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		| gus.fraser(at)gs.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
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				|  Posted: Tue Mar 21, 2006 10:18 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
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 |  
				| While investigating something totally different I discovered the following in the FAA archive. It is the findings of an investigation the FAA carried out into the two acm accidents that happened a while ago. It makes interesting reading and for you ARS folks something to think about when planning.   
http://www.faa.gov/library/manuals/examiners_inspectors/8700/fsga/media/fsga9506.txt
 Gus
 
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		| HawkerPilot2015 
 
 
 Joined: 10 Jan 2006
 Posts: 503
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:00 am    Post subject: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| I find it odd that while ACM is discouraged, low level aerobatics is promoted and people pay money to see it!! I have seen two fatal accidents while low level aerobatics were being peformed. In fact, I was the second to the scene (the first was the dead pilot) and then I had to assist the womans husband! 
 I dont go to too many airshows any more because of this. I honestly dont see the fun in seeing someone pull out from a loop 4 inches above the ground. I will agree that it takes extraordinary talent to do what they do...but it just does not make sense to me. The crowd does not truly understand the training and risk involved, they just want to see someone pushing the edge.
 
 What is the RPA's stand on this?
 
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		| brian 
 
  
 Joined: 02 Jan 2006
 Posts: 643
 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 7:13 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Tim Gagnon wrote:
  	  | Quote: |  	  | 
 I find it odd that while ACM is discouraged, low level aerobatics is promoted and people pay money to see it!! I have seen two fatal accidents while low level aerobatics were being peformed. In fact, I was the second to the scene (the first was the dead pilot) and then I had to assist the womans husband!
 
 I dont go to too many airshows any more because of this.
 
 | 
 I understand. I like participatory sports, not spectator sports. Acro is
 something you do, not something you watch (unless you are trying to
 understand a maneuver).
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | I honestly dont see the fun in seeing someone pull out from a loop 4 inches above the ground. I will agree that it takes extraordinary talent to do what they do...but it just does not make sense to me. The crowd does not truly understand the training and risk involved, they just want to see someone pushing the edge. 
 | 
 You are certainly right on that.
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | What is the RPA's stand on this? 
 | 
 Well, it should be that it is legal and therefore RPA has no comment.
 
 The desire to tell others what they can and cannot do "for their own
 good" is a powerful one. Still, people should be allowed to do what they
 want to do even if they risk their own life in the process.
 
 RPA should stay out of this completely and provide services to its
 membership to help them be as safe as they can be. RPA should not be in
 the habit of telling people how they should fly their airplane or
 attempting to enforce same.
 
 --
 Brian Lloyd                         361 Catterline Way
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com          Folsom, CA 95630
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
 
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 _________________
 Brian Lloyd
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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		| HawkerPilot2015 
 
 
 Joined: 10 Jan 2006
 Posts: 503
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 3:38 pm    Post subject: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| I was not advocating (although it seems like I did imply that) that RPA be involved in "regulating" low level aerobatics. They have taken a stand on the ACM issue but to the best of my knowledge, have not addressed the low level aerobatic issue. 
 I must preface the following statement by saying that I am not involved in either activity,only by lack of training and education, not for lack of desire.
 
 It seems to me that ACM done with proper training by those proficient in it, is as safe as any other activity where you fly your airplane to its limits. I have sat in on and participated (from a GIB view) on ACM hops and can tell you that they were thoroughly briefed and specific ROE of were set and expected to be adhered too. I have been involved in countless military crew briefings and these were done as professionally as any of those. I understand the concerns of the community but I think they are overstated without regards to the operation. I do believe in and have seen the training that goes into getting someone up to speed on ACM. It is not unlike any other training I have seen yet we are shying away from it because of a couple of accidents. When the airshow season starts, so do the obituaries for those that were at the top of thier game...well...until one day when they made one mistake and got killed. It happens to the best out there and there is not an effort to shut down airshows.
 
 I just find it ironic, and a bit hypocritical,  to lambast something that has suffered few incidents while we pay for and praise those that operate at the very ragged edge, and sometimes beyond, an airplanes envelope.
 
 Maybe someone smarter than me can tell me where the difference exist between the two activities when done by proficient and trained pilots.
 
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		| MajorGoofinoff(at)aol.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 5:47 pm    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| I think the reason to avoid ACM is the whole T-34 issues.  No matter how good your are you will pull more G's than you think, at least we have the HIGH G light and tone.  Let the Feds go after the T-34s and such.  I don't want any wings popping of the Yaks and then having to deal with the Feds who think are airplanes are all going to shed a wing.  
 Scott.
 
 
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		| dsavarese(at)elmore.rr.co Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:19 pm    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Excellent point Scott.  One thing that always stands out in  my mind is "metal has memory".
Dennis
 [quote]   ---
 
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		| HawkerPilot2015 
 
 
 Joined: 10 Jan 2006
 Posts: 503
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 6:36 pm    Post subject: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Does that metal know whether it is pulling G's from ACM or hard aerobatics? I think both carry risk but my question is the risk that much different? Rolling G's aside which limits even current fighters and the pilots know that, what is different about ACM and an aerobatic routine? How long does a routine last compared to a couple of engagements? 
 When you have a surface waiver and you screw something up, how much time or altitude do you have to correct your mistake? If you have a wing failure at 200 feet or 4000 feet (assuming you survive the actual failure), how much time do you have to bail out at the respective altitudes?
 
 I just dont see that ACM is more risky than aerobatics when done properly.
 
 ACM guys....break the silence...I know you are out there!
 
