BigBird wrote:
I was motivated to join this forum by Bob's post about radio requirements at Torrey Pines and USH”P”A supporting it Seems to me if certain pilots don’t respond to visual prompts to get out of the air in an emergency then a radio will be just as useless. I personally don’t want to hear the chatter of a “control” frequency at any site.
Good points BigBird!!!
Does anyone think that seeing one of these flying around wouldn't be enough to clear the air?
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Did you notice the PA system dangling from that thing? What's going to be more effective, a small hand-held radio stuffed in a harness that
might be turned on, and
might be tuned to the right frequency, and
might have the volume turned up, and
might have the battery fully charged, or that helicopter and PA system blasting "
Clear the air"? The failure modes of the former are many. The failure modes of the latter are about zero.
BigBird wrote:
I kinda feel the USH”P”A is an ineffective, good buddy oriented, organization. IMHO, the USH"P"A support for this radio requirement is a perfect example of that.
You're exactly right. USHPA has become the concessionaire's lap dog. That's why USHPA has failed to balance the Soaring Council and has done everything they could do to undermine the Torrey Hawks.
RickMasters wrote:
don't get it. What was wrong with the idea of a red flag? And if everybody already has a cell phone, why not use that? The concessionaire could send a message from "TORREY CLOSED." No response needed. What's the 2-way for? To argue about it? And what's wrong with a siren? Anybody besides me ever hear of a radio running out of juice? Anybody besides me ever hear of a pilot setting the wrong channel? For Christ sake, it's Torrey Pines, not an XC contest. What kind of idiots run that place now?
Jeez, I remember when the original hotdoggers would launch HGs standing on the bar without a harness...
All excellent points. Those measures work for every other site in the country. Crestline, for example, has a big "X" they roll out when they need to land. Eagle is right. The radio rule is just a way for them to single pilots out, and demand that they land when they haven't broken any rules. USHPA's willingness to impose this on us further demonstrates that they are NOT a pilot's organization.