Recent article highlighting the mishap trend since OCT 2017. While this trend over a short period is newsworthy, is it really alarming?



I get notifications of all the HAZREPs and SIRs that come out for all the communities and there's a lot of them, more than I remember there being before. There are certainly a lot of Class Bs and Cs.
Recent article highlighting the mishap trend since OCT 2017. While this trend over a short period is newsworthy, is it really alarming?
Totally agree but even with birdstrikes, I've seen pilots now check bash reports and avoid airfields where its red. If you get a birdstrike, the questions start coming down as to why you were there and didn't go elsewhere, at least that's what people are trying to avoid.
Totally agree but even with birdstrikes, I've seen pilots now check bash reports and avoid airfields where its red. If you get a birdstrike, the questions start coming down as to why you were there and didn't go elsewhere, at least that's what people are trying to avoid.
Mishaps don’t require “negligence.”
You guys are ignoring what I’m saying—- we need to reduce our operational commitments. Less WESTPAC, no more 1.0 in the gulf, complete withdraw from AFG. The problem is that we have become used to being at war 24/7/365. This is unrealistic and unsustainable. The manning and equipment issues below this ground truth. We have too much war and not enough shit.
I realize this is kinda my soap box, but it’s almost as if a generation of pilots who grew up on a tactical hard deck are less proficient, and thus more dangerous, than their predecessors. Who’dathunkit?
Stay safe out there folks.