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		| viperdoc(at)mindspring.co Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
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				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 8:58 pm    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Tim,
Honestly I have mixed emotions on having civilians doing ACM. Sure it is
 nice to see what their military has trained for and get a taste of what it
 is like to be a fighter pilot for a day. The problems have come from the
 type aircraft chosen to present this taste in. It has brought a mirade of
 headaches to the T-34 and T-6 communities. I really do not want to see that
 come to our community.
 As for Acro being no worse on the aircraft than ACM, I would have to
 disagree. In the fighter training community, acro is a stepping stone to
 something more. In acro, it is you and the airplane flying a set routine.
 Your attention is on what your aircraft is doing (airspeed and attitudes
 flown). ACM is a choreography balancing what your aircraft is doing, what
 your adversary is doing, thinking far enough ahead of your jet to project
 where you want to be in the airspace, the corner you are trying to paint
 your opponent into, and oh by the way look inside for a snap shot of  what
 your instruments say your plane is doing. If you are pulling the fight and
 not pushing, your trying to force your adversary to make a mistake so
 he/she overshoots giving you an in (if you are defensive that is). The
 entire time you are dividing you attention between your plane, your energy
 state that is, and your opponent. Flying is second nature. The majority of
 your attention is employing your jet as a weapons system to kill this
 bandit, go to his bar and drink his beer.  This is all taking place in a 1
 v 1, it gets even more dicey in 2v2, 4v4, or you v many.
 The whole process of minting a steely eyed young fighter pilot is a
 building block process that takes place over a 18 mo. course of training.
 He/She exits the B course are FNG wing man who is trying finish gulping
 down the fire hose they stuck in it's mouth for the last 18 mo. The
 building process is only beginning. It is not complete until he/she leaves
 the cockpit at retirement.
 We can't take a civilian YAK/CJ driver with nothing more than a FAST card
 and turn them into a "safe" fighter pilot in weekend. We are asking for
 major trouble if we start doing that. Some Bubba is going to go home
 thinking that at the end of a 3 day ACM course he is kingkong and put
 himself or his bud out of control turning themselves into a lawn dart. We
 just do not need to do that in our community.
 Tactical flying is one thing but full up ACM needs to stay where it is
 now... the military where we train to that level of proficiency.
 Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative. But do not do it in
 the name of the PA and neither should the RPA try to legislate what two
 consenting  adults do on their on time. The problem will still come if the
 intrepid YAK drivers (CJ for that matter) go an shuck a wing. Now we have
 the undivided attention of the FAA in a light we do not want.
 That is my 2 cents. Now do I fly ACM with some of my squadron
 buds...truthfully yes. The ROE is so ingrained that the Knock It Off call
 is almost automatic when a DLO(desired learning objective) is met.
 Learning to fly tactical is allot of fun and does take energy management of
 our aircraft to another level. It truly does introduce the 3 dimension to
 flying, the vertical.
 Doc
 
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		| brian 
 
  
 Joined: 02 Jan 2006
 Posts: 643
 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:26 pm    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Tim Gagnon wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | ACM guys....break the silence...I know you are out there! 
 | 
 In the "heat of battle" one is more likely to pull and roll at the same
 time thus exceeding the load limit of the airframe without the
 accelerometer indicating the fact. Straight acro doesn't usually do this.
 
 --
 Brian Lloyd                         361 Catterline Way
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com          Folsom, CA 95630
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
 
 | |  |  | - The Matronics Yak-List Email Forum - |  |  |  | Use the List Feature Navigator to browse the many List utilities available such as the Email Subscriptions page, Archive Search & Download, 7-Day Browse, Chat, FAQ, Photoshare, and much more:http://www.matronics.com/Navigator?Yak-List
 
 | 
 | 
 _________________
 Brian Lloyd
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
 |  |  
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		| dabear(at)damned.org Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:57 pm    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Roger,
 The problem is not *if* pilots will do it.  They are doing it.  Sticking
 our collective heads in the sand and saying we don't support it,  don't
 want people to do it, and will not train them to do it, doesn't stop
 that.  Just like you, people are doing ACM in their aircraft.
 
 Your comment is valid:
 
 "Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative."
 If two people want to brief it up on their own dime ... it is their
 prerogative.  Qualified?  What is that?  If we don't have a standard set
 of qualifications, programs, etc.  Then everyone is qualified, because
 their is no agreed upon level of qualification.  People flew formation
 before FAST.  People fly formation without going to FAST clinics and
 getting instruction, solo "qual", and then wing/lead patches.  Some do
 it safe, many are just lucky.  But they do it.  Not having clinics
 doesn't stop people from flying ACM, it just stops them from having the
 opportunity to learn the "standards."
 
 I agree, someone flying their Yak on a regular basis doing acro is
 different than ACM.  However, I don't agree that a metal fatigue is more
 likely in ACM.  Someone flying a 1985 Yak-52 or 1970 CJ6A, who has no
 idea how much time their aircraft has spent at high G levels, is doing
 acro on a regular basis.  Even competing at IAC events.  Eventually,
 their aircraft could break.  Heck, if they are doing airshows, or even
 just practicing low level and mess something up, they could over G Their
 aircraft multiple times and cause failure.
 
 I see nothing wrong with teaching people a safe way to brief, fly (with
 safety pilots), and debrief ACM hops.  It is better to teach people the
 safe way to do things, rather than ignore it.  I also don't think it is
 right for people to say, don't teach it, don't condone it, RPA doesn't
 support it, and then for those same folks to go out and do it.  That
 includes multiple people in all levels of our RPA organization.
 
 Some folks were lucky (and good) and were able to fly fighter jets.
 Others would like a taste of that, with some guidance from local IPs and
 people that can guide those that are new to this.  It isn't that I can't
 find people to do ACM with/against.  I can find many just at my local
 airport.  However, what I don't have is a standards of flight profiles,
 and standards for level of ability ala FAST.  So, I'm not going to go
 out and fly against people I don't know and trust just like I will not
 fly formation without knowing someones ability and that they understand
 the program.
 
