FLYING LESSONS for January 9, 2025

Topics this week include: > Two collisions, two days apart. > Facts and surprises. > Fuel technique

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FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances.  In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. So apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.  Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence.  You are pilot in command and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.     

FLYING LESSONS is an independent product of MASTERY FLIGHT TRAINING, INC.

From NTSB preliminary reports:

9 December 2024 Pahokee, Florida

What are the facts as reported so far that fit the mold of what you might expect in a midair collision?

  • Contact occurred in the traffic pattern on final approach within 400 feet of the ground (where most collisions occur, according to AOPA’s Air Safety Institute).
  • Dual instructional flight (students may be fixated on learning the task to the detriment of looking outside the airplane; instructor may be fixated on teaching and monitoring the student).
  • High wing vs. low wing airplane.
  • Nontowered airport.
  • Two-way radio communication not effective.
  • Nonstandard operation (“short approach”).
  • Discrepancy between the facts as reported by one pilot and the other.

What about this preliminary report might be surprising?

  • All five persons aboard the two airplanes escaped uninjured.
  • Both airplanes were landed under control despite each receiving “substantial” damage.
  • Although this was the collision of a high wing vs. a low wing airplane, the high wing airplane was above the low wing and reportedly descended into the collision. In other words, as this event is reported the “blind spot” created by wing location did not exist on the collision path.

11 December 2024 Pearland, Texas:

What are the facts as reported so far that fit the mold of what you might expect in a runway collision?

  • Nontowered airport.
  • Two-way radio communication not effective.
  • Nonstandard operation (electrical failure, no-flap landing, following closely [1/4 to ½ mile] behind another airplane in the pattern).
  • Discrepancy between the facts as reported by pilots and witnesses.

What about this preliminary report might be surprising?

  • Collision was not an airplane taxiing onto an active runway, it was one airplane landing closely behind another.
  • Both pilots were aware of the other airplane in close proximity. The Grumman pilot had the Cessna in sight, and the 182 pilot acknowledged knowing the AA5 was close behind on the basis of the witness’ radio advisory.

Midair and on-runway collisions often follow predictable patterns, but they also sometimes turn out differently than you’d think. For example, many more midairs result in successful landings than most pilots would guess. This suggests putting some thought into how to safely land an airplane after an inflight collision, if your attempts at collision avoidance are unsuccessful. 

Both mishaps are a reminder that radio calls or lack of radio calls does not mean there is no chance of a collision. It challenges notions that having the other airplane in sight or hearing the report from (or about) another is itself enough to avoid a collision. It raises questions about reliance on ADS-B—which most likely all four airplanes had on board—when collision avoidance still depends primarily on actively scanning for other airplanes to see and avoid them, and flying predictably in standard patterns to give other pilots the best chance of seeing, and avoiding, you.

Readers, what LESSONS do you draw from these preliminary reports that might not apply directly to these accidents, but help us all avoid collisions on the runway and in flight?

Questions? Comments? Supportable opinions? Let us know at [email protected]

Debrief

Readers write about previous LESSONS

Readers responded to last week’s Debrief, especially my comments about fuel management mishaps. A reader who wishes to remain anonymous wrote the week previously but the comment synchs well with something I said last week. The reader writes:

First, I commend you for (1) accepting pilot-in-command responsibility (“my preflight, my call”) even while still a student pilot, and (2) for risk management related to fuel starvation, something the record suggests might not get the thought it deserves even from experienced pilots. 

Here’s what I wrote last week:

Is it possible your CFIs were less concerned about the line guys’ workload and more about teaching you fuel management skills? I agree that there are few times when you want to take off with less than full tanks (high density altitudes, when payload requires reduced fuel weight, to improve single-engine performance in piston twins), always taking off with full fuel and never having to depend on your fuel management skills may be a reason for the number of fuel starvation and fuel exhaustion mishaps. Insisting on full tanks for every flight is not wrong, at least until you have an operational need to reduce the fuel load. Just be sure you gain experience with enroute fuel monitoring and management to develop fuel judgment for the times full fuel isn’t an option or is not optimal, and get practice in fuel decision-making. Thanks, anonymous reader.  

Reader Ed Stack relates one technique:

That’s a nice feature of GPS-era avionics. It’s a good reminder for persons who don’t have a technique, and for pilots new to the concept. Thanks, Ed. 

Reader and aviation safety author Richard Benson adds:

I do remember you sending that me to before, and it’s a great example of what we’re talking about. You encapsulate the problem with this statement:

Thank you, Richard, for sharing your experience and the LESSONS you learned in Air Facts, and for reminding me to include it here as well.

Wrapping us the fuel discussion for this week (and more), Jeff Wofford, a growing force in the world of business aviation and adoption of Safety Management Systems (SMS) by small flight departments, writes:

Thanks for continuing to pass along what you’ve learned, Jeff.


Several readers commented about a recent webinar I presented for the Experimental Aircraft Association titled “IFR Departures: From Planning to the Enroute Environment.” Reader Rick Stegehuis writes:

Reader/ instructor John “Grumpy” Miller adds:

More to say? Let us learn from you, at [email protected]

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Disclaimer

FLYING LESSONS uses recent mishap reports to consider what might have contributed to accidents, so you can make better decisions if you face similar circumstances. In most cases design characteristics of a specific airplane have little direct bearing on the possible causes of aircraft accidents—but knowing how your airplane’s systems respond can make the difference in your success as the scenario unfolds. Apply these FLYING LESSONS to the specific airplane you fly.

Verify all technical information before applying it to your aircraft or operation, with manufacturers’ data and recommendations taking precedence. You are pilot in command, and are ultimately responsible for the decisions you make.