 2012 in almost all walks of life (and certainly aviation) than they've ever been. But, as the thread started, we sometimes still fail, and the cost is high.
Regards,