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Jerry_Atrick

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Everything posted by Jerry_Atrick

  1. Portugal had really bad fires for the first time in living memory - and the heat killed over 238 people: https://metro.co.uk/2022/07/17/europe-on-fire-238-dead-from-heat-in-portugal-in-just-one-week-17013031/ Also, the fires killed quite a few, I understand.
  2. Same, and when I disable javascript (on Firefox 104.0.1 (64 bit), the connection to socialaustralia.com.au times out. @willedoo - am reading your posts to socialaus; appreviate them but can't respond either way... so here's a 👍 for them.
  3. I am just wondering what your alternative explanation is, backed by science?
  4. Fires have already come to Europe: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/aug/15/wildfires-europe-burn-area-equivalent-one-fifth-belgium
  5. I couldn't agree more.. however, if the coroner is trying to find the cause of a death caused by an aeroplane accident, then surely finding the cause of the aeroplane accident is going to be a critical factor in finding the cause of death, is it not? Could not agree more.. but there is one thing we all miss in this.. and that is human factors - something which wasn't taught even when I did my ATPL theory (well, nothing like it is today), which, admittedly, was a flippin long time ago. As a young an inexperienced pilot, I could not understand why people flew into terrain, barring some inforeseen emergency or weather event. However, as an older and more experienced pilot, I did find myself afflicted by pressonitis - twice - you would have thought I learned the first time.. Both times were purely self-inflicted, but the second time, there was an external influence. The first time, which has been published in Aussie Flying and Pilot (UK), was where I ended up so frustrated, I pushed on regardless.. and the only thing that saved me from driving a burning hole in the ground was that I may not get the rental back in time for the next renter - not the fact that I would have left my partner and two primary school-aged children behind. Diving home from the airfield was when I realised that.. and writing about it now still sends shivers down my spine. The second time, I took a look at the weather and even though it was well below my now VFR only minima, I thought it looks good enough.. and I pressed on. I won't go into the reason why, but it blinded rational thought.. and I knew it did, but still pressed on. The reality was, I didn't want to dissapoint some people who were very important to me - my family. Imagine how disappointed they would have been if I drilled a smoking hole in the luscious British countryside (as it was then.. looks a bit brown at the moment). I am well trained, have had all manner of safety requirements drilled into me, and am normally of fairly strong will. Sometimes, the holes in the Swiss Cheese aliign well before the flight starts. I have no idea how the airline the pilot flew for operates, nor what commercial pressure the pilot was under. But I do know that sometimes we put ourselves under pressure and mixing that with confirmation bias can lead to a deadly cocktail. The second time I found myself in a pickle over pressonitis, I ended up luckily sandwiched between two layers of strataform cloud, about 200' vertically separated. In the UK, you can normally rely on the military for vectors to a close by airfield, but the closest had been sold off, and was a housing estate.. the nearest was about 100nm away. I made a beeline out to a sparesly shipped part of the English channel, wedged between these two layers until I breached French airspace, were, amazingly, the clouds gave way to clear blue skies. I tracked the Freench side of EGLL (line between French and English airspace), until clouds thinned on the British side of the line. In the drama I forgot to ask ATC to relay to the destination airfield that I was turning back. Not only that, but do you think I had a lifejacket on and the life raft ready to be deployed? My partner waited at the destintion airfield until an hour after I was scheduled to arrive and without a word, raced to my son's departing to Europe on a school holdiay - the event I was prepared to die to miss, apparently. My partner was in tears, in the full knowledge I had perished.. But, if I had, no ATSB, AAIB, NTSB, Coronial Enquiry could have really established anything.. because they don't know what was going through my head at the time. And while you may judge, you don't know, either. These are two occasions in flying that I do not deserve to have survivied. But, as aligned as the holes in the Swiss Cheese were, they weren't perfectly aligned. Having trained in Australia, UK, US, Canada, and Germany, I can say Australia is as good, if not better than those. I am sure the pilot would normally implement her training - from the reports, there is no reason not to suggest otherwise. Also, there is no reason to suggest that had she made it to pick up her passengers, she would have conducted the flight in a way that would have resulted in their demise. We don't know what happened on that flight and we never will. That is the reality of most of pilot error accidents. I will not say it is pilot fault until I can read their minds. May she rest in peach and all those affected receive my sincerest condolences.
