| Mar 10: Getting Back On The Horse |
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| Close Calls by Anthony Nalli | |
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Our pilot was a student pilot who experienced
his close call during a flight lesson. The occurrence was enough to have him
seriously consider the acquisition of a portable collision avoidance device
immediately… the very next day, in fact, with little time to spare before his
next flight!
Our pilot was a student pilot who experienced
his close call during a flight lesson. The occurrence was enough to have him
seriously consider the acquisition of a portable collision avoidance device
immediately… the very next day, in fact, with little time to spare before his
next flight!
Our pilot (and instructor) was practicing
forced approaches in the southeast portion of a practice area near Calgary,
Alberta. In the same practice area was another club plane doing their work in
the northeast portion. After sharing the same general area for a little while,
the other aircraft announced he was headed back to their base airport at an
altitude of 5500 feet proceeding just west of the highway commonly used to
guide them back.
Our pilot immediately responded that they too
were heading back from east of the highway with plans to intercept it and
follow it back. There was no reply but our pilot and instructor assumed their
message was heard and just that there wasn’t a response because there was no
conflict.
Upon reaching the highway a few minutes later
and turning south, our pilot suddenly spotted the other aircraft at his two
o’clock position “no more than a few hundred yards away!” Our pilot
instinctively took evasive action to avoid what he believed would be a
collision.
With both aircraft not yet in controlled
airspace, our pilot’s instructor called out to the other plane on the en route
frequency but there was no response. Despite the apparent close call, both aircraft
carried on back to the airport and arrived safely.
A short while later on the ground the details
of the occurrence began to present themselves. Evidently, the other aircraft
had already switched from the en route frequency to the outer tower control
frequency. Given their position at the time, this was earlier than would be usual
practice. They were also directed by ATC to steer left directly to the runway.
The instructor of the other aircraft noted that they did see our pilot’s plane,
but only after he had taken his evasive action.
Says our pilot “I don't know yet how blame
should be apportioned. If ATC had my colleague on radar, he should have had us
too, as we were at the same altitude. While we were both in uncontrolled
airspace, apparently ATC directed them into our flight path.”
He continues “At this point I am shaken, and
considering giving up my childhood dream of flight. Perhaps there will be some
follow up debriefing before my next lesson.”
My gut (unqualified though it may be) tells
me that the controller probably had both aircraft on their screen and didn’t
believe there to be any elevated risk. And if that was indeed the case then our
pilot was merely taken aback by having been surprised by the sudden appearance
of the other aircraft at his two o’clock.
Whether or not any real danger existed in
this particular case, it doesn’t make his being surprised feel any less
surprising! And it doesn’t make his thoughts of stepping away from his dream of
flight as a result any less real.
Close calls are all very subjective. What any
given pilot feels within themselves as the result of their own close call
really can’t be fairly judged. We all feel what we feel. And we all react how
we react. For some, nerves can invigorate and challenge us. For others, they
can take us down.
With the added security he thought he’d get
from a $500 collision avoidance gadget he can pull out of his flight bag before
every flight, our pilot got back on his winged horse and returned to flying a
few days later. The dream lives on.
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- Aug 08: Collision Avoidance Technology for GA
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