I Would Never Do That!
By Thomas P. Turner, ATP, CFII, MEI | June 2016
Authors note: All mishap reports mentioned here are courtesy of the www.ntsb.gov website.
A student pilot in a Cessna Skylane takes off for a 20-mile hop to another airport
to take his Private Pilot Practical Test (checkride). There's a 900-foot ceiling
and visibility is limited. A quarter mile from takeoff he loses control, crashes
and burns.
A 17,000-hour ATP flying a Beechcraft A36 Bonanza lands with about eight gallons
of fuel remaining. After dropping his passengers, he asks for "15 gallons a side"
to be added, and the FBO correctly fills his order. With a total of under 40 gallons
of fuel on board the ATP then launches on a three-hour trip back home--in an airplane
that burns about 23 gallons per hour in climb and 17 gallons per hour in high-speed
cruise. The airplane runs out of gas and crashes, killing the pilot.
Another Bonanza pilot nears his planned destination, where surface winds have increased
far above what was forecast--now at 30 gusting to 40 knots, almost directly across
the runway. The pilot loses directional control during landing and substantially
damages the aircraft, although luckily he was not hurt.
Near the end of a long cross-country trip while descending visually after dark,
a commercial pilot of a third Bonanza (I track Beech crashes closely, which is why
so many of my examples involve this type) flies into a hillside less than 10 miles
from his destination.
Reading these examples of real crash reports, some pilots might have the same reaction:
"I would never do that!" It's easy for me to dismiss these as "stupid pilot tricks,"
in my opinion something no competent pilot would probably do. Yet with the exception
of the student pilot in the Skylane, all the pilots had at one time demonstrated
their ability to the FAA's satisfaction. The student pilot, by virtue of being endorsed
to take his Practical Test that day, met the FAA standard at least in the opinion
of his flight instructor. Yet, they all crashed. And it's pretty certain they each
believed they could safely complete the accident flight.
Instead of dismissing these events (and the many, many others like them) as what
I refer to as "stupid pilot tricks" or something you would probably never do, think
of them as something you might accidentally do under the right (or wrong) circumstances.
These types of crashes aren't really stupid; they are in my opinion evidence of
two common pilot issues: failure to plan, and failure to monitor.
Failure to Plan
In my opinion, three of the examples show a clear deficiency in preflight planning.
The student Skylane pilot knew the weather conditions existed, but had been told
(by the pilot examiner he was flying to meet) that the weather was expected to improve.
The 17,000-hour ATP obviously did not take on enough fuel for the trip he was about
to make. The last Bonanza pilot, descending in hilly terrain after dark, had not
planned a terrain-avoiding route for his descent.
The student pilot was under self-imposed pressure to take his checkride because
the Skylane had to go in for annual inspection in two days. The ATP told the FBO
where he fueled he was "in a hurry" to get home, which may have negatively affected
his flight planning. The last Bonanza pilot who descended into terrain was at the
end of a six-hour transcontinental trip that was in itself the contraction of a
two-day flight from Europe, and had been cruising at 12,500 feet without supplemental
oxygen before beginning his descent. All four pilots exhibited the "go" mentality
common to most pilots.
Failure to Monitor
All four pilots failed to monitor indications during their flight, and to alter
the flight as necessary to suit the actual conditions. The student pilot should
have seen before he ever took off that the expected improvement in ceiling and visibility
had not yet occurred. The ATP did not continually update his fuel status while en
route, computing expected fuel remaining at destination and comparing fuel gauge
and other inflight indications to expectations. The second Bonanza pilot, who lost
control trying to land in a 30 to 40 knot crosswind, had not updated his preflight
weather briefing en route or listened to the AWOS at his destination. The Controlled
Flight into Terrain pilot lost track of his precise position and his height in relation
to obstacles beneath him, likely in part due to fatigue and the effects of hypoxia.
Although flight planning is emphasized in initial pilot training, it is not stressed
in Flight Reviews and (in my experience with pilots) it is reduced to minimal, rule-of-thumb
guesswork in day-to-day operations. Inflight monitoring is almost never taught in
flight instruction, except perhaps in the minimal dual cross-country experience
required by the FAA. The incredible capability of modern navigation and online
flight plan filing make it more likely pilots will not study performance and aeronautical
charts before a flight or crosscheck that planning against real conditions while
en route, in my opinion, especially when distracted or stressed.
Pilots almost never intentionally attempt visual flight in instrument conditions,
run out of gas, roll an airplane into a ball trying to exceed their crosswind capability
or that of the aircraft, or fly the airplane under control into an obstacle. And
in my opinion the resulting accident can be boiled down to failure to plan
and failure
to monitor, influenced by (usually self-imposed) stress. You can usually avoid
performing "stupid pilot tricks" by approaching every flight with the same level
of planning you demonstrated on your very first pilot certificate checkride, and
then cross-checking that planning against the real world once you're in the air.
Commit to planning and monitoring, and you will increase your chances of “never
doing that”.
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Holder of an ATP certificate with instructor, CFII and MEI ratings and a Masters
Degree in Aviation Safety, 2010 National FAA Safety Team Representative of the Year,
2015 Inductee into the NAFI Hall of Fame and 2008 FAA Central Region CFI of the
Year, three-time Master CFI Thomas P. Turner has been Lead Instructor for Bonanza
pilot training program at the Beechcraft factory; production test pilot for engine
modifications; aviation insurance underwriter; corporate pilot and safety expert;
Captain in the United States Air Force; and contract course developer for Embry-Riddle
Aeronautical University. He now directs the education and safety arm of a 9000-member
pilots’ organization. With over 4000 hours logged, including more than 2500 as an
instructor, Tom writes, lectures and instructs extensively from his home at THE
AIR CAPITAL--Wichita, Kansas. Subscribe to Tom’s free FLYING LESSONS Weekly e-newsletter
at http://mastery-flight-training.com/
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