  6. Still haven't seen a smoke warning on the NOTAMS over here yet... One day, no doubt..
  7. Can't see France banning private jets given Dassault still make the Falcon. I didn't read the FT article as it is behind a paywall, and frankly, since it changed hands a few years ago, IMHO, its standards dropped a tad. Anyway, euronews is reporting a ban is unlikely, but a tax is. No problem with that, as the rich don't seem to pay their fair share anyway. What I didn't like about the Canadian tax was that it was set at aircraft greater than CAD $100K, but boats at CAD $250K. Why the difference? Do boats have to go through the same regulatory controls as aircraft? Doubt it. And, yes, there are a lot of commercial boats, such as fishing trawlers - make them exempt. I can't think of a single new GA plane that would be less than CAD $100K, and probably not too many upper end LSAs either.
  8. Same problem with SociaAustralia... Thought I got myself banned... still trying 😉
  9. More an economic refugee.. no degree in Aus for what I did at the time (software engineering) meant little progress. When the software company installing software at what was then GenVic saw what I could do, they offered me a job and sponsorship, and a decent wad of cash to boot Times have changed since - but it is still tougher without a relevant degree in Aus than here
  10. @lee-wave, yeah Farnborough are accommodating and even before they got the grab, i was outside controlled airspace and they asked me to change route I would accommodate providing I kept clear of cloud flying VFR. But the implementation is a dogs breakfast and easy to bust so it keeps people concentrating where they shouldn't Also apparently the law is here when controlled airspace is granted, it cannot be reclaimed unless the authority (which really is company as atc is privatised) agrees to give it up. I think Norwich Airport still has its class D despite traffic projections never materialising
  11. Le Touquet is the aviation mecca fo British gen and rec aviation pilots. The airport ops aren't quite as good as they used to be with French only on Tuesdays I think, and they have learned what British airfields charge and charge accordingly. But it is a shortish walk to town and of course the food options are magnifique. I don't recall a kart track, but I am not a beach person despite my Aussie heritage (except for fishing, of course). The town is still very pretty and I am hoping to get out there for another trip but part of a bigger one to include a Trois, and Cherbourg
  12. @lee-wave - what has been the impact to you with the "new" Farnborough class-D airspace that blankets that part of the woods? I flew out of Fairoaks a couple of weeks ago - for the first time since well before they implemented it, and it is a dogs breakfast.. Our flight was to Le Touquet (LFAT), which took a little under an hour.. Border police always at Fairoaks.. Customs at LFAT was virtually as it was pre-Brexit; Didn't have to show my passport. Ate lunch, strolled on the beach.. bakc at Fairoaks.. was reasonably relaxed but I did have to showe the Passport. Except for the cost of fuel, GA is the way to fly to Europe at the moment. Can't remember the temp.. didn't seem hot enough to worry me, though.. would guess mid-20s or thereabout.
  13. Well, I consider myself more an expat.. but one of the reasons worth dtaying. Tonight - a Bellarine Peninsula (no prizes for guessing which one). It hit 28 where I am today... Had our three days of summer already!
  14. Thankfully.. I get more moderate weather.. very little threats of wildlife trying to eat or killme, and some bludday good wine - tonight.. from the Yarra Valley!
  15. Here is a bright young fermale aviator and the youngest to fly around the world solo.. In a Shark of all things..: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zara_Rutherford I imagine the story will be on Pilot magazine's website (pilotweb.aero) sometime in the future. The article is in this month's magazine.
