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"Kamikaze-two-one, go around."
In late october there was a controversy emerging that I have totally missed and learned about just today. A NASA report on air traffic security saw such catastrophic data that the goivernment told Nasa to withhold the release to the public.
http://www.mindfully.org/Technology/...ASA22oct07.htm I do not know if the full story has been relased now, (Google did not help me to think so, and the geman newspaper I refer to say that Nasa released the data just threed days agho and that AP was able to decypher it just now), but Die Welt today has published numbers from that report, also quoting the deputy director of NASA. From 2001 to 2004, over 25000 professional and 4000 private pilots had been questioned on air travels in american air space. the study costed 11.3 million dollars. 1266 "near misses" have been reported in that time, that means aircraft coming closer than 500 ft to each other - at speeds that eventually are in excess of 600 knots (if in frontal collision mode). 1312 cases have been reported when airliners were suddenly pulled up and pushed down most brutally, obviously in attempots to avoid frontal collisions in mid-air. 166 landings without asking for permission. 513 "hard landings". 4267 occaisons when birds struck the plane. A not precisely named number of occaisons when airliner pilots slept while being on duty in cockpit. NASA and government seemed to have agreed that these numbers never should see the light of the oublic, but AP has taken legal action by which NASA was forced to release the results on 31st of Decembre. not without adding NO conclusions, NO summary, NO structure, NO order to a document that has more than 16 thousand pages - evil to him who evil thinks. :smug: There is mounting anger and criticism for this form of obviously intentional disarranged publication, amongst others coming from the university of Stanford. It is reasonable to suspect that it was done this way in the hope that the important data would get missed in the mist. All in all the findings exceed the results of examinations by the FAA often by several factors. the excuse why the report was locked is simple, and is admitted freely: not to hit commercial interest of airline companies by makeing the public aware. Enjoy collecting your air miles, gentlemen. |
Doesn't sound too bad in my book. How many take offs and landings in the US in a given year for commercial alone? 8 Million+?
That's 00.0001582% chance that you might become involved in a near miss given that these were all these near misses from the commercial sector, which they aren't!!! This is even less if you include the private pilot data. Sounds like a damn safe way to travel to me! I might as well sell my cars and commute by airplane. I am practically guaranteed to life a full life in safety that way. -S |
See it that way:
Roughly 2600 near misses and almost mid-air collisions and counting four years of 365 days means a statistical mean value of 1.78 "almost happened desasters" - per day. ;) |
If I'm not mistaken, a near miss is considered two aircraft thatt are 1 mile from each other. At any rate, statistically, I have a better chance of slipping in my shower cracking my head open then aircraft crash. Those figures look like a regular day at La Guardia.;)
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If you want to put it that way - an airplane crashes on average once per day, killing at least one person a day. Now if you want to look at that on a statistical scale, that is phenominaly low considering how many aircraft are actually in the sky at a given moment in time. Compare that to travelling by car and you can't go 1 second practically without a fatal incident! -S PS. Level with me. I see you have a fear in your writing in both past and present of aircraft. Countless times you post about aircraft and dangers. If I were Freud..... I'd have to guess you have a fear of flying, but it doesn't stop there. I'd venture to conclude that you even have a fear of them of simply flying over your head. I'd even go so far as to think you may not only have this fear, but you are also are extremely facinated by flight.... :hmm: |
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At that speed you move 150 m in around half a second. |
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In the area it is likely to happen - less than 10K feet, there is a 250 knot speed limit for this purpose alone. -S |
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BTW, if an Airbus at 8000ft collides with a Cessna Skylane hitting it from the side at 90 degrees -the outcome nevertheless is a catastrophe. It has also to be pointed out that in recent years the number of accidents or almost-accidents during taxing and rolling at the airport has constantly and very significantly increased, Googling for the above report I found texts saying "drastically increased". That is with regard to major Hubs and commercial traffic centres where you have no or low private traffic only. |
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Let'S see when the full report gets published, or at least more details get known. I forgot the links, btw: http://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/arti...nruhigend.html http://www.welt.de/wissenschaft/arti...fentlicht.html And to make one thing clear, this thread I do not mean to bash anyone, or to generally discredit NASA, air traffic, or the FAA. Just to show that obviously very many close accident situation are never being told to the oublic, and that the situation obviously is worse than was previously assumed by the FAA. Okay, I have nothing more to report on this story. |
There are plenty of air miss/air prox incidents that go unreported, I've had a few myself and not reported them. By the way, 'near miss' is usually what the media calls it, air prox is usually what it gets called by most aviation authorities, typical of the media really, since a near miss, would actually be a hit, as in in 'well it nearly missed it' LOL
One time my aircraft got rolled through about 120 degrees to almost inverted by wake turbulence from a couple of RAF Harriers at about 1500 feet ASL (about 500 feet AGL at the time) that flew through the airspace I was cleared to be in without even spotting me, they were doing about 500 knots and passed either side of me. And I've heard plenty of them on the radio too, they happen all the time, especially in the Peak District in the UK. :D Chock |
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This will explain all about moving aircraft on an airfield :rotfl:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3f0YbQDxp0 :D Chock |
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That would be a closing speed of 3,600 miles and hour. :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: one second * 60(seconds in a minute) * 60 minutes in an hour 3,600 MPH or one mile a second. That would be 1,800 mph for each aircraft. Take off speed typical load 747 is 207 MPH. Take off speed typical load 747 landing is 165 MPH. Closing speed of 2 747 is 372 mph. R*T=D unless they changed the distance formula on me that is 9.67 seconds take off the 1 second for the mind to wake up(I think that is high btw) That gives you 8.67 seconds to react. Assuming of course the two planes are comming in head on. |
The point being, in IFR conditions as all commercial traffic is, a near miss is very very unlikely. I don't know of a private pilot that has not had a near miss. If you understand flight rules, you can easily see why this is too. I've had 100's of hours in IFR and can't say I've had a near miss while under it. During VFR, that is a different story.
So Skybird, without any further data, I'd have to conclude that the majority of those near misses reported by private pilots. No other way to explain it. -S |
I get a feeling that most of you are not familliar with the concept of Near-Miss reporting.
A near miss is when you go "Wow, if this and that and that had only gone wrong at that time, we could have had a mess on our hand." When you walk down the stair, slip a little bit and catch yourself on the railling, that's a near-miss. To be particular, it's a personnal injury (Slip and fall) near miss. Incident, Non conformity and near miss reporting alway gives skewed statistic, depending on who's reporting it. I work in the maritime industry, so of course, the situation is a bit different at times, but I figure it's simillar. The number of near misses in a work unit is directly related to how much paperwork the supervisor feels like doing. And what the supervisor wants. Say you want the lights on the main deck improved. you fill in a req, the office says Too Expensive. Strangely, in the next month, there will be a slew of incidents and near miss on that deck, all due to "Improper or poor lighting" - Simply because someone wants to draw attention to a particular problem. In a air traffic control situation, IFR flights are statistically more likely to be involved in near-misses, since they are more closely watched by controllers. Near-misses are no good for statistical analysis. They're a qualitative tool. As for the rest, I don't know the industry's specifics well enough to say. But I'm pretty sure no one can do bupkiss about bird strike. |
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