B17 crash at Bradley
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I understand that these Living History flight operations operate under a waiver, and many FAA Regulations are "relaxed" for these operations
A seat belt with shoulder harness, then a life jacket saved my life once, because I was wearing both properly when the accident happened. And, on the other hand, I have refused certain operations in airplanes which were not equipped with a shoulder harness.
I hope that there is a continued interest of the importance of seat belt use. I have occasion to ride jump seat observer from time to time in an older aircraft, in commercial operation. It surprises me how often the pilots wear only the lap belt, when the shoulder harness is easily available, and perfectly suited.
There is a public service in these flights, they maintain a living heritage and act as a homage to those that were involved in their use. Whether a B-17 or UH-1, the risk that is imposed to the individual is a personal, accepted risk, it is necessary to be informed but it is the individual's decision, like parachuting... and the risk to others is manageable with any reasonable planning.
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There is a public service in these flights, they maintain a living heritage and act as a homage to those that were involved in their use. Whether a B-17 or UH-1, the risk that is imposed to the individual is a personal, accepted risk, it is necessary to be informed but it is the individual's decision, like parachuting... and the risk to others is manageable with any reasonable planning.
FAA regulations were not “relaxed” for this flight they were totally ignored. Yes modifications to regulatory requirements are necessary for these category of aircraft but I firmly believe they can be operated safely if the operating organization is serious about doing things right. Sad this was not the case here
The living history exemptions are in real danger if there are more preventable accidents killing paying passengers. The regulator does not have the expertise to provide fully functional oversight for these rare and unusual aircraft, the warbird community has to step up and self regulate.
The living history exemptions are in real danger if there are more preventable accidents killing paying passengers. The regulator does not have the expertise to provide fully functional oversight for these rare and unusual aircraft, the warbird community has to step up and self regulate.
BPF, `awaremanship` was sadly lacking in the B-17 case, in that if the pilot had put out a `Mayday` and flown the aircraft to land on the other runway (24?), instead of trying to crawl around the circuit, losing altitude and speed, it would probably have been a non-accident event.....
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FAA regulations were not “relaxed” for this flight they were totally ignored. Yes modifications to regulatory requirements are necessary for these category of aircraft but I firmly believe they can be operated safely if the operating organization is serious about doing things right. Sad this was not the case here
The living history exemptions are in real danger if there are more preventable accidents killing paying passengers. The regulator does not have the expertise to provide fully functional oversight for these rare and unusual aircraft, the warbird community has to step up and self regulate.
The living history exemptions are in real danger if there are more preventable accidents killing paying passengers. The regulator does not have the expertise to provide fully functional oversight for these rare and unusual aircraft, the warbird community has to step up and self regulate.

BPF, `awaremanship` was sadly lacking in the B-17 case, in that if the pilot had put out a `Mayday` and flown the aircraft to land on the other runway (24?), instead of trying to crawl around the circuit, losing altitude and speed, it would probably have been a non-accident event.....
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BPF, `awaremanship` was sadly lacking in the B-17 case, in that if the pilot had put out a `Mayday` and flown the aircraft to land on the other runway (24?), instead of trying to crawl around the circuit, losing altitude and speed, it would probably have been a non-accident event.....
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the shoddy FAA oversight
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We are the aviation professionals. Sure, the FAA, and every other authority are important elements of aviation safety, but we pilots should be doing it right because we are professionals, not because the FAA could be overseeing that day. How many FAA inspectors of this era would have a working understanding of the systems of a B17? Few, I opine, the technical expertise for this vintage types lies much more with the operator than the authority. Do we, as taxpayers, want to be funding the cost to assure that the authority's inspectors are conversant with every type? We aviation professionals keep flying affordable in part by satisfying the safety system that we fly safely, rather than how we fly safely.