As pilots and aviators, we have to face the facts: 1. Accidents to happen 2. Most of the time it’s the pilot’s fault 3. Mortality rate in aviation accidents is not that great.

Undoubtedly, there are many decisions that go into making a successful flight. This starts the night before, making sure that you are rested, sober (from both alcohol and drugs, even some medications), and you have an idea of what’s in store for the following day’s flight.

Then there are the hundreds of little items you must consider in your preflight planning, walk around, engine run-up, and all the miscellaneous items in between that don’t really fit in a category.

Lots of little things. Lots of opportunity to screw up.


Truth of the matter is, we all make mistakes. As a pilot, it is inevitable that you too will make mistakes. Those of us that survive are the ones that make smaller mistakes we can learn from. Those that don’t, well, Fate is the Hunter.

But, that said, it’s important to realize that you are human therefore you CAN make mistakes.

Many things that you do in preflight, as we’ve named a few, have little consequence unless you push into the air when you know better. And, so the cycle goes. On domino, leading to a larger domino, leading to another.

So there are two types of mistakes; the initial ‘mental’ mistake, and how you handle that earlier mistake down the road. In other words, the second ‘decision’ can become a mistake if not handled correctly.

There is a saying out there in aviation that I have found to be applicable, and true:

“Flying is full with hours of boredom, speckled with moments of sheer terror”

What I believe is this: As aviators, virtual or otherwise, we are going to make mistakes and be faced with situations that seem beyond our control. We get to choose our path. PANIC or PERFORM.

I stumbled across this acronym a few months back, and I think it totally explains what happens when a pilot fails to answer the call the action. The call that will inevitably come to those who brave the skies.

PANIC

Pressured-And-Not-In-Control


I had a particular experience, which was well documented and discussed. Some friends and I had flown into an airport in Washington with a popular FS scenery, to see what the real scenery was like. The day was fairly normal, with light wind, and acceptable temperatures.

The runway, however, was shorter than I’m used to, although still completely doable for the Bonanza we were in. 2500 with the density altitude and load we had was no big deal.

The amount of trees around the airport, however, made me second guess every number and figure. But, we were set. It was fine.

On the departure, there was a sudden shift in wind because the way that the towering trees, and the terrain, were setup. Just as I took off (my mistake was I rotated a bit prematurely, my mistake #1) the wind shifted from a headwind, to an equally as strong left crosswind, killing much of the performance we had.

Barreling forward, trees at eye level, I had a choice to make. With my airspeed right at ‘stall speed’, I could pull up to avoid the trees, or I could determine myself to plow forward and trust all I had been taught, and what I knew to be true.

I could not pull up. I could not afford the airspeed. I was already milking every knot I could.

PANIC, and we were dead.

Thankfully, and with humility I don’t want to take credit for it, we came out the other side, missing the trees by mere feet.

WATCH THE PILOT-CAM ON THIS TAKEOFF

I was terrified, scared far more than I had ever experienced, but I didn’t panic. That, mixed with the experience I was able to gain over the years, was what pulled us through. I don’t have some huge amount of skill. I believe myself to be an average humble. I choose to be average, or at least view myself as such, as I believe it offers an extra layer of safety. I don’t need pride in my cockpit!

So, the moral of the story, and of this article, is that these decisions and situations will come up for you.

Based on the experience you gain, both through training and through the hours you spend in the air flying wherever your heart desires, you too can remain calm and collected during your moment of crisis. This moment, again, will happen to you. It’s not a matter of if, but when.

Hold to what you know is true, don’t be afraid to trust your gut, and pull through. Besides, as the Pilot-in-Command, it is entirely up to you to do so.

It is your duty, and your charge.

DO NOT PANIC!



Join the Conversation!
Have you ever made mistakes, and averted disaster?


  • Wyogunslinger

    ‘Watched you take-off in Washington Chris. Just one question, did everyone on board have a change of underwear with them? Because, as Bill Cosby once said, “First you say it, then you do it !”

    • http://www.flyaoamedia.com Chris Palmer

      Haha! I love Bill Cosby. Thankfully no one lost their cool, and thankfully no one lost control of their bowels. That would have been a mess, literally!

  • http://www.eamonnwatson.com Eamonn Watson

    Dude I hear ya man.. During my pilot training I had a couple scary moments.

    I did my training out of CYXU (London, Ontario http://bit.ly/ttQKGF), and it was my 2nd solo, I had maybe 10 hours time in total in a C172.

    My instructor and I were doing touch and go’s and he then decided for me to do some on my own so he got out. I proceeded back to the runway and proceeded with takeoff, everything was going swimmingly as it did for my 1st solo the day prior. I did the circuit perfectly and had a nice approach going on and performed a nice smooth landing, then things went a little wonky.

    I was taught when doing a touch and go in a C172 to put flaps up BEFORE advancing the thrust to full power, however for whatever reason, I advanced thrust first. The airplane immediately did a left yaw and headed for the edge of the runway.. I was on Runway 9 at CYXU which is 150′ wide and 6300′ long. I will admit part of me did panic a bit. Because I had advanced the thrust without raising the flaps I hadn’t reduced the wing loading of the aircraft and it was still technically flying even though the wheels were on the pavement. Because I was inexperienced I didn’t step on the right rudder to straighten the aircraft out. Anyway, I hit 60 knots before running off the edge of the runway and pulled the airplane into the air. Once I was in the air I realized my mistake and noticed my flaps were still deployed. I realize now it was a stupid mistake and one I never made again. It was because the aircraft did something I wasn’t expecting as It hadn’t happened before and I panicked slightly. That was the most intense experience in my flying.. I’ve had an engine failure on takeoff once which wasn’t as bad. :)

    Live and learn..

    • http://www.flyaoamedia.com Chris Palmer

      Exactly, live and learn. I must reiterate that we ALL make mistakes. Anyone that claims to be a perfect pilot or holds a persona as if they can handle anything and everything that comes their way is dangerous to fly with.

      You made a mistake. It was a small enough mistake that you were able to learn from it. And the list of lessons from that event isn’t small. It goes pretty deep!.

      So, good job! Could have been worse. In my opinion, you stayed in pretty good control for your experience level. Many people really would have paniked, then pancaked into the taxiway signs or something.

  • ray

    wow!, I heard you talk about this on fsbreak but didn’t fully understand what you meant…..now I do, that might have been a good time to take up religion man, think I might have been praying to every and any god.

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