1 / 29

Staying Alive or the Limitations of the See and Avoid Principle

Staying Alive or the Limitations of the See and Avoid Principle. CAA Safety Investigation Unit. Background. Why I am presenting today The USA perspective FAA AC90-48C The Australian perspective BASI/ATSB Research Report Trends in New Zealand July/August Vector 2009. NZ Reported Near Misses.

demi
Télécharger la présentation

Staying Alive or the Limitations of the See and Avoid Principle

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Staying Alive or the Limitations of the See and Avoid Principle CAA Safety Investigation Unit

  2. Background • Why I am presenting today • The USA perspective FAA AC90-48C • The Australian perspective BASI/ATSB Research Report • Trends in New Zealand July/August Vector 2009

  3. NZ Reported Near Misses

  4. NZ Hot Spots • Hamilton 19 • Tauranga 12 • Palmerston North 11 • Ardmore 10 • Christchurch 9 • Paraparaumu 8 • Queenstown 8

  5. Mid Air AccidentZK-MBD and ZK-MBL • 9 February 2006 • ZK-MBL Climbing 75kt 750ft/min • ZK-MBD Descending 75kt 600ft/min • “The accident occurred due to the pilots not being able to sight each other as a result of the aircraft’s inherent blind spots and position of the sun”

  6. SSR RadarPlot

  7. Accident Site

  8. ZK-MBD Main Wreckage

  9. ZK-MBL Main Wreckage

  10. Aircraft Blind Spots

  11. Mid Air AccidentZK-ETY and ZK-HGV • 17 February 2008 Paraparaumu • ZK-HGV PPL(H) issue flight test A Cat Examiner 2,674 hours • ZK-ETY Student pilot 25 hours • TAIC Summary Page • TAIC Safety Recommendation 5.1.2

  12. ZK-ETY Main Wreckage

  13. ZK-ETY Tail Section

  14. ZK-ETY Roof Damage

  15. ZK-ETYEngine

  16. ZK- HGV Placemakers Roof

  17. ZK-HGV Main Wreckage

  18. What the CAA Rule Says • 91.229 Right-of-way rules (a) Right-of-Way: A pilot of an aircraft – (1) must, when weather conditions permit, regardless of whether the flight is performed under IFR or under VFR, maintain a visual lookout so as to see and avoid other aircraft; and

  19. What the Advisory Circulars Say • AC61-3 AC61-5 • Lookout: • Demonstrate an adequate lookout (both on the ground and in the air). • Maintain an adequate level of situational awareness by ensuring compliance with the minimum VMC requirements for VFR flight and building a mental picture of the relative position of traffic, which may potentially affect the flight.

  20. What the Flight Test Guides Advise for RPL/PPL/CPL • Assessment Criteria Task: Lookout (critical task) Objective: To determine that the candidate; • Maintains a good lookout both on the ground and in the air for collision avoidance and separation from other aircraft (critical element). • remains in VMC to comply with Visual Flight Rules (critical element). • Maintains situational awareness (critical element)

  21. “Lookout” Considerations • FAA AC 90-48C gives eight key points: • Constantly alert within field of vision • Spotting threats • Proper scanning technique • Short regularly spaced eye movements • Peripheral vision most useful • Visual search at night/peripheral • Brightness and contrast • Moving head to search around obstructions

  22. Scan Technique

  23. Scan Technique

  24. “To See” Considerations • Workload • Glass cockpits • Diffusion of responsibility • Cockpit Visibility • Obstructions • Glare • Blind Spots • Visual field narrowing • Threshold for Acuity • Accommodation • Empty field myopia • Alerted V Unalerted • Target characteristics • Lights

  25. “And Avoid” Considerations • It should not be assumed that successful action is guaranteed once threat sighted • Time required to recognise threat and take evasive action • Evasive manoeuvre may increase collision risk

  26. Time to React

  27. The Instructor’s/Flight Examiner’s Perspective • Devote maximum time to collision avoidance • Set an example • Safety pilot • “During any flight test, direct attention to the applicant’s vigilance of other air traffic and an adequate clearance of the area before performing any flight manoeuvre”

  28. Conclusion • New Zealand trends • Instructing/assessment of lookout, see, and avoid • Self preservation of instructors and flight examiners • Tools for your toolbox (handouts)

More Related