 I'd much rather our community pilots go to regular ACM clinics, with
 appropriate level (ex-military) IPs, and learn to do it well, safely,
 and with rules we all understand, than to have them doing it on their
 own, without training, without good IPs in the back.  No one is saying
 go to one 3-day ACM clinic and you are going to be a SH ACM pilot.  But
 teaching some basic BFM 1 v 1 stuff over a series of clinics would be
 fun, valuable, and safe.  Having basic level requires before moving to
 next level clinics would be great times for out community of pilots.  We
 have people that have their FAST cards for multiple years, 100+ hours of
 formation including lots of grab-ass extended trail, and they want to
 learn more, improve their skills, and have fun.
 
 ACM clinics would prevent more accidents then they would ever cause.
 
 DaBear
 Roger Kemp wrote:
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | 
 Tim,
 Honestly I have mixed emotions on having civilians doing ACM. Sure it is
 nice to see what their military has trained for and get a taste of what it
 is like to be a fighter pilot for a day. The problems have come from the
 type aircraft chosen to present this taste in. It has brought a mirade of
 headaches to the T-34 and T-6 communities. I really do not want to see that
 come to our community.
 As for Acro being no worse on the aircraft than ACM, I would have to
 disagree. In the fighter training community, acro is a stepping stone to
 something more. In acro, it is you and the airplane flying a set routine.
 Your attention is on what your aircraft is doing (airspeed and attitudes
 flown). ACM is a choreography balancing what your aircraft is doing, what
 your adversary is doing, thinking far enough ahead of your jet to project
 where you want to be in the airspace, the corner you are trying to paint
 your opponent into, and oh by the way look inside for a snap shot of  what
 your instruments say your plane is doing. If you are pulling the fight and
 not pushing, your trying to force your adversary to make a mistake so
 he/she overshoots giving you an in (if you are defensive that is). The
 entire time you are dividing you attention between your plane, your energy
 state that is, and your opponent. Flying is second nature. The majority of
 your attention is employing your jet as a weapons system to kill this
 bandit, go to his bar and drink his beer.  This is all taking place in a 1
 v 1, it gets even more dicey in 2v2, 4v4, or you v many.
 The whole process of minting a steely eyed young fighter pilot is a
 building block process that takes place over a 18 mo. course of training.
 He/She exits the B course are FNG wing man who is trying finish gulping
 down the fire hose they stuck in it's mouth for the last 18 mo. The
 building process is only beginning. It is not complete until he/she leaves
 the cockpit at retirement.
 We can't take a civilian YAK/CJ driver with nothing more than a FAST card
 and turn them into a "safe" fighter pilot in weekend. We are asking for
 major trouble if we start doing that. Some Bubba is going to go home
 thinking that at the end of a 3 day ACM course he is kingkong and put
 himself or his bud out of control turning themselves into a lawn dart. We
 just do not need to do that in our community.
 Tactical flying is one thing but full up ACM needs to stay where it is
 now... the military where we train to that level of proficiency.
 Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative. But do not do it in
 the name of the PA and neither should the RPA try to legislate what two
 consenting  adults do on their on time. The problem will still come if the
 intrepid YAK drivers (CJ for that matter) go an shuck a wing. Now we have
 the undivided attention of the FAA in a light we do not want.
 That is my 2 cents. Now do I fly ACM with some of my squadron
 buds...truthfully yes. The ROE is so ingrained that the Knock It Off call
 is almost automatic when a DLO(desired learning objective) is met.
 Learning to fly tactical is allot of fun and does take energy management of
 our aircraft to another level. It truly does introduce the 3 dimension to
 flying, the vertical.
 Doc
 
 
 
 
 | 
 
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		| dabear(at)damned.org Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Wed Mar 22, 2006 10:01 pm    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Brian Lloyd wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | 
 Tim Gagnon wrote:
 
 > ACM guys....break the silence...I know you are out there!
 In the "heat of battle" one is more likely to pull and roll at the
 same time thus exceeding the load limit of the airframe without the
 accelerometer indicating the fact. Straight acro doesn't usually do this.
 
 So teach people what rolling G is, the consequences, and how to do ACM
 | 
 without rolling G.  Sorry Brian, but people (qualified and not yet
 instructed) are doing it today.  Hiding behind the illusion that lack of
 ACM training and clinics will prevent someone from doing ACM is in the
 same vein of if we outlaw guns, we will not have any gun crime.  Sorry,
 we have airplanes, we have pilots, people want to do it.  If ACM wasn't
 fun, challenging, etc, then the former military guys wouldn't be doing
 it, the non-military people wouldn't want to, and this wouldn't be an
 issue  But the folks in WWI opened the box, and we can't close it again.
 
 DaBear
 
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		| pa3arw(at)euronet.nl Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 2:02 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Sorry to ask this stupid question: Can anybody explain to me what "ACM"
stands for???
 It would explain a lot to me...
 
 Hans
 Dutch Yak Pilot
 
 -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
 Van: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com
 [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] Namens DaBear
 Verzonden: donderdag 23 maart 2006 6:56
 Aan: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 Onderwerp: Re: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 
 
 
 Roger,
 
 The problem is not *if* pilots will do it.  They are doing it.  Sticking
 our collective heads in the sand and saying we don't support it,  don't
 want people to do it, and will not train them to do it, doesn't stop
 that.  Just like you, people are doing ACM in their aircraft.
 
 Your comment is valid:
 
 "Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative."
 If two people want to brief it up on their own dime ... it is their
 prerogative.  Qualified?  What is that?  If we don't have a standard set
 of qualifications, programs, etc.  Then everyone is qualified, because
 their is no agreed upon level of qualification.  People flew formation
 before FAST.  People fly formation without going to FAST clinics and
 getting instruction, solo "qual", and then wing/lead patches.  Some do
 it safe, many are just lucky.  But they do it.  Not having clinics
 doesn't stop people from flying ACM, it just stops them from having the
 opportunity to learn the "standards."
 
