FN FAL
Freight Dawgs Rule
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2003
- Posts
- 8,573
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avbug said:When I was in Kansas, a B-1 route cut through our area. I used to joke about oging to whiteman and putting bumperstickers on the nose of the B-1's that said, "If you can read this, you're too **CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED****CENSORED** close." (Never did, of course).
GravityHater said:I always worry when these things happen if they will eventually convert all MOAs Alert areas etc to R-airspace. If you were to see a chart of how much a/s the military has already in use, it may boggle your mind from a simple 'national freedom to move about' standpoint.
EagleRJ said:SPS is a good place to get killed when the Wing is training. Zoomies in the pattern, trainees in the tower, and hot dogs arriving and departing the area. I've had several close calls in the area, usually with Talons. When you have a two-ship or a four-ship, you have just one pilot looking for traffic, and three pilots just trying to stay in formation. Those T-38s were hard enough to spot when they were white- whoever decided to have them painted camo grey was an idiot.
I'm surprised this sort of thing doesn't happen more often!
TonyC said:I doubt, given the altitude of 5,000', that there was any use of military airspace involved. My guess - - pure speculation based solely on my own experience in the Tweet - - is this was a VFR leg of a cross country, the route was chosen by the student based upon landmarks selected between the departure and destination airports to rpovide an opportunity to practice chart reading and dead reckoning skills. Measure distance and course from point 1 to point 2, set a heading corrected for winds, set a groundspeed, hack the clock, check the groundspeed, adjust the heading, adjust the speed, check the timing, adjust the groundspeed, and so on. When you reach the timing you should be at point 2, hack the clock, turn to point 3, adjust the groundspeed, and so on. No military route, just the good ole U.S. of A. The hardest part of teaching this part of the syllabus was getting the student to get his eyes off the chart and clock, and into the sky.
See and avoid - - there is NO substitute.
Fury220 said:It was a local training sortie -- not a cross country.
Fury220 said:And to the GA pilots in here: I know that a transponder/radio aren't required, but, if you have the use of those devices, please use them to their max extent. I can't tell you much about the accident (USAF controlls the info until the safety board finishes up), but maybe this would have helped a little bit.
Rook said:Grew up at SPS. Sorry about the crop-duster pilot. See and avoid of course but was he flying in a MOA? Or along a known Training route?
Rook
TonyC said:I didn't look up the location of the crash before. Now I see it was about 40 NM NNW of Sheppard, about halfway between Sheppard and Altus. I'm not familiar with the area (ask me about Enid), but I'm guessing there was a MOA in the neighborhood, and perhaps they were enroute to or from the areas?
RJP said:Did the article say what altitude they were at?
RJP said:5000' seems a bit low for the practice area but I can't recall any details from UPT.