VH-WAL wrote:fly the buggers!
Agreed....otherwise they are nothing more than glorified 1:1 models sitting in a dusty ol hanger or museum.
TOR
VH-WAL wrote:fly the buggers!
BradG wrote:...and another demonstration why old aircraft shouldn't be flying.
tor lives wrote:VH-WAL wrote:fly the buggers!
Agreed....otherwise they are nothing more than glorified 1:1 models sitting in a dusty ol hanger or museum.
TOR
BradG wrote:tor lives wrote:VH-WAL wrote:fly the buggers!
Agreed....otherwise they are nothing more than glorified 1:1 models sitting in a dusty ol hanger or museum.
TOR
That's what CBO's and dusters are for.
BradG wrote:You know what I meant by old aircraft, I don't think I need to write 4 paragraphs explaining that. As I said Adam, the aircraft might be well maintained, but pilot experience is certainly not what it use to be when those aircraft were in service. Look in Aus, just in recent times we've had an F4U seriously damaged, a Yak seriously damaged and a Mallard lost with fatalities. How many more vintage aircraft will be lost in the next 20 years I wonder? Will the so called enthusiasts care then? Probably not.
Cap'n Wannabe wrote:You know about pilot experience, Brad? Flying's flying for the most part. Sure, some aircraft have their idiosyncrasies, but the all work exactly the same. How often *should* a pilot fly a particular aircraft to keep you happy? Once a day? A week? A month? You know, I took a 12 year break from flying. When I got back into the cockpit again, I was good to go in 1 hour. And I wasn't particularly experienced at the time.
Why did the F4U come a cropper? Certainly not the pilot's fault there...things are gonna break occasionally on aircraft - just ask TOR about his favourite, the A380...
And the Mallard? There's a lot more to that accident than simply pilot error. A lot more. In fact, in the vast majority of crashes where pilot error is a factor, it's generally the last hole in the swiss cheese to line up..
Adam the Akrodude wrote:BradG wrote:You know what I meant by old aircraft, I don't think I need to write 4 paragraphs explaining that. As I said Adam, the aircraft might be well maintained, but pilot experience is certainly not what it use to be when those aircraft were in service. Look in Aus, just in recent times we've had an F4U seriously damaged, a Yak seriously damaged and a Mallard lost with fatalities. How many more vintage aircraft will be lost in the next 20 years I wonder? Will the so called enthusiasts care then? Probably not.
Can the F4U really be considered old given it was extensively rebuild and essentially zero timed? It will be flying again soon enough anyway. So many "vintage" warbirds are not vintage at all, but built up from the data plate up. There are plenty of warbirds flying that have been rebuild after being wrecked in a accident. The Yak at Tyabb certainly isn't old at all. Mallard crash, well that was pilot error. Should we stop flying every type after some pilot screws up - no, or they'd be no flying anywhere. Flying involves some risk and it's how that risk is managed that is the important thing.
Operating aircraft of a certain age I think is a completely different discussion to high performance aircraft operation and currency/experience of the pilot. I do agree that extremely rare aircraft and of historic importance should not be flown. Just to suggest that "old aircraft" should not be flown is WAY too a simplistic statement.
BradG wrote:Adam the Akrodude wrote:BradG wrote:You know what I meant by old aircraft, I don't think I need to write 4 paragraphs explaining that. As I said Adam, the aircraft might be well maintained, but pilot experience is certainly not what it use to be when those aircraft were in service. Look in Aus, just in recent times we've had an F4U seriously damaged, a Yak seriously damaged and a Mallard lost with fatalities. How many more vintage aircraft will be lost in the next 20 years I wonder? Will the so called enthusiasts care then? Probably not.
Can the F4U really be considered old given it was extensively rebuild and essentially zero timed? It will be flying again soon enough anyway. So many "vintage" warbirds are not vintage at all, but built up from the data plate up. There are plenty of warbirds flying that have been rebuild after being wrecked in a accident. The Yak at Tyabb certainly isn't old at all. Mallard crash, well that was pilot error. Should we stop flying every type after some pilot screws up - no, or they'd be no flying anywhere. Flying involves some risk and it's how that risk is managed that is the important thing.
Operating aircraft of a certain age I think is a completely different discussion to high performance aircraft operation and currency/experience of the pilot. I do agree that extremely rare aircraft and of historic importance should not be flown. Just to suggest that "old aircraft" should not be flown is WAY too a simplistic statement.
..and that's why I mention pilot experience. You can have that zero timed air frame, but realistically, how often will you fly it? There's going to be a difference between taking up your Cessna and taking up your Corsair.
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