 I agree, someone flying their Yak on a regular basis doing acro is
 different than ACM.  However, I don't agree that a metal fatigue is more
 likely in ACM.  Someone flying a 1985 Yak-52 or 1970 CJ6A, who has no
 idea how much time their aircraft has spent at high G levels, is doing
 acro on a regular basis.  Even competing at IAC events.  Eventually,
 their aircraft could break.  Heck, if they are doing airshows, or even
 just practicing low level and mess something up, they could over G Their
 aircraft multiple times and cause failure.
 
 I see nothing wrong with teaching people a safe way to brief, fly (with
 safety pilots), and debrief ACM hops.  It is better to teach people the
 safe way to do things, rather than ignore it.  I also don't think it is
 right for people to say, don't teach it, don't condone it, RPA doesn't
 support it, and then for those same folks to go out and do it.  That
 includes multiple people in all levels of our RPA organization.
 
 Some folks were lucky (and good) and were able to fly fighter jets.
 Others would like a taste of that, with some guidance from local IPs and
 people that can guide those that are new to this.  It isn't that I can't
 find people to do ACM with/against.  I can find many just at my local
 airport.  However, what I don't have is a standards of flight profiles,
 and standards for level of ability ala FAST.  So, I'm not going to go
 out and fly against people I don't know and trust just like I will not
 fly formation without knowing someones ability and that they understand
 the program.
 
 I'd much rather our community pilots go to regular ACM clinics, with
 appropriate level (ex-military) IPs, and learn to do it well, safely,
 and with rules we all understand, than to have them doing it on their
 own, without training, without good IPs in the back.  No one is saying
 go to one 3-day ACM clinic and you are going to be a SH ACM pilot.  But
 teaching some basic BFM 1 v 1 stuff over a series of clinics would be
 fun, valuable, and safe.  Having basic level requires before moving to
 next level clinics would be great times for out community of pilots.  We
 have people that have their FAST cards for multiple years, 100+ hours of
 formation including lots of grab-ass extended trail, and they want to
 learn more, improve their skills, and have fun.
 
 ACM clinics would prevent more accidents then they would ever cause.
 
 DaBear
 Roger Kemp wrote:
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | 
 Tim,
 Honestly I have mixed emotions on having civilians doing ACM. Sure it is
 nice to see what their military has trained for and get a taste of what it
 is like to be a fighter pilot for a day. The problems have come from the
 type aircraft chosen to present this taste in. It has brought a mirade of
 headaches to the T-34 and T-6 communities. I really do not want to see that
 come to our community.
 As for Acro being no worse on the aircraft than ACM, I would have to
 disagree. In the fighter training community, acro is a stepping stone to
 something more. In acro, it is you and the airplane flying a set routine.
 Your attention is on what your aircraft is doing (airspeed and attitudes
 flown). ACM is a choreography balancing what your aircraft is doing, what
 your adversary is doing, thinking far enough ahead of your jet to project
 where you want to be in the airspace, the corner you are trying to paint
 your opponent into, and oh by the way look inside for a snap shot of  what
 your instruments say your plane is doing. If you are pulling the fight and
 not pushing, your trying to force your adversary to make a mistake so
 he/she overshoots giving you an in (if you are defensive that is). The
 entire time you are dividing you attention between your plane, your energy
 state that is, and your opponent. Flying is second nature. The majority of
 your attention is employing your jet as a weapons system to kill this
 bandit, go to his bar and drink his beer.  This is all taking place in a 1
 v 1, it gets even more dicey in 2v2, 4v4, or you v many.
 The whole process of minting a steely eyed young fighter pilot is a
 building block process that takes place over a 18 mo. course of training.
 He/She exits the B course are FNG wing man who is trying finish gulping
 down the fire hose they stuck in it's mouth for the last 18 mo. The
 building process is only beginning. It is not complete until he/she leaves
 the cockpit at retirement.
 We can't take a civilian YAK/CJ driver with nothing more than a FAST card
 and turn them into a "safe" fighter pilot in weekend. We are asking for
 major trouble if we start doing that. Some Bubba is going to go home
 thinking that at the end of a 3 day ACM course he is kingkong and put
 himself or his bud out of control turning themselves into a lawn dart. We
 just do not need to do that in our community.
 Tactical flying is one thing but full up ACM needs to stay where it is
 now... the military where we train to that level of proficiency.
 Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative. But do not do it in
 the name of the PA and neither should the RPA try to legislate what two
 consenting  adults do on their on time. The problem will still come if the
 intrepid YAK drivers (CJ for that matter) go an shuck a wing. Now we have
 the undivided attention of the FAA in a light we do not want.
 That is my 2 cents. Now do I fly ACM with some of my squadron
 buds...truthfully yes. The ROE is so ingrained that the Knock It Off call
 is almost automatic when a DLO(desired learning objective) is met.
 Learning to fly tactical is allot of fun and does take energy management of
 our aircraft to another level. It truly does introduce the 3 dimension to
 flying, the vertical.
 Doc
 
 
 
 
 | 
 
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		| feyerabm(at)web.de Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 2:14 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Hi Hans,
 ACM = Air Combat Maneuvers
 
 Regards,
 Markus
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 Gesendet: 23.03.06 11:10:47
 An: <yak-list(at)matronics.com>
 Betreff: RE: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 
 | 
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | 
 Sorry to ask this stupid question: Can anybody explain to me what "ACM"
 stands for???
 It would explain a lot to me...
 
