06-13-2020, 01:29 PM
(06-13-2020, 08:51 AM)Peetwo Wrote:
The Last Minute Hitch: 12 June 2020
12 June 2020
Comments 0 Comments
– Steve Hitchen
History has shown us that breath spent on demanding formal inquiries into aviation is largely wasted. If the energy and political patronage of the Aviation Safety Regulation Review (ASRR) has failed to bring about any substantial change in the fortunes of the general aviation community, it's not a long bow to suggest that no inquiry will ... and that includes a Royal Commission.
Quote:
We Need a Royal Commission: Dick Smith
12 June 2020
Comments 1 Comment
Aviation activist, former CASA chairman and entrepreneur Dick Smith has supported growing industry calls for a Royal Commission into aviation in Australia.
In a video posted to social media site Vimeo last week, Smith cites several fatal crashes in Australia as evidence of the need for an inquiry.
"I agree with those pilots that are calling for a Royal Commission," Smith says in the video. "We had a Royal Commission into home insulation after four people lost their lives. Now we've got 15 who have died, I believe, completely unnecessarily."
Smith's 15 are the six who died onboard Cheyanne VH-TNP near Benalla, Vic, in 2004; the three people killed when Navajo VH-OAO crashed trying to get into Mount Hotham in July 2005, the crash of Mooney VH-DJU near Coffs Harbour in September last year and the mid-air collision south of Mangalore earlier this year in which four professional pilots died.
According to Smith, the common denominator is that all aircraft were operating in Class G uncontrolled airspace, when they would have been in Class E airspace had reforms been implemented in the 1990s.
"As per the original AMATS [Airways Management Air Traffic Services] agreement 29 years ago, I believe that at airports served by airline traffic, the Class E should come down to either 1200 feet AGL or 700 feet AGL," Smith told Australian Flying.
"It should also be the same at busy airports with good ADS-B/radar coverage. This would follow the North American system, which works very well and safely."
AMATS was first proposed in December 1991, two years after Dick Smith was appointed Chairman of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA). He resigned in 1992 before being reinstated as Chairman of the new Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) in December 1997.
In February 1998, Class E airspace replaced Class G for a six-month trial, which mandated transponder use in the Class E.
Smith resigned again in March 1999.
Smith has also urged Airservices Australia Chairman John Weber to resign, saying he has "blood on his hands" because Airservices did not provide a separation service for the aircraft involved in the Mangalore crash.
Dick Smith has recently thrown his weight behind pilots who are starting to get loud about an RC into aviation, using four tragic events as the supporting evidence for his call. But, Dick may be preaching to the exasperated; the battle-weary aviation community that has endured inquiry after inquiry to achieve nothing. Although there may be merit is his call to go once more unto the breach, you can't really blame anyone for wondering what would be the point. Dick points out that it took the death of only four people to bring about an RC into the home insulation debacle, but the analogy needs some reworking. That commission was put into play by the Abbott government in December 2013, three months after the Liberal Party seized power from the ALP, who instigated the home insulation scheme. As the scheme had been shut down nearly four years earlier, the RC was probably nothing more than clubbing seals to show them who was now in charge. My point is that RCs are often political footballs that are almost never kicked into play by a government that stands to lose the game from doing so. And like the ASRR, an RC's finding have no legal standing, so the government can shelve them with the comfort of knowing that the full weight of the aviation industry can't produce the damaging outcry that banking or child abuse can.
Quote:schools will always need one in the air and one on the charger
Electricial energy looks like it has leapt ahead in the race to replace avgas. The last fortnight has seen the magniX eCaravan fly for the first time and EASA issue the very first type certificate for an electric aircraft. Not so long ago, we were talking big about unleaded avgas and biofuels to replace Jet-A1, both of which promised large and delivered small. Right now, development has stalled whereas electricity projects are flying high. The surge in electric power has been helped along by the rapidly-evolving urban mobility market, which is contemporary speak for VTOLs and air taxis, many of which are being designed to use electrical power. That in itself comes from the technical success of drones, of which many run on battery power. And it is the batteries that are currently the weakest point in the system, as there needs to be a lot more development work done to bolster the endurance. Right now, power output is tied tightly to the battery weight and the need for the batteries to be light currently puts the stoppers on long-range flight. The recently certified[b] [/b]Pipistrel Velis Electro is good for 50 minutes of flight before it needs to be put in an electrical umbilical and charged again. That means it can't be used for the next block booking in the hot-bunking way that avgas trainers are now. To keep up with the booking sheet, schools will always need one in the air and one on the charger, which means one aircraft for the price of two. Electrical power might be at the front of the field, but in the race for widespread acceptance it is still a long way from the finish line.
