To claim that you don't believe in odds, and won't use technology to put odds in your, or your passengers favor is nonsense.
I have never claimed that I do not use the technology available to me. I dont' rely on it to the exclusion of those good old fashioned "old school" basic airmanship ways, however. Anyone who does is either dead, soon to be, or an idiot (soon to be dead). That's playing odds. I don't do that.
I'm no mathmatician. I do know that every time you fly, you'll either land safely, or you won't. Odds fifty fifty, if you believe in odds. Save yourself the time. Half-way there, flip a coin. If it comes up against your favor, pull the power to idle, hold a rudder full over, and wait. You know the odds on that, right?
Playing odds in the cockpit? Adjectives such as insane, stupid, nutzyroxo...are quite inadequate. Criminal gets a lot closer.
A synthetic 3D topography display in IMC conditions is like the ability to look down the barrel of that pistol, and actually see that one bullet in place. If you still want to pull the trigger, then it's up to you. But the odds have drastically changed.
But of course, I would never play Russian Roulette. I'd always know that I could see the bullet ahead of time. That's just my mentality.
Who cares if you see the bullet? Not getting hit with the bullet is the important part. Not looking down the barrel is a good start. One who does that has already exceeded all semblence of good sense. One who looks down that barrel is either suicidal, or merely a bloody idiot.
If you feel that flying IMC is the same as playing Russian roulette, then perhaps you need to stay clear of clouds for a while. It's not looking good for you. If you're down in the terrain, "looking down the barrel," playing the sick game or whatever it is to which you allude, adding gadgetry to stupidity only makes it high tech stupidity, does it not? (it does)
And then I read the next reply. "They hit a mountain, end of story". Well that's nonsense too! This whole disccusion is getting much to lame for my taste.
You introduced the event, but the summation that they hit the mountain pretty much covers it. They acted stupidly, briefed poorly, used incompatible and incorrect charts, failed to fly proceedures, made up their own, and died. But I digress...it was your example to support your point. Just how much technology is necessary to save a pilot from herself (in the KJAC case) when even the most basic policies and proceedures are not used? And hasn't she and her crew suffered enough, already? (Certainly can't get any more dead...)
As that summation was "much to [sic] lame" for you, then by all means address the specifics and we'll contemplate them in order to better come to the understanding of how to blame others for our own stupidty, and the wisdom in exchanging common sense, airmanship, and judgement for "non-essential toys" and gadgetry. In addressing that issue, be sure to put more words in my mouth as I'm running short tonight. Perhaps a little more about my lack of experience in these systems, or perhaps my abject refusal to use them in favor of "old school" technology. Or playing the odds. Your ball.
Actually, the conditions weren't known...the cockpit voice recorder picked out that they only listened to "remarks" section of the ATIS, not the "weather" section.
The crew flew into the airport in those conditions, could look up into the sky and see it obscured, and certainly encountered those conditions during their VFR departure. Reported conditions were several hundred feet lower at the base than the crew was seen to be. Regardless of known conditions, the crew knew about the departure proceedure, and should have followed it. At least discussed it. Done something. Anything. The conditions were known...we don't know if the crew called any numbers to get information or looked it up such as with a cell phone or PDA...but the conditions were known. If the crew failed to know the conditions when that information was so readily available, then chalk it up to one more failure.
Or perhaps we can find a way to blame that on ATC too...Erlanger?
Risk management is a better term, and we all have to manage our risk.
I don't believe in risk management. I hate the term. The very term suggests accepting risk, and accepting risk is never appropriate. Hate it. Despise it. Fear it. Respect it. But don't live with it. A potential exists as a hazard until that hazard is put in play, and then it becomes risk. Risk is, because pilots make it so. To create a working hazard, to make a threat a true potential in real time and then to discuss managing it, belies the very effort of handling the risk; to create it, one has undermined the entire purpose of managing it. Much like baking river rocks in a hot oven then trying to juggle them to keep from getting burned.
Risk elimination means seeking out ways to avoid hazards becoming risks, and when hazards to become risks, eliminating them by either finding ways to mitagate the risk and take the element of risk away from the situation, or make it go away completely. People shooting at destination A is a hazard. Taking off with the intent of flying to destination A is a risk. Chaning destination to B where no shooting exists makes the risk go away; the risk has been eliminated. So does arriving before or after the shooting. So does neutralizing destination A before arrival. And so does perhaps a dozen other possibilities.
Point is, see a risk, address a risk. Don't manage it, fix it. This isn't an absolute, one time effort. It's a state of mind, like looking for traffic in flight. One doesn't merely glance outside once and be done with it. One assumes that there forever exists traffic one doesn't see, and then looks for it as though one's life depends upon it...because of course, it does. Likewise, risk elimination exists as a basic component of one's character in every moment of every flight. Most of us do it without thinking about it. Yet whine to high heaven when someone suggests it's truly possible. Of course it's possible. You've spent your life engaging in risk elimination, and if you stop for a moment and backtrack the miriad millions of decisions you've made over the years, you know had you not made these decisions or been exceptionally lucky, you'd have been dead a long time ago.
Some say semantics; tomato, potato (potatoe for D. Quayle), management, elimination. I disagree. Find risk and eliminate it. Don't accept it, don't manage it, don't coddle it. Make it go away. Make the bad man stop. Make it be quiet. Open a door and let it out. Go the other way. By far the biggest hazard inflight is the pilot. For most of us, eliminating the pilot isn't practicable, but eliminating the stupid pilot tricks of which we are all at times guilty, certainly is possible. This is the whole essence of risk elimination, and yessiree, it most certainly is possible.