The Federal Aviation Act of – 1958
1958
Federal Aviation Agency created FAA Sign. President Eisenhower signs the
Federal Aviation Act, formally creating the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA).
Aviation Safety is everybody’s business. So,
safety has become always an important subject for study by those who flying. We
owe it to ourselves to be as well prepared as possible for every flight we
make.
I wrote this post today to continue improving safety
in aviation, so over the 80% of the accidents in general aviation are caused by
pilot error. But, I want to emphasize that the term pilot error does not imply
that all errors are the fault of the pilot. Sometimes other external circumstances
are the cause.
This post is about to recollect some history in
aviation, The Federal Aviation Act 1958.
The Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 was basically
a constitution of aviation upon which the aviation industry could expand and develop.
It was general in character and left the interpretation of the specific nature
to the Civil Aeronautics Board in the matter of economics regulation, and to
the Civil Aeronautics Administration in the area of adherence to Air Safety.
The Federal Aviation Act of 1958, however, is
not entirely new, it is largely a reenactment, in amendment form, of the prior
Civil Aeronautics Act.
With the enactment of the Department of Transportation
in 1966, the Federal Aviation Agency became the Federal Aviation Administration and was placed under the Secretary of Transportation.
The Federal Aviation Agency was granted
expanded authority in Air Safety.
Mid Air Collisions
TWA
Flight 2 was a Lockheed Super Constellation
The first of these
accidents occurred on
June 30, 1956, over the Grand Canyon. The aircraft involved were a Trans World
Airlines Constellation and a United Airlines DC-7. Both aircraft fell into the
Canyon.
TWA Flight 2 left Los Angeles International
Airport at 9:00 a.m., bound for Kansas City, and three minutes later, bound for
Chicago, UAL Flight 718 took off from the same runway.
At 10: 31 a.m. Flight 2 and Flight 718 collided
over the Grand Canyon.
The probable cause, according to the official Civil
Aeronautics Board Accident Report, was that the pilots did not see each other
in time to avoid the collision. It is not possible to determine why the pilots
did not see each other, but the evidence suggests any one, or a combination of
the following factors, intervening clouds, visual limitations, preoccupation with
normal cockpit duties, attempting to provide passengers with a more scenic
view, physiological limits to human vision, or insufficient of en route air
traffic advisory information due to inadequacy of facilities and lack of personnel
in air traffic control.
The second accident involved a DC-7B owned by Douglas Aircraft
Company and a USAF F-89J near Sunland California on January 31, 1957. The DC-7B
crashed into a junior high school playground killing three students and
injuring 70 others. The F-89J crashed in the Verdugo Mountains.
The probable cause was the high rate of near
head on closure at high altitude, which, together with physiological limitations,
resulted in a minimum avoidance, opportunity during which the pilots did not
see the others aircraft.
The third accident, involved a United Airlines DC-7 and
a USAF F-100F near Las Vegas, Nevada, on April 21, 1958.
The probable cause of this mishap, according to
Civil Aeronautics Board investigation, was a high rate of near head on closure
at high altitude, human and cockpit of the Nellis Air Force Base and the Civil Aeronautics
Administration to take every measure to reduce a known collision exposure.
These accidents and other occurrences caused Congressional
action.
Remember, improving your ability to learn, always
Fly Safely.
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