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Old 4th Jan 2011, 21:16
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Seems to me....

It seems to me that:
-The pitts pilot was within his rights to take off.
-He should have made a radio call
-Regardless of whether glush was flying a piper or an aircraft with higher performance than the pitts he was wasting time by backtracking 20m when over 250m is available, especially when he is so concerned about runway behind him.
-The pitts pilot probably assumed that when glush started backtracking he would backtrack for long enough for him to take off safely.
-Finally, both pilots were not on top form that day.

Investigation complete
However, I do understand why glush was annoyed
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Old 4th Jan 2011, 21:34
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Apparently it is to be encouraged if it saves a minute or two of waiting at the hold!
Well said.

I hear that flying is expensive in the UK, and everyone is trying to save a quid, and fly as cheaply as possible, but come on here, isn't courtsey still a hallmark of behaviour in the UK?

I don't think that one can be proud of, or defend, "butting in" the queue, be it at Tescos, or on the runway. If proper radio calls were made and missed, it could be seen from differing perspectives. If no radio calls were made to assure that everyone was in agreement, poor form in my opinion.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 01:44
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Originally Posted by dhc1chippymunk
It seems to me that:
-The pitts pilot was within his rights to take off.
-He should have made a radio call
-Regardless of whether glush was flying a piper or an aircraft with higher performance than the pitts he was wasting time by backtracking 20m when over 250m is available, especially when he is so concerned about runway behind him.
-The pitts pilot probably assumed that when glush started backtracking he would backtrack for long enough for him to take off safely.
-Finally, both pilots were not on top form that day.

Investigation complete
However, I do understand why glush was annoyed
I think you have succinctly and accurately summarized the situation.

I think this is an example of a more widespread issue. That is the lack of emphasis flight training organizations place on using runway time efficiently. When things are busy I think good airmanship means not wasting time on the runway. That means not taxing to the hold line until you are in all respects ready for takeoff, not dawdling on the runway when you are lined up, and when landing, exiting expeditiously at the first safe taxiway. If you have to taxi along the runway to get to the next exit than use a high speed taxi until you are near the exit. Finally be predictable, if you are going to backtrack, others will assume you are going to the end, so if that is not the plan clearly describe your intentions.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 07:45
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I think this is an example of a more widespread issue. That is the lack of emphasis flight training organizations place on using runway time efficiently. When things are busy I think good airmanship means not wasting time on the runway. That means not taxing to the hold line until you are in all respects ready for takeoff, not dawdling on the runway when you are lined up, and when landing, exiting expeditiously at the first safe taxiway. If you have to taxi along the runway to get to the next exit than use a high speed taxi until you are near the exit. Finally be predictable, if you are going to backtrack, others will assume you are going to the end, so if that is not the plan clearly describe your intentions.
Hear hear!

To add: High-speed exits can be used at high speeds. For a typical spamcan that's just below stall speed so if you touch down 200-300 meters before a high-speed exit there's no need to brake. Just roll out onto the exit.

And of course, if it's a 1000 meter runway with no intersections, land long.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 11:08
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Backpacker

Greetings; Before landing long, could I just suggest (from personal experience) that it is good to know how long your landing roll is in case of failure of the breaks and touch down at more than that distance


Maybe my English is not quite right, but I do not see any mention of an intersection in glush's first post.

The mental picture I have is that the second aircraft entered by the same place and then took off.

So, if I understand correctly, his first glance of the Pitts might have been at quite short distance.

I make no judgement, but am trying to imagine how things looked.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 11:20
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Joao, the airports that I know only have high-speed intersections, but a normal 90-degree exit at the runway ends. So if you land long, aiming for a high-speed intersection and then find you're confronted with failed brakes, you have an additional few hundred meters to roll out to the end of the runway anyway (or accelerate and climb away).
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 11:39
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Backpacker

That works just fine.

I had brake failure on a 800m runway and was amazed how long we rolled for!

However, we did not run off the end.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 11:48
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I've just looked at the AD Chart and satellite photo for Leicester and it looks like the backtrack for 10 is more like 200M than 20M?
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 11:56
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Yep. That's why it's so odd to call "lining up" and then do a 20-meter backtrack before actually lining up. It doesn't make sense. Either you need the backtrack and you go all the way, or you don't need it so you line up and depart immediately.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 12:40
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The only logical reason I can think of, is that the take off charts and factors (e.g. CAA) suggest those extra 20m and you decide to play it by the book as it is a training flight.

Maybe the OP will inform us.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 12:45
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“The only logical reason I can think of, is that the take off charts and factors (e.g. CAA) suggest those extra 20m and you decide to play it by the book as it is a training flight.

Maybe the OP will inform us.”

He has already told us that his machine had better performance than a Pitts. With a long hard runway no way did he need the extra 20m to comply with the regs. He probably had more than 5 times what he needed.

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Old 5th Jan 2011, 14:35
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Assuming the aircraft was a PA28-151, take off distance over a 50ft obstacle is 540M.

There is 630M of runway between the intersection and the far threshold - the backtrack doesn't make any sense to me at all?

