JJet44,
I'm not saying that the UCA accident was wx caused. It is a contributing factor in situational awareness. I don't discredit AirNet for anything. If you read my entire post, you can see I was a Starchecker for almost 2 years including the Learjet. Just curious, do you fly there, or have you flown there before? If so, you may know who I am. Anyways, if you hit the marker at 250kts in the Lear as they usually do, you will be at idle thrust most of the way, if not the entire way down to slow the aircraft. On clear days, that is the way the aircraft is flown. If it's low IMC, then I personally took it in a little slower and was "stabalized."
I am in no way afraid to fly low IMC as you hinted to in your post. I've done my share of 800RVR departures in a Caravan (Part 91 legs, no SIC) and approaches to minimums in blowing snow at night anywhere East of the Mississippi. I was a floater in the BE58, PA31, C208 and the jet, which if you ask any Starchecker, is probably the most challenging flying any AirNet pilot does, especially on the props by yourself. After flying at AirNet, the regionals is a vacation. Everything is automated and you lose your stick flying skills very fast. I just did my one year recurrent at my regional and chased the hand flown single engine ILS all the way down. I give props to ALL Starcheckers, cause I know they can fly circles around any regional pilot anyday. If I had to do a "fly off" with Guillotine007, I know he'd fly circles around me, once he made it past the taxi stage of course

(Inside AirNet joke)
Keep up the good work Starcheckers. It's always fun to hear you guys on the radios. Enjoy your AirNet days, I miss them. It is the best flying you will ever do. Anyone who discredits your flying capabilities has probably never flown night freight and is used to getting all their flight plans handed to them with their coffee. Stay warm out there this winter and be sure to triple check the BE58 doors before departure. It can be a cold miserable night when your flying BDL to Farmington New York with a pax door popped open in IMC and freezing temps. I'll never forget that night. Door popped open 3 of 6 legs. It was nice of MX to show me the next morning the little trick with that specific aircraft. Aww, the life of a floater.