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Shannon's "Accident" was no accident, it was the
inevitable outcome of a long chain of bad decisions. Tragic?
Absolutely! Avoidable? Completely! This was not a case where something
suddenly and unexpectedly failed resulting in an element of surprise
normally associated with an "accident". The engine, over the course of
hours, was methodically reducing itself to scrap. In the process it was
displaying multiple symptoms of its reversion to bauxite. High
temperatures, high oil consumption and low oil pressures, none of
these are good signs. Adding three quarts of oil after a short demo
flight and then attempting to fly home, using a high power / RPM
setting, with an obviously sick engine is the wrong course of action at
many levels.
This reminds me of a time at a Lancair fly-in where I was approached by
a pilot asking me if I thought 35 PSI of oil pressure for a Lycoming
was OK. I told him that it absolutely was NOT and that I knew for a
fact that his engine would fail if it was run at that pressure for
long. I advised him to ground the plane until he isolated the problem,
even if it was the pressure sensor. I offered to assist. He told me
that the engine had been running that way since it was rebuilt 35
hours ago and that he would fly it home to Southern California and then
take it to the shop for them to investigate. The engine failed on the
trip home with the #4 con rod crank bearing seizing and then attempting
to leave the engine compartment. In this case the "accident" was the
fact that this happened on downwind at the home airport and that the
pilot was able to land safely. I say accident because successfully
landing a IV with a five cylinder engine and a fist sized hole in the
engine case is an unexpected event.
These scenarios are common because they are NOT the result of poor
training but rather, poor judgment and poor judgment does not get
trained out of someone if the training focuses on skills and
procedures.
Shannon's death was brought about by the actions and decisions of three
people; the Builder, the Mechanic and the Pilot. The Builder did not
fully understand the implications of the performance modifications he
installed. The Mechanic did not ground an obviously sick engine. The
Pilot decided to fly a sick engine, ignored multiple warning signs and
decided not to make any (of several) precautionary landings. Any one of
these people could of, should of grounded the airplane and prevented
the last flight. Why not? Because they were all Shannon and Shannon
shares a common trait with all of us. A simple fact that has caused
many, many "accidents".
People at far more cavalier with their own safety that the safety of
others.
This intrinsic human behavior has caused the death of many.
Some equally simple rules to follow to counteract your natural tendency
to kill yourself:
Rule #1) All anomalous events REQUIRE investigation.
Rule #2) Uttering the phrase "Whatever that was, I am sure it is not a
problem" is NOT a repair.
Rule #3) Before a flight, ask yourself if you would let your wife /
child / parent fly that plane without you on board.
Rule #4) The urge to ask for a second opinion is confirmation that
there is an actual problem. See rule #1.
Just because you are capable of building, maintaining and flying an
airplane does NOT mean you are an expert in failure assessment, failure prediction or failure analysis and, what you
don't know can likely kill you. Be afraid, be a coward, be overly
conservative and live to learn.
Regards
Brent Regan
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