 Hans
 Dutch Yak Pilot
 
 -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
 Van: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com
 [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] Namens DaBear
 Verzonden: donderdag 23 maart 2006 6:56
 Aan: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 Onderwerp: Re: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 
 
 
 Roger,
 
 The problem is not *if* pilots will do it.  They are doing it.  Sticking
 our collective heads in the sand and saying we don't support it,  don't
 want people to do it, and will not train them to do it, doesn't stop
 that.  Just like you, people are doing ACM in their aircraft.
 
 Your comment is valid:
 
 "Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative."
 
 
 If two people want to brief it up on their own dime ... it is their
 prerogative.  Qualified?  What is that?  If we don't have a standard set
 of qualifications, programs, etc.  Then everyone is qualified, because
 their is no agreed upon level of qualification.  People flew formation
 before FAST.  People fly formation without going to FAST clinics and
 getting instruction, solo "qual", and then wing/lead patches.  Some do
 it safe, many are just lucky.  But they do it.  Not having clinics
 doesn't stop people from flying ACM, it just stops them from having the
 opportunity to learn the "standards."
 
 I agree, someone flying their Yak on a regular basis doing acro is
 different than ACM.  However, I don't agree that a metal fatigue is more
 likely in ACM.  Someone flying a 1985 Yak-52 or 1970 CJ6A, who has no
 idea how much time their aircraft has spent at high G levels, is doing
 acro on a regular basis.  Even competing at IAC events.  Eventually,
 their aircraft could break.  Heck, if they are doing airshows, or even
 just practicing low level and mess something up, they could over G Their
 aircraft multiple times and cause failure.
 
 I see nothing wrong with teaching people a safe way to brief, fly (with
 safety pilots), and debrief ACM hops.  It is better to teach people the
 safe way to do things, rather than ignore it.  I also don't think it is
 right for people to say, don't teach it, don't condone it, RPA doesn't
 support it, and then for those same folks to go out and do it.  That
 includes multiple people in all levels of our RPA organization.
 
 Some folks were lucky (and good) and were able to fly fighter jets.
 Others would like a taste of that, with some guidance from local IPs and
 people that can guide those that are new to this.  It isn't that I can't
 find people to do ACM with/against.  I can find many just at my local
 airport.  However, what I don't have is a standards of flight profiles,
 and standards for level of ability ala FAST.  So, I'm not going to go
 out and fly against people I don't know and trust just like I will not
 fly formation without knowing someones ability and that they understand
 the program.
 
 I'd much rather our community pilots go to regular ACM clinics, with
 appropriate level (ex-military) IPs, and learn to do it well, safely,
 and with rules we all understand, than to have them doing it on their
 own, without training, without good IPs in the back.  No one is saying
 go to one 3-day ACM clinic and you are going to be a SH ACM pilot.  But
 teaching some basic BFM 1 v 1 stuff over a series of clinics would be
 fun, valuable, and safe.  Having basic level requires before moving to
 next level clinics would be great times for out community of pilots.  We
 have people that have their FAST cards for multiple years, 100+ hours of
 formation including lots of grab-ass extended trail, and they want to
 learn more, improve their skills, and have fun.
 
 ACM clinics would prevent more accidents then they would ever cause.
 
 DaBear
 
 
 Roger Kemp wrote:
 
 >
 >
 >Tim,
 >Honestly I have mixed emotions on having civilians doing ACM. Sure it is
 >nice to see what their military has trained for and get a taste of what it
 >is like to be a fighter pilot for a day. The problems have come from the
 >type aircraft chosen to present this taste in. It has brought a mirade of
 >headaches to the T-34 and T-6 communities. I really do not want to see that
 >come to our community.
 >As for Acro being no worse on the aircraft than ACM, I would have to
 >disagree. In the fighter training community, acro is a stepping stone to
 >something more. In acro, it is you and the airplane flying a set routine.
 >Your attention is on what your aircraft is doing (airspeed and attitudes
 >flown). ACM is a choreography balancing what your aircraft is doing, what
 >your adversary is doing, thinking far enough ahead of your jet to project
 >where you want to be in the airspace, the corner you are trying to paint
 >your opponent into, and oh by the way look inside for a snap shot of  what
 >your instruments say your plane is doing. If you are pulling the fight and
 >not pushing, your trying to force your adversary to make a mistake so
 >he/she overshoots giving you an in (if you are defensive that is). The
 >entire time you are dividing you attention between your plane, your energy
 >state that is, and your opponent. Flying is second nature. The majority of
 >your attention is employing your jet as a weapons system to kill this
 >bandit, go to his bar and drink his beer.  This is all taking place in a 1
 >v 1, it gets even more dicey in 2v2, 4v4, or you v many.
 >The whole process of minting a steely eyed young fighter pilot is a
 >building block process that takes place over a 18 mo. course of training.
 >He/She exits the B course are FNG wing man who is trying finish gulping
 >down the fire hose they stuck in it's mouth for the last 18 mo. The
 >building process is only beginning. It is not complete until he/she leaves
 >the cockpit at retirement.
 >We can't take a civilian YAK/CJ driver with nothing more than a FAST card
 >and turn them into a "safe" fighter pilot in weekend. We are asking for
 >major trouble if we start doing that. Some Bubba is going to go home
 >thinking that at the end of a 3 day ACM course he is kingkong and put
 >himself or his bud out of control turning themselves into a lawn dart. We
 >just do not need to do that in our community.
 >Tactical flying is one thing but full up ACM needs to stay where it is
 >now... the military where we train to that level of proficiency.
 >Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own dime
 >and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative. But do not do it in
 >the name of the PA and neither should the RPA try to legislate what two
 >consenting  adults do on their on time. The problem will still come if the
 >intrepid YAK drivers (CJ for that matter) go an shuck a wing. Now we have
 >the undivided attention of the FAA in a light we do not want.
 >That is my 2 cents. Now do I fly ACM with some of my squadron
 >buds...truthfully yes. The ROE is so ingrained that the Knock It Off call
 >is almost automatic when a DLO(desired learning objective) is met.
 >Learning to fly tactical is allot of fun and does take energy management of
 >our aircraft to another level. It truly does introduce the 3 dimension to
 >flying, the vertical.
 >Doc
 >
 >
 >
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
 