  16. Who would have thought leasing out prime development quality land to developers would result in them wanting to overstep the mark and push the boundaries? According to this article, DFO at Essendon airport was built closer than Australian and international guidelines to the runway: https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/dogfight-over-space-at-moorabbin-airport-as-users-fear-sidelining-of-aviation-20220418-p5ae57.html (if you don't have a subscription, open in private mode and it should be OK). Developers are there to extract every possible cent from their investment for the benefit of their shareholders and bonuses. As interviewees in the above article state, Goodman will do everything they can to squeeze out aviation - and when Moorabbin Airport is under-utilised, they will hope to present a case to shut it down in deference to re-development. Often, in these agreements, there will be some armageddon clause so that it can happen should income from the airport become unsustainably low (assuming the development company receive the income). This is what is now happening all over the UK. Google Sutton Harbour Holdings Plymouth Airport, and they let the airport fall into such disrepair that the then main airline there had to move to Exeter. If not for some resourceful private pilots, it would be a new housing estate by now. The ongoing fight has been hard fought, but the local council now are tiring of it, and are signalling their switch from supporting the airport (they ironically leased out) to sweeping it all under the carpet and allowing it through. Abermale was sold the lease to Fairoaks airport, which used to be my home airport. It has taken them a whiile, but they have now evicted all the tenants (with a twist of fate, they don't own the runway - but in their plan, the ruynway would be turned to a park). The land they do own is probably worth about £15m in its current state, but with approval for houses and a "garden" village, land alone would be worth about £120m - £150m. What really made me mad in my last trip to Aus was how over-developed Moorabbin had become. These are community assets, and provided a great place to take kids to do a bit of plane spotting, where parking was easy (no longer is despite the claim of more car parking spaces), and had picnioc benches and a dated playground. All replaced by concrete square buildings.. Unlike here, there is plenty of development space in Aus... Braeside is only next door, as is the stretch between Dingley and Noble Park...
  17. I have only caught up on this thread as these days, I spend more of my time on this forum's sister (or brother) site. I think it is important we try and seek facts, which is a casualty well before a ware starts.. It is an ongoing casualty of the world's operations on both sides of the east-west divide. Until this war, TBH, I knew (and really still know) little of Ukraine and my only relationship with Russia was a Russian girl I dated when I was about 18.. who, by the way was really nice and had no outwardly megalomaniac tendencies. 😉 Neither the East or West have perfect, blemish free records. The west has perpetrated some nasty wars, too, and are indefensible. However, that does not detract from, nor justify the indefensibility of this war, which I see everyone seems to agree. @kgwilson has addressed the 13,000 innocent lives claim, and, yes, 3,500 (or thereabouts) innocent lives is that many too much. But how many are going to be killed over a very short period of time in the Ukraine. And how where the civilians killed by the Ukraine in the fight with the separatists? Were they sad collateral damage to attacking military/separatists, or where they killed by intentionally shelling civilian areas and infrastructure, such as hospitals, schools, etc (of course, it may all be propaganda and fake news... but). While 3,500 civilians have been killed in 12-ish years (so, < 300/year), how long will it take Russia to kill the same innocents in Ukraine, if they haven't already? Hmm. .Chechnya comes to mind to (amazingly, Chechnya is now pro-Russian).. I hadn't heard of the Maidan Revolution (also known as the Revolution of Dignity) until today. Yes, it was an illegal overthrow of a government, but when governments in the past have materially governed against the will of the people, there often have been revolutions. There were, in the end negotiations between the opposition and the government, after which the government was removed (or fled). That does not make today's Ukrainian government illegitimate - it it were and we were to extend that logic, virtually every European government, including Russia's, would be illegitimate.. and a good few others. In fact, you could argue that because of the wanton violent control the Kremlin exerts over its political opponents, it, today, is not a legitimate government. Russia was simply p155ed off that they were not going to get as much of the proceeds of the Ukrainian bounty as Europe want, and a Kleptocracy cannot have that. Russia funded a separatist movement, after which the fighting resulted int he Misk accords, of which are criticised for their complexity and fragility - brought about by the desire to appease the Russians to stop the fighting rather than confront them. By the way, I clicked on the bitchute link and got this: [edit] Going slightly off topic, I would commend a book for you to read (as I have on socialaustralia.com.au) called Kleptopia, by Tom Burgis. Quite inttruiging about the dirty money that was made in the East's transition to "liberal market economies" is laundered clean in the west... Khodorkovsky, in the video above, I believe, gets a few mentions (although it may be a different Khodorkovsky.. I am sure it isn't).
