Promoting
Aviation Safety Prevent Accidents!!!
New Federal Safety Alerts Aim to Improve
General Aviation
On Friday the National Transportation Safety
Board, an independent federal agency, announced that it had issued five new
safety alerts that provide general aviation pilots with strategies for preventing
accidents.
The alerts follow five others that were issued
earlier in the year that focused on the most frequent types of general aviation
accidents.
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The agency defined alerts as brief information
sheets that pinpoint particular safety hazards and offer practical remedies to
address the issues.
The new "Armed" for Safety: Emergency
Locator Transmitters alert, for example, advises pilots to verify that devices
are switched on and attached to aircraft to ensure that they will work when
needed. They can save pilots' and passengers' lives by helping search and
rescue personnel locate a downed aircraft after an accident and minimize risk
to personnel during operations, but "these lifelines can be rendered
inoperative" if switch positions are improperly set or if they becomes
detached from the aircraft, the agency said.
The other four recent safety alerts are:
* Check Your Restraints
* Engine Power Loss Due to Carburetor Icing
* All Secure, All Clear (securing items in the
aircraft cabin)
* Proper Use of Fiber or Nylon Self-Locking
Nuts
Commercial aviation continues to have a strong
safety record, the agency said, however each year it continues to investigate
an average of 1,500 general aviation accidents in which about 475 pilots and
passengers are killed and hundreds more are seriously injured in the United
States.
"Knowing these accidents, which sometimes
include entire families, can be prevented is why 'General Aviation Safety' is
on our Most Wanted List of transportation safety improvements," Deborah
A.P. Hersman. NTSB's chairman said in a statement. "At a time when many
people are putting together their list of resolutions for the coming year,
these five Safety Alerts remind pilots, mechanics and passengers of basic
safety precautions to add to their checklists to ensure a safe flight for all
on board."
In describing the problem, the agency wrote:
"In many cases, pilots did not have the adequate knowledge, skills, or
recurrent training to fly safely, particularly in questionable weather
conditions. In addition, the more sophisticated "glass" cockpit displays
present a new layer of complications for general aviation pilots. And not only
are pilots dying due to human error and inadequate training, but also they are
frequently transporting their families who suffer the same tragic fate."
Also, although the overall general aviation
accident rate has remained relatively steady, the components have changed
dramatically over the last 10 years, the agency said. Personal flying accident
rates, for example, have increased 20 percent, while the fatal accident rate
has increased 25 percent over the same 10-year period.
To learn more about the new safety alerts and
25 others issued since 2004, click here.
SOURCE:http://www.forbes.com/sites/tanyamohn/2013/12/29/new-federal-safety-alerts-aim-to-improve-general-aviation/
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