 ______________________________________________________________
 Verschicken Sie romantische, coole und witzige Bilder per SMS!
 Jetzt bei WEB.DE FreeMail: http://f.web.de/?mc=021193
 
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		| pa3arw(at)euronet.nl Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 2:30 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Thanks Markus, that explains a hell of a lot. I agree with Doc....
 Hans
 
 
 -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
 Van: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com
 [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] Namens Markus Feyerabend
 Verzonden: donderdag 23 maart 2006 11:14
 Aan: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 Onderwerp: RE: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 
 
 
 Hi Hans,
 
 ACM = Air Combat Maneuvers
 
 Regards,
 Markus
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 Gesendet: 23.03.06 11:10:47
 An: <yak-list(at)matronics.com>
 Betreff: RE: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 
 | 
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | 
 Sorry to ask this stupid question: Can anybody explain to me what "ACM"
 stands for???
 It would explain a lot to me...
 
 Hans
 Dutch Yak Pilot
 
 -----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
 Van: owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com
 [mailto:owner-yak-list-server(at)matronics.com] Namens DaBear
 Verzonden: donderdag 23 maart 2006 6:56
 Aan: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 Onderwerp: Re: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 
 
 
 Roger,
 
 The problem is not *if* pilots will do it.  They are doing it.  Sticking
 our collective heads in the sand and saying we don't support it,  don't
 want people to do it, and will not train them to do it, doesn't stop
 that.  Just like you, people are doing ACM in their aircraft.
 
 Your comment is valid:
 
 "Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own
 dime
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative." 
 
 If two people want to brief it up on their own dime ... it is their
 prerogative.  Qualified?  What is that?  If we don't have a standard set
 of qualifications, programs, etc.  Then everyone is qualified, because
 their is no agreed upon level of qualification.  People flew formation
 before FAST.  People fly formation without going to FAST clinics and
 getting instruction, solo "qual", and then wing/lead patches.  Some do
 it safe, many are just lucky.  But they do it.  Not having clinics
 doesn't stop people from flying ACM, it just stops them from having the
 opportunity to learn the "standards."
 
 I agree, someone flying their Yak on a regular basis doing acro is
 different than ACM.  However, I don't agree that a metal fatigue is more
 likely in ACM.  Someone flying a 1985 Yak-52 or 1970 CJ6A, who has no
 idea how much time their aircraft has spent at high G levels, is doing
 acro on a regular basis.  Even competing at IAC events.  Eventually,
 their aircraft could break.  Heck, if they are doing airshows, or even
 just practicing low level and mess something up, they could over G Their
 aircraft multiple times and cause failure.
 
 I see nothing wrong with teaching people a safe way to brief, fly (with
 safety pilots), and debrief ACM hops.  It is better to teach people the
 safe way to do things, rather than ignore it.  I also don't think it is
 right for people to say, don't teach it, don't condone it, RPA doesn't
 support it, and then for those same folks to go out and do it.  That
 includes multiple people in all levels of our RPA organization.
 
 Some folks were lucky (and good) and were able to fly fighter jets.
 Others would like a taste of that, with some guidance from local IPs and
 people that can guide those that are new to this.  It isn't that I can't
 find people to do ACM with/against.  I can find many just at my local
 airport.  However, what I don't have is a standards of flight profiles,
 and standards for level of ability ala FAST.  So, I'm not going to go
 out and fly against people I don't know and trust just like I will not
 fly formation without knowing someones ability and that they understand
 the program.
 
 I'd much rather our community pilots go to regular ACM clinics, with
 appropriate level (ex-military) IPs, and learn to do it well, safely,
 and with rules we all understand, than to have them doing it on their
 own, without training, without good IPs in the back.  No one is saying
 go to one 3-day ACM clinic and you are going to be a SH ACM pilot.  But
 teaching some basic BFM 1 v 1 stuff over a series of clinics would be
 fun, valuable, and safe.  Having basic level requires before moving to
 next level clinics would be great times for out community of pilots.  We
 have people that have their FAST cards for multiple years, 100+ hours of
 formation including lots of grab-ass extended trail, and they want to
 learn more, improve their skills, and have fun.
 
 ACM clinics would prevent more accidents then they would ever cause.
 
 DaBear
 
 
 Roger Kemp wrote:
 
