X-Virus-Scanned: clean according to Sophos on Logan.com Return-Path: Received: from [69.171.58.236] (account marv@lancaironline.net) by logan.com (CommuniGate Pro WEBUSER 5.1c.2) with HTTP id 1312387 for lml@lancaironline.net; Sun, 23 Jul 2006 01:11:27 -0400 From: "Marvin Kaye" Subject: Re: response to Terrence O'Neill's posting... To: lml X-Mailer: CommuniGate Pro WebUser v5.1c.2 Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2006 01:11:27 -0400 Message-ID: In-Reply-To: <007301c6ae08$7c442550$f58711ac@TOSHIBA> References: <007301c6ae08$7c442550$f58711ac@TOSHIBA> X-Priority: 3 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain;charset="iso-8859-1";format="flowed" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Posted for "Ed Kary" : Dear Terrence, Regarding your comments in reply to Jeff's e-mail: I found your comments fairly uninformed in response to Jeff Edwards' well thought out e-mail that brought up a trememdous amount of valid safety points. I am confident of Jeff's adroitness with safety statistics; this is his "bread and butter". Specifically, as to your comment about "airline piklots" (sic) being "baby-sat from taxi clearance to shut down", I take exception and I find your comment way out of line. If you think that I need to be baby sat, I wish I could invite you on one of my typical trans-Pacific or inter-Asia flights to observe and see for yourself from my cockpit jump seat just how demanding the job is and why my experience and safety training come into play on a daily basis. I don't know what you base this comment on, unless you were a Part 121 Captain yourself who actually needed to be "baby-sat" as you conducted your duties. Perhaps instead of picking apart another individuals comments about low flight time pilot error and it's relationship to possible causal factors of high performance aircraft mishaps, you might instead take a healthy dose of humility and attempt to learn something that just might save your own bacon someday in your modified experimental aircraft. Regards, Ed Kary, Captain, Part 121, ratings: ATP, CFI, CFII Type Ratings: 757, 767, 747, DC-10, A-330 Total Flight time: over 20,000 hrs Former US Naval Aviator: single-seat carrier aviator; over 3000 hrs; 678 carrier landings (138 night) Proud builder: IV-P (~65%)