"See and Avoid" is widely recognized as a method for avoiding collision. This accident shows that approach has limits.
The term "See and Avoid" is part of Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Regulation 14 CFR Part 91.113 (b), calling for pilots to actively search for potentially conflicting traffic. John and Todd discuss a 2014 accident where two planes crashed because they were not able to see one another in time.
The accident involved a Cessna 172 and a Searey homebuilt participating in a Experimental Aircraft Association Young Eagles program. The Cessna was overtaking the Searey as it descended and the two collided. Two people in the Searey were able to land. The Cessna crashed and the passenger and student onboard died.
The NTSB probable cause cited failure to “see and avoid.” The Flight Safety Detectives explore the importance and limitations of relying on being able to see everything from the cockpit. They discuss how better preplanning by the two pilots involved could have avoided the collision.
Related documents at the Flight Safety Detectives website:
Don’t miss what’s to come from the Flight Safety Detectives - subscribe to the Flight Safety Detectives YouTube channel, listen at your favorite podcast service and visit the Flight Safety Detectives website.
You Asked, Flight Safety Detectives Answer
A Well-Maintained Airplane Is a Safe Airplane
A Free-Ranging Conversation with Expert Pilot Brian Schiff
Passenger Safety and COVID-19
Storing Airplanes Safely During COVID-19
COVID-19 Requires a New Approach to Air Safety
Accident Investigations: Tearing Down Engines
Who’s Investigating?
Corona Virus Will Reshape the Aviation Industry
Are Active Winglets the Next Game Changer for Aviation?
Talking Drones with Drone Queen Loretta Alkalay
Inspector General Report Signals Dangerous Air Safety Complacency
NTSB Investigation of the Kobe Bryant Sikorsky Helicopter Crash
Fly the Way You Train, Train the Way You Fly
Lion Air Accident Report Analysis
The (Real) Facts of the Indonesian Report
Asking the Hard Questions at Boeing and Looking at Recent General Aviation Crashes
Patience! Tips for Safe Air Travel this Holiday Season
Aviation Safety Demands More than Soundbites and Other Takeaways from Boeing on Capitol Hill
Lost Information, Unaddressed Issues and More Failures of the NTSC Final Lion Air Flight 610 Report
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Next Trip - An Aviation and Travel Podcast
Layovers - Air Travel podcast
Opposing Bases: Air Traffic Talk
Fighter Pilot Podcast
Pilot’s Discretion from Sporty’s