CASA threw the CATS among the pigeons last week when it called for consultation feedback for the transitional rules for the flight operations regs. These are called the consequential, application, transitional and savings (CATS) regulations. Basically they are regs to make sure the suite is not delayed any further past the 2 December 2021 implementation date. However, CASA has allowed only until 30 June this year for the consultation, which in the COVID-plagued times we are in is being seen as a resource-sapping demand when operators really want to concentrate on still being around to see the regs implemented. CASA has pointed out that it is asking for feedback on only eight specific points in the CATS rather than the whole document for that very reason, saying the consultation survey should take about 10 minutes. Of course, that doesn't take into account the time needed to analyse the impacts of the regulations, including trying to second guess what the post-COVID GA industry is going to look like. CASA is obviously busting their chops to make sure the implementation date doesn't get pushed back. In fact, this would probably be the best thing to do; COVID has delayed everything and aviation regs aren't really immune to that. If implementation was rescheduled for December 2022, it would give the industry a chance to concentrate on breathing and CASA wouldn't need to let the CATS out of the bag until sometime next year. From what I am hearing, there is more to come on this.
May your gauges always be in the green,
Hitch
Sandy in reply...
Sandy Reith • 3 hours ago
Golly gosh...CATS! What can we dream up next? Wasn’t the regulatory rewrite pronounced finished 2020? Maybe just finished in principle (after 32 years and several hundred $million).
Reminds one of the government accepting only ‘in principle’ fifteen of about thirty odd government agreed recommendations from the comprehensive Aviation Safety Regulation Review (ASRR), Forsyth report. What happened to the ASRR ? Well might you ask. Announced in 2013, it took 269 submissions and the Minister released his report on the findings in December 2014. Discernible or meaningful results zero, unless one counts the negatives. The massive time wasting and costs to the General Aviation (GA) industry, raised hopes, then continuing loss of businesses and jobs with disillusioned personnel leaving GA for good.
‘Royal’ Commission? I have the greatest admiration for Dick but I don’t think ‘Royal’ has much cachet today. Besides the perpetuation of Government Industries, sub section Inquiries (GII), is simply dancing to the GII fiddle. Of course they love it, it means that nothing actually happens while they all look earnestly (all with very lucrative contracts) at the hugely complicated problems which are caused GI in the first place. And so help me, the Senate is having yet another inquiry and asking for submissions again. Why don’t they read the 269 from the ASRR? Too much like hard work, and they don’t really want to make changes. The Senators and other MPs should be demanding some reforms immediately, and they would if they were fair dinkum. Independent instructors, ASICs abolish or make ten years valid. Freehold lots on airports and wind up all the failed airport leasing structures, private pilot medicals as driver standard successfully demonstrated over past 30 years in the low weight category. Do away with Cessna SIDs on private aircraft, as in USA. Then put CASA back under direct Ministerial control. Its easy if you want to create jobs, services and businesses in GA but won’t happen unless or until we have real leadership or a depression causes government to look for ways out of the giant hole that it’s bureaucrats have dug for us and that we’ve all fallen into.
http://disq.us/p/29wcias
MTF...P2
Ps Plus:
CASA creates Post-isolation Checklists
3 June 2020
Comments 1 Comment
The Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) has created a series of checklists to help GA pilots return to aviation safely as governments relax COVID-19 restrictions...
Quote:Sandy Reith • 3 hours ago
As the experts for keeping aviators and their aircraft safely on the ground I’m sure that CASA’s expertise will be welcomed as the few left in GA blow the rust out of their exhaust ports.
Ref: http://disq.us/p/29wczjd