 >
 >
 >Tim,
 >Honestly I have mixed emotions on having civilians doing ACM. Sure it is
 >nice to see what their military has trained for and get a taste of what
 it
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >is like to be a fighter pilot for a day. The problems have come from the >type aircraft chosen to present this taste in. It has brought a mirade of
 >headaches to the T-34 and T-6 communities. I really do not want to see
 that
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >come to our community. >As for Acro being no worse on the aircraft than ACM, I would have to
 >disagree. In the fighter training community, acro is a stepping stone to
 >something more. In acro, it is you and the airplane flying a set routine.
 >Your attention is on what your aircraft is doing (airspeed and attitudes
 >flown). ACM is a choreography balancing what your aircraft is doing, what
 >your adversary is doing, thinking far enough ahead of your jet to project
 >where you want to be in the airspace, the corner you are trying to paint
 >your opponent into, and oh by the way look inside for a snap shot of
 what
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >your instruments say your plane is doing. If you are pulling the fight and
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >not pushing, your trying to force your adversary to make a mistake so >he/she overshoots giving you an in (if you are defensive that is). The
 >entire time you are dividing you attention between your plane, your
 energy
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >state that is, and your opponent. Flying is second nature. The majority of
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >your attention is employing your jet as a weapons system to kill this >bandit, go to his bar and drink his beer.  This is all taking place in a
 1
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >v 1, it gets even more dicey in 2v2, 4v4, or you v many. >The whole process of minting a steely eyed young fighter pilot is a
 >building block process that takes place over a 18 mo. course of training.
 >He/She exits the B course are FNG wing man who is trying finish gulping
 >down the fire hose they stuck in it's mouth for the last 18 mo. The
 >building process is only beginning. It is not complete until he/she
 leaves
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >the cockpit at retirement. >We can't take a civilian YAK/CJ driver with nothing more than a FAST card
 >and turn them into a "safe" fighter pilot in weekend. We are asking for
 >major trouble if we start doing that. Some Bubba is going to go home
 >thinking that at the end of a 3 day ACM course he is kingkong and put
 >himself or his bud out of control turning themselves into a lawn dart. We
 >just do not need to do that in our community.
 >Tactical flying is one thing but full up ACM needs to stay where it is
 >now... the military where we train to that level of proficiency.
 >Now having said all that, if two guys want to brief it up on their own
 dime
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >and are qualified to do that..it is their prerogative. But do not do it in
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >the name of the PA and neither should the RPA try to legislate what two >consenting  adults do on their on time. The problem will still come if
 the
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >intrepid YAK drivers (CJ for that matter) go an shuck a wing. Now we have >the undivided attention of the FAA in a light we do not want.
 >That is my 2 cents. Now do I fly ACM with some of my squadron
 >buds...truthfully yes. The ROE is so ingrained that the Knock It Off call
 >is almost automatic when a DLO(desired learning objective) is met.
 >Learning to fly tactical is allot of fun and does take energy management
 of
 | 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | >our aircraft to another level. It truly does introduce the 3 dimension to >flying, the vertical.
 >Doc
 >
 >
 >
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
 
 ______________________________________________________________
 Verschicken Sie romantische, coole und witzige Bilder per SMS!
 Jetzt bei WEB.DE FreeMail: http://f.web.de/?mc=021193
 
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		| dsavarese(at)elmore.rr.co Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 4:36 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| Also throw in age differences (read - reaction time), and physical 
condition.  Having a current 3rd, 2nd or 1st class medical doesn't make you
 physically fit to participate.
 Dennis
 
 ---
 
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		| mjbjhf(at)charter.net Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 4:58 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| So true Dennis.  I am 41 and fit as a fiddle.  But still went night night 
during the last of six fights during a Air Combat USA flight.  My advice is
 to only participate in these activities with a current proffessional in the
 other seat.  And I found these guys really good.
 
 Michael "Mighty " Bolton
 "If it doesn't sound round, WHY LOOK?"
 ---
 
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		| gus.fraser(at)gs.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 5:55 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| There is already two bodies that 'regulate' aerobatics IAC and CIVA. I
should make the point that competition aerobatics and airshow flying are as
 different as night and day. The safety record at IAC events is remarkable.
 In fact I think the safety record of IAC events is to this day spotless. In
 fact I think that makes it better that RPA
  ))) notice the smiley ! 
 Airshow flying is about going beyond. We All know that the guy who
 helicopters his Pitts 10 ft above the ground is walking a very thin line. A
 reduction in HP, even slightly, can be disastrous. Aerobatics has rules in
 place and these rules, pretty much all of them are obvious and everyone
 accepts them because they make so much sense.
 
 I agree that airshow pilots take, what for me are unacceptable risk but hey
 all to there own. I am happy competing against my last score in a
 competition.
 
 Gus
 
 --
 
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		| brian 
 
  
 Joined: 02 Jan 2006
 Posts: 643
 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
 
 | 
			
				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 6:45 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
				| 
 |  
				| DaBear wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | their aircraft could break.  Heck, if they are doing airshows, or even just practicing low level and mess something up, they could over G Their
 aircraft multiple times and cause failure.
 
 | 
 One good thing about our Eastern Bloc aircraft: they design to a greater
 load margin than do US designers. If the structure is designed to yield
 at 12G and you spec it at 6G, even if you go over a little you still
 have a much greater safety margin than if you do the same to an aircraft
 designed to yield at 9G with a design load factor of 6G. Frankly I am
 going to feel safer in a CJ6A or Yak-52 of unknown background than I am
 a T-34 or SNJ of unknown background. (My opinion. YMMV.)
 
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | ACM clinics would prevent more accidents then they would ever cause. 
 | 
 Now, while I agree with you philosophically, I don't think you can make
 the above statement with any degree of confidence. We just don't know
 because we just don't have enough data. For instance, most people
 wouldn't even try to play fighter jock. Put them through a class and
 they might feel more qualified to go out and try it on their own. In
 that case instruction would make an accident more likely.
 
 OTOH, proper training will reduce the incidence of stupid errors and
 reduce the error rate over that of untrained people attempting the same
 thing. This would likely reduce the accident rate.
 
 So you have competing results from the same action because the initial
 conditions change.
 
 So what does this mean for RPA? It means that we can argue about the
 number of angels dancing on the head of a pin forever since there is no
 hard data from which to make a reasoned decision. It means that anything
 we decide is pure, unsupported, meaningless supposition.
 
 Now the question is, what do we *DO*? Frankly, you guys know where I
 come from. I believe that it is the right and responsibility of the
 PILOT to determine how best to operate his/her aircraft. To that end I
 believe that members of RPA who have skill in an area; be that ACM,
 acro, form, maintenance, systems, or whatever; share that experience in
 a fashion that members interested in a particular activity can make
 decisions based on a better understanding of that activity. I think
 these members should learn and then practice under the watchful eye of
 the people with skill and then solicit the input of these people,
 including accepting, "You know what Bob? I don't think you are really
 getting this. You probably ought to do something else with your airplane."
 