  18. @Garfly - apols, squire. Didn't mean to implicate your post - as the thread had moved on to vortex /wake turbulence, picked yours text to bring context to my post.. I should have been clearer... JA
  19. I have absolutely no photos of my flying in Aus.. and only a handful of those flying in the UK.. Mainly my son as a (sometimes bored) passenger.
  20. Hah! If Heathrow getting a 3rd is anything to go by, it's at least 2 generations away... And it was approved 2 years ago! Who on earth would want to save Gladstone Park? (Only joking). Does Tulla need another runway.. Outside peak hour runs to Sydney, it has (or had) a steady, but not congested stream of traffic... and that was both before and after Avalon.
  21. Since I almost always wear denim and cotton, that is about it. Avoid polymers like the plague.. Leather runners or shoes with a rubber sole. Though, once in a hurry for a flight lesson as the light was fading and they airfield didn't have runway lights, I did the lesson in my motorcycle trousers and boots (jacket was in the back).. Never again!
  22. True-ish.. In straight and level flight, thrust = drag at that angle of attack. At normal angles of attack, when you raise the nose, you will have an increase angle of attack and thanks to inertia, the airspeed will hold for a bit. With the increase angle of attach and the same air mollecules going past, you will enter a climb. At that angle of attack (assuming a small increase), you may have excess thrust and be able to maintain the climb, although likely, to maintain the climb if pulling back the elevator at cruise, you will have to up the throttle or reduce the AoA slightly. Of course, you can be straight and level with a nose high attitude and the throttle rammed to the firewall.. I wouldn't pull back the control column at this stage, and I have no more thrust to apply - so to climb, counterintuitively, I have to ease up on the control column slightly and reduce the AoA. Of course, I am talking fixed pitch props.. In the PPL syllabus (and I am assuming the RAA), you are taught when entering a climb or descent, power, attitude, trim.. and when levelling off, attitude, power trim I try and follow it, but don't always.. but invariably the change in AoA of lower powered a/c means at some stage you have to adjust the power. But power is the rate of ascent/descent control, and elevator is the airspeed control (within normal parameters of flight in piston engine aircraft, anyway). Moral of the story - don't bleedin' well use the elevator for the climb or the descent - use the power first.. then get your airspeed with the elevator, then trim.. or at least that's how I have been taught.. (of course, minor deviations in height/altitude - yeah go for the elevator). Re wake/vortex turbulence - the aircraft in front doesn't have to be too much bigger. Unfortunately, the PPL theory alludes to them aircraft having to be a lot bigger. I believe I suffered a wake turbulence problem on very late finals into Moorabbin while I was a student - and in a PA28 from memory (could have been a C150/152). I was bang on my speed (for once!) and there was a twin in front of me. No idea what type; bigger than an Navajo I think, but smaller than a king air (maybe a small one??). Well, I must have flown under its flight path because out of no where, my left wing decided it couldn't be bothered flying anymore and scared the living poop out of a solo-ing student. I was landing from the north ont rwy 18L, so coming on over the park (Kingswood park??) on a mild day with very light if any wind. So thermals or shear should not have been a problem. Scared the living carp pout of me, tbut thankfully, I read a book called "All About Stalls and Spins" by Everett Gentry (a book I recommend) and forgot turning the control column and used rudder and judicious amounts of power.. I am sure it was wake turbulence, but thankfully not intense enough to spin me into the ground like this - which was in front of an AN2.: [Edit] BTW, I don't blame the pilot for using aileron.. if you have used up all your options.. try something else (no matter how unlikely it is to get you out of the situation.. The state of mind at the time is such that what have you got to lose.
  23. Amazing what a passenger carrying endorsement (OK.. a GA licence) will lead people to do... I remember after I got my PPL at Moorabbin, I bundled two light friends (both about 62kg) into the PA28 and the difference in handling was noticeable..
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