NineThreeKilo wrote:That’s the order of priority, but as a professional pilot doing a normal non odd emergency landing should be able to easily do all three, making a few comms as you come in a coordinate with others takes maybe 7% of my mental firepower
As it turns out... the gentlemen who's meeting in the sky precipitated this thread were easily doing all three at the same time as well. There are recordings to prove that... right up until they weren't. I'd bet they would have treated it as though it was an emergency if they had to do it over again. In fact, I'd call that flight an emergency before it even happened
NineThreeKilo wrote:If you have a SODA sure, but the black and white says no dice
Great, so now we add 'check for SODA possessing pilots' before we plan a trip to the airport... This makes so much more sense than not expecting everyone to be on the radio, why didn't I think of that

Honestly the only reason I responded to your comment about an 'Ag pilot shouldn't have a medical if he is deaf' was because they can, and do, and they are not the only professional pilots flying deaf... all of which is occurring at uncontrolled airports... you know... the kind in the title of this thread..
NineThreeKilo wrote: Like I said before it really takes away nothing for me to ALSO communicate as I come in for a normal landing, I got no prob picking out traffic, but I’m also not scared of the PTT button and having a 2 way communication, it’s not difficult for me to fly, look and talk at the same time
Agreed, funny spraying sidebar...
When people think of crop dusters, they have an image in their mind of a graceful swooping turn in the magic morning air of a powerhouse that would never need for horsepower.
No one is picturing the kid in the cockpit, chemical running out, chemical that
must fit that job. Is it coming out at 2 gal/acre? 1.5, or 2.4? are you running short or running long, because you will need to address that. Now.. like immediately, or you
will run short / long. Are you still on your swath? or at least intercepting it? shit... what do you mean you're 5 feet off and moving away? Do you know what defoliation looks like on the green cotton it doesn't hit? Speaking of defoliation, are you sure the wind is still blowing away from the vineyard next door, or are you buying some dead grapes this year? And did you already decide if you're going under that wire that is 300' away as you are approaching at a buck fifty with 5000#'s of poison straddled in-between a literal bomb of fuel? Because if you didn't, you're going to hit it as you instinctively pull up, requiring a tear down ow the $489K engine, and no work while it's down... Break, break, one nine... can I get a radio check? A few thousand hours of that and he'll be having a sandwich and a pop, catching up on an Ebook or Rosetta Stone, while spraying the country side and wondering why he was so task saturated just flying the damn thing before.... But he damned sure wasn't born thataway.
ya I get it... you can walk, talk, chew gum yada, yada, yada... Turns out I might could too

I'm also not afraid to admit that if you don't train your brain to prioritize, it will take the path of least resistance when you are instantly and unpleasantly surprised. That path is the way you unintentionally trained for... it's why many pilots will die pulling the stick or yoke back when the wing has already quit, and why others have died making radio calls. As was the case in the recent mid air.
I agree whole heartedly with your comment that communication is lacking in the vast majority of radio comms today... I am just not ready to make that a priority over flying the airplane.
As someone who also spends a fair amount of time in the air, like you I could probably fill out an entire book on ridiculous radio transmissions du jour. Sometimes I think 'that pilot should have thought before they keyed', sometimes you can pick the obvious errors like 'on final for 20'... when you can see them on 02, shoot I've been at the place that comes to mind there and had a call for final on 22? Maybe he's landing both at the same time?... Turns out they're human too. I probably pick out more awkward transmissions than the average Joe because I'm not poised to hit the trigger for my own call, but rather content disseminating the disheveled calls of others and keying up when it counts.
Good radio work is good... making your radio work good is great, but it doesn't fix the bad radio work of those you can't control, that's a one way road. And once more that assumes the other guy even has a radio, has it set right, knows how to use it, but is just not good with it.
Learning how to not be a target works regardless of how well the other guy flies... I *think* that was the message here.
Take care, Rob