 But in the end, it is the PILOT and not RPA who makes the decision.
 
 (But, boy oh boy, do some people want other people to make their
 decisions for them. <sigh>)
 
 --
 Brian Lloyd                         361 Catterline Way
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com          Folsom, CA 95630
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
 
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 | 
 _________________
 Brian Lloyd
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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		| brian 
 
  
 Joined: 02 Jan 2006
 Posts: 643
 Location: Sacramento, California, USA
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 6:50 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
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				| DaBear wrote:
 
  	  | Quote: |  	  | So teach people what rolling G is, the consequences, and how to do ACM without rolling G.  Sorry Brian, but people (qualified and not yet
 instructed) are doing it today.  Hiding behind the illusion that lack of
 ACM training and clinics will prevent someone from doing ACM is in the
 same vein of if we outlaw guns, we will not have any gun crime.
 
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 Yo! Bear! Who do you think you are talking to here? You are talking to
 the resident extreme libertarian who thinks we should be able to do what
 we want to do, damn the torpedoes. I would *never* advocate legislating
 against any activity (so long as its practice only affects the person
 practicing it). I was just commenting on a possible reason why people
 playing fighter jock might be more likely to break their airplanes than
 people doing straight-ahead acro.
 
 I -*{AGREE}*- with you. Long live instruction in the things we want to
 do! And long live the good sense to do it safely (or not do it as the
 case may be).
 
 --
 Brian Lloyd                         361 Catterline Way
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com          Folsom, CA 95630
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
 
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 _________________
 Brian Lloyd
 brian-yak at lloyd dot com
 +1.916.367.2131 (voice)             +1.270.912.0788 (fax)
 
 I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things . . .
 - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
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		| fougapilot(at)hotmail.com Guest
 
 
 
 
 
 
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				|  Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:14 am    Post subject: [INFO]ACM possible issues |   |  
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				| Our community is still young.  It is growing rapidly both in numbers and in 
experience level. We are far from my first KOSH (1998) when there was only 3
 Yaks / CJ flying in the Big show. The level of professionalism and knowledge
 has done leaps and bounds and continues to grow exponentially. It is only
 normal for the members of our community to seek a higher level of knowledge
 and skills. Heck, I too want to improve my flying abilities. I too am
 interested in both ACM and / or Aerobatic. The question is at what cost.
 Agreed, having trained pilots flying their airplanes will not hurt our
 airplanes as much as the "thrill" rides sold by certain vendors, but still
 the level of fatigue imposed on our airplanes increases during ACM (even if
 compared to Acro).
 
 So, what should the RPA do? Is it better for your association to turn a
 blind eye and leave its members on heir own to learn by trial and error? Is
 it better to come up with a training program and get every interested member
 trained? What is the responsibility of the RPA? Lets face it, both low level
 acro and ACM are high risk activities. Acro is already legislated via the
 FAA, IAC and ICAS but ACM is not. Is the RPA the proper venue to organize /
 legislate ACM? What about liability? Are you covered to fly formation
 aerobatic? After all, that IS what ACM is. Flying semi-improvised aerobatic
 maneuvers in reference to another airplane.
 
 Facts are simple, neither formation flying, aerobatic nor ACM are strictly
 legislated by the FAA. Any pilot can legally go fly formation with their
 SpamCan, same with acro  and / or ACM (assuming they fly acro birds) and
 they will remain legal. Not the best of ideas, but legal no the less. The
 RPA (through FAST and FAST standards) trains its members for "airshow"
 formation. RPA did not come up with the FAST standard, it simply applies it
 to its operation. Should the RPA break new ground and "invent" an ACM
 standard? As with FAST, this standard would most likely have an experience
 level associated with training / qualification (something like: needs a Lead
 patch, 100hrs Acro, 100hrs Form and advance spin training (my numbers
 only)). Would this standard prevent two guys who do not meet the
 requirements from learning on their own the same way FAST prevented two non
 qualified guys from flying formation?... Oh wait a minute, FAST never
 prevented two guys from...
 
 At the end of the day, opening this can of worm will only cause more
 headache to the RPA. ACM has already arrived, nothing we can do about it.
 The RPA will be faced with a tough choice in the near future; either condone
 ACM, not promote ACM or come up with a standard and go full fledge with it.
 Believe it or not, you have a voice in that choice. Let your BOD know in
 which direction you wnat your RPA to go. Personally, I think we should
 someone else break that ice.
 
 Dan
 [quote]From: "Fraser, Gus" <gus.fraser(at)gs.com>
 Reply-To: yak-list(at)matronics.com
 To: "'yak-list(at)matronics.com'" <yak-list(at)matronics.com>
 Subject: RE: Re: [INFO]ACM possible issues
 Date: Thu, 23 Mar 2006 08:54:24 -0500
 
 
 
 There is already two bodies that 'regulate' aerobatics IAC and CIVA. I
 should make the point that competition aerobatics and airshow flying are as
 different as night and day. The safety record at IAC events is remarkable.
 In fact I think the safety record of IAC events is to this day spotless. In
 fact I think that makes it better that RPA
  ))) notice the smiley ! 
 Airshow flying is about going beyond. We All know that the guy who
 helicopters his Pitts 10 ft above the ground is walking a very thin line. A
 reduction in HP, even slightly, can be disastrous. Aerobatics has rules in
 place and these rules, pretty much all of them are obvious and everyone
 accepts them because they make so much sense.
 
 I agree that airshow pilots take, what for me are unacceptable risk but hey
 all to there own. I am happy competing against my last score in a
 competition.
 
 Gus
 
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