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Old 28th Mar 2019, 09:14
  #340 (permalink)  
212man
 
Join Date: Oct 1999
Location: Den Haag
Age: 57
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Originally Posted by Easy Street


This is readily explained by the condition known in the military aviation profession as being ‘maxed out’, or stretched beyond the limits of mental capacity. Most often seen in student pilots, its recurrence is a common reason for suspension, whether in initial training or under carefully supervised conditions on postgraduate courses such as the Qualified Weapons Instructor Course. Many a current and capable second- or third-tour aviator with greater ability than AH has failed the latter by becoming ‘maxed out’ despite operating at what most would consider peak performance. The condition is typically suppressed outside the training environment by the application of a process known as ‘flying supervision’, which begins with regulations setting out minimum qualification and currency requirements and upon which a layer of professional judgement is applied, culminating in a signature authorising a particular sortie. Even the most experienced and expert military aviators are limited in what they are permitted to do when outside of currency stipulations, in part because of the risk of making errors and mistakes while ‘maxed out’.



Widely known in professional circles, and most especially in the display world, as one of the *very* highest risk factors for poor decision-making and self-induced pressure, while performing and even on the ground beforehand. Evidence: B-52 Fairchild AFB 1994, C-17 Elmendorf AFB 2010, Tucano Linton-on-Ouse 2009, plenty of other case studies, and the enormous quantity of military regulation that existed to control flypasts, role demonstrations and displays even before the Shoreham accident.



Not a barrier to becoming 'maxed out', see my QWI course example above. More significantly, the statement is way beyond the bounds of credibility given AH's currency and experience on type.



A straw man argument in relation to the sequence of errors recounted. AH could have been doing his very best at that point in the occurrence. The key to our profession is not putting pilots in a place where their best is not good enough.

I am being deliberately tongue-in-cheek with all of this because I can’t think of many sortie profiles more likely to stretch a pilot beyond the limit of their mental capacity than a low-level aerobatic display at a tricky venue with patchy currency and less than 20 hours on type. Frankly I find it astonishing that a human factors expert would offer the pilot's supposed 'experienced and expert' status as an absolute barrier to poor performance, given countless historical examples of 'experienced and expert' pilots performing very poorly indeed.



Few, if any on here are disputing the verdict duly reached in court of law; perhaps that makes our discussion off-topic given the word 'trial' in the thread title. However you should be unsurprised to learn that the verdict and medical position have been examined carefully by military authorities, as the outcome could be taken to infer that the military is unaware of the potential for CI at relatively low G, which would be a significant issue for legally-accountable aviation duty holders. So you'll have to take it as read that some of us may be more informed on the medical position than you think. Your statement of that position was enough to prevent the criminal standard of proof from being reached, but I'm afraid it won't wash with the majority here.
Great post which I think resonates with many here. Having met Dr. Steven Jarvis and seen him presenting at conferences/workshops several times, I can say that he is a very dynamic and charismatic character (positively 'bounces' around the stage!) and it is easy to see how his evidence to a jury would be found to be very compelling.
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