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glasspilot said:The point is I think putting a cheap xponder in all aircraft and especially gliders, with their low profile, would be well worth it. Well all complain about the reactionary style of the FAA. They never seem to make a rule unless someone or a lot of people die first. Well, the xponder issue just makes sense to me.
I don't mean to sound patronizing, but I wonder how much the sailplane pilot involved in last week's incident would be willing to pay for a transponder and battery pack now?MJG said:...Nothing the FAA mandates ends up being cheap. So my club with it's four gliders would have to increase our yearly dues by who knows how much just to pay for such an additional requirement. We already struggle to attract and retain members as our dues are already $500/year just for club membership, this doesn't include any tow fees...
Each of us has differing views on what is expensive or not. To one of us an additional $1000.00 transponder is not going to break the bank, but to someone else, like tony says above, that may be a significant cost to the point of forcing that person to sell their glider and get out of the sport all together.
Pilots depending on TCAS to see and avoid instead of keeping their eyes outside is a recipe for disaster. I recommend you look outside more and quit relying on your "glass". This is a concept taught to private pilots pre-solo. I would hope that you can still handle pre-solo type expectations.glasspilot said:Hey Avbug;
1st: I'm not your "mate".
2nd: I'm telling you what is. I know everyone would like to believe professional pilots are constantly looking outside. But believe me that is NOT the case. In all my years of flying I've never met a pilot that as spent a great deal of time looking out the window unless the TCAS is going off or ATC says there's traffic. I've been an FO and a CA. I've commuted for over 7 years. In all of that time none of my "pilots in the other seat" or even the "major airline pilots" of the airplane I was jumpseating on have done it either. Below a few thousand feed...yes, we look outside a great deal more. Above a few thousand feet...it's pretty much instrumentation. Right or wrong it's a fact. I've been in flight in the jumpseat at night and seen the CA turn on the dome light so he could read the newspaper and eat his diner. I don't mean to drone on but it is just a fact of life; it is the extremely rare jet pilot that looks outside on his own for traffic when flying. TCAS has done a wonderful job of preventing midairs but it has also made pilots more reliant on electronic equipment to avoid those same midair collisions
I really do respect glider pilots and that is sort of the reason I even made it to this thread, but I'm also telling you the truth from an airline/cargo/corporate point of view. Airplanes without transponders operating where other airline/cargo/corporate aircraft operate is a recipe for problems.
I can't think of a reason a transponder couldn't be installed in any airplane. With today's electronics capabilities they could make a hand held or a very cheap panel mount that would fix the problem. I truly think America has enough airspace for everyone to get what they want out of aviation.
Fly safe.