If it wasn't a PA28-151, and some kind of 'hotter than a Pitts' hot ship, then the backtrack makes even less sense!

glush mentions in another thread that he instructs on a Eurostar - so perhaps that was the aircraft in use on the day?
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 15:20
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Two wrongs don't make a right. Just because the OP might have been ill-advised to backtrack does not then legitimise someone else entering the runway unannounced for a sneaky take-off when noone's looking.

If you are at an airfield where there are frequent PPL training flights then it is naive to always expect the standards you would get from experienced pilots. Students are learning and will occasionally make mistakes. We all had to start at the beginning and the vast majority of us weren't particularly brilliant when we started off!

When I flew solo to another airfield as part of my PPL I was taxiing to the hold when I realised I had made a silly error. This threw me and then I became conscious of another bigger aircraft waiting behind me and I panicked - took off without completing a whole section of my checks. I learned a lot from that - namely do not rush and get it wrong.

But what if this had been a solo student? Mr Pitts wasn't to know there was an instructor on board. Already feeling pressurised because of the busy circuit, the student enters the runway, backtracks (rightly or wrongly), turns, applies full power without looking ahead properly (he is trying to save time remember) and then suddenly finds himself taking off alongside another aircraft who entered the runway without telling anyone.

Piss poor airmanship and quite worrying that others regard it as acceptable behaviour (until of course someone does it to them!)
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 15:32
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who entered the runway without telling anyone.

We dont know if he did or didnt (tell anyone).

No excuses for not saying I agree.

If he did say this could be all be a wind up.

Thats it - doesnt seem a lot more to say, other than our OP seems to have got sticky keys.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 15:36
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"When I flew solo to another airfield as part of my PPL I was taxiing to the hold when I realised I had made a silly error. This threw me and then I became conscious of another bigger aircraft waiting behind me and I panicked - took off without completing a whole section of my checks. I learned a lot from that - namely do not rush and get it wrong.

But what if this had been a solo student? Mr Pitts wasn't to know there was an instructor on board. Already feeling pressurised because of the busy circuit, the student enters the runway, backtracks (rightly or wrongly), turns, applies full power without looking ahead properly (he is trying to save time remember) and then suddenly finds himself taking off alongside another aircraft who entered the runway without telling anyone."

Excellent points which the OP could have resolved by calling the Pitts through, agreeing to a call from the Pitts indicating his action or being relived that the Pitts took the initiative and went ahead.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 15:37
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turns, applies full power without looking ahead properly (he is trying to save time remember) and then suddenly finds himself taking off alongside another aircraft who entered the runway without telling anyone.
....pretty unlikely with a Pitts, you've obviously never flown one.

If the Pitts pilot had been holding behind the PA28 and then the PA 28 had called lining up and proceeded to turn to the left, then its a reasonable assumption that the PA28 was going to backtrack and that could have been up to 200mtrs which would take some time.

The Pitts could then easily depart from the intersection. Generally he would out accelerate and out climb most other piston aircraft and it would be safer to be ahead of a slower aircraft rather than behind because of the limited forward visibility.

Yes, he should have announced his intentions, but maybe he did and Glush missed it. He does seem to have been wrong on the distance to backtrack and the relative performance of the two aircraft.

I'm no lover of Pitts's but this seems a pragmatic and safe way to maximise the use of a busy airfield.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 15:46
  #77 (permalink)  
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Let's face it, the whole thing is about communications.


"G-ABCD making short backtrack before line up and departure"

"G-EFGH entering behind backtracking aircraft for immediate departure"


Would have probably solved probably the whole misunderstanding.

G
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 16:16
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Genghis

Exactly

Yes, he should have announced his intentions, but maybe he did and Glush missed it. He does seem to have been wrong on the distance to backtrack and the relative performance of the two aircraft.
Hmm, I agree, for an instructor the OP is beginning to look less than like a reliable witness. It is one of those stories that doesnt quite stand up to scrutiny.

Still it has kept us all entertained when we have nothing better to do!
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 16:24
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The OP said it was 'rude'. I agree and it was also poor airmanship. Procedures and good habits are put in place to ensure safety. Unfortunately the type of pilot described here will also be likely to nip in front of a student on finals. I have seen this twice and both times the offending pilot took umbrage at being challenged (what about the wobbly student?).

I also don't blame the OP for going quiet. He makes a valid point and members with thousands of posts (and presumably nothing else to do) take over and change the entire emphasis. No wonder people are leaving Pprune.

Last edited by DeeCee; 5th Jan 2011 at 17:26.
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Old 5th Jan 2011, 17:39
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He has already told us that his machine had better performance than a Pitts. With a long hard runway no way did he need the extra 20m to comply with the regs. He probably had more than 5 times what he needed.
If it was an F4, it uses a lot of runway before achieving a 48,000 feet rate of climb, which I believe might just beat a Pitt's.

And that answer is about as sensible as yours, as you have no more idea than me of the performance calculations for that aircraft, which might even be simulating an IFR departure in a multi for training purposes.

Let's face it, the whole thing is about communications.


"G-ABCD making short backtrack before line up and departure"

"G-EFGH entering behind backtracking aircraft for immediate departure"


Would have probably solved probably the whole misunderstanding.
Possibly not, as G-ABCD was a AVRO 616 AVIAN MK4M, withdrawn from use in 1938 and G-EFGH is a Robinson R22

Sorry couldn't resist!
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