

What has prompted this, is once again we have a "tragic accident" in van der bijl park. I will probably get crucified here but nonetheless i am saddened and upset as well by this tragic incident. Once again a public outcry about how unsafe it is. My question/s here is what standard or level of training did the deceased person recieve.
What sort of pre-flight was carried out(was he taught how to do a proper pre-flight at all times) and shoot me down but to not be able to re-act quick enough to hit the mag switches i find a bit absurd(was he ever taught this). It's not like we are sitting on 11000 pounds of thrust that rockets us to 300 kmh in seconds. I have met some friends who have never heard of a side slip or were shown it at any time during there training. This tells me STANDARDS OF TRAINING DO VARY FROM SCHOOL TO SCHOOL.
What i would like to know is does the CAA go and check up where the deceased recieved his training, how long for, what was covered, etc etc.
All ive ever heard or seen here is the CAA are at the scene, were at the scene or are returning to the scene. I am starting to understand maybe in some cases as to why indemnity forms are so important. They also protect the flight training centre from incompetency perhaps. WE ALL KNOW AVIATION IS A RISK. RISKS ARE MINIMIZED THROUGH GOOD COMPETENT TRAINING.
Last but not least some people are just not cut out to be "AVIATORS" no matter how much we would like to convince ourselves. I speak for myself here and it's one of the reasons why i stopped flying. I was too nervous and i could never shake it when caught in turbulance. I was honest and realistic with myself.
Maybe David Daniels can pass comment on the standards. At this rate maybe MPLS must qualify after 50 hours!!
Your's in Walking



CHAZ