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Television Transportation

FAA Revokes Certificates of Two Pilots Involved in Plane-Swapping Attempt (cbs8.com) 84

Whatever happened to those two pilots who attempted to swap planes in mid-air — skydiving from one to the other while the planes slowly tumbled toward the desert 65 miles southeast of Phoenix?

One pilot successfully reached the other plane — but the other pilot didn't, parachuting safely to the ground instead. "All of our safety protocols worked," the first pilot said triumphantly in a documentary streamed on Hulu. Er, but what about that second plane, slowly tumbling toward the ground without a pilot? It fell 14,000 feet, landing "nose first" (according to footage from a local newscast) — though its descent was also slowed by a parchute. (Both planes also had a specially-engineered braking system to slow their fall so the skydiving pilots could overtake them.) The stunt was sponsored by Red Bull.

Both pilots had previously conducted more than 20,000 skydives — "but there's a problem," that local newscast pointed out. "The FAA says it had denied Red Bull permission to attempt the plane swap because it would not be in the public's interest." So now both pilots — who'd had "commercial pilot certificates" from America's Federal Aviation Administration — have had their certificates revoked.

The Associated Press reports: In a May 10 emergency order, the FAA cites the two pilots, Luke Aikins and Andrew Farrington, and describes their actions as "careless and reckless." Aikins also faces a proposed $4,932 fine from the agency....

Aikins had petitioned for an exemption from the rule that pilots must be at the helm with safety belts fastened at all times. He argued the stunt would "be in the public interest because it would promote aviation in science, technology, engineering and math."

While both pilots must surrender their certificates immediately, there is an appeal process.

Aikins had shared a statement on Instagram after the stunt, saying he made the "personal decision to move forward with the plane swap" despite the lack of the FAA exemption.

"I regret not sharing this information with my team and those who supported me."

"I am now turning my attention to cooperatively working transparently with the regulatory authorities as we review the planning and execution."
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FAA Revokes Certificates of Two Pilots Involved in Plane-Swapping Attempt

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  • It fell 14,000 feet, landing "nose first" (according to footage from a local newscast [youtu.be]) — though its descent was also slowed by a parchute. (Both planes also had a specially-engineered braking system to slow their fall so the skydiving pilots could overtake them.)

    At 1:47 in the news video you see the plane descending and then its wreckage, which looks unsurvivable.

    Why was it such a hard crash? Here's an emergency parachute system working:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    Can anyone explain the reason for the difference? Maybe "parchute" wasn't really a typo in TFS, and it's like a carton of Malk [youtube.com]?

    • From that very short clip of the plane descending it it sure looks like the parachute did not fully engage and expand, maybe it just didn't work properly or was undersized for the weight of the plane.

      Parachutes are complicated stuff, wouldn't surprise me if they just got it wrong in this case, whether out of hubris or incompetence.

    • A shallow and superficial take, I admit, but the guy in the interview wearing his adjustable baseball cap backwards did not install a lot of confidence in his good judgment.

    • watching the analysis video (https://youtu.be/IRRX9UoWkQY?t=177), the plane entered a spin as the pilot jumped out, preventing either pilot from entering the plane. The spin probably interfered with the deployment of the parachute.

  • by bkmoore ( 1910118 ) on Saturday May 14, 2022 @01:30PM (#62533104)
    I honestly have no ill will towards either of these skydivers, but they in my opinion, they really made complete fools out of themselves. Not only did they perform an illegal stunt, but they also failed to perform said stunt and wrecked an airplane as a result. At least they both made it out unharmed. This needs to be a reminder to everyone in aviation, it doesn't matter if you had 20,000 successful parachute jumps each, or have 20,000 safe flight hours under your belt, your reputation and your career can end in an instant by one bad judgement. In the case of a pilot who makes a bad decision in the heat of battle, such as dealing with an actual aircraft emergency, I have some sympathy especially if they learn from that mistake and can educate others. But in this case, I have little sympathy. This stunt was preplanned. They both got into airplanes with the intent to willfully violate Federal Aviation Regulations. Their support team also woke up that morning with the intent to assist others to violate FARs. Inexcusable. Although it's been said before, "play stupid games, win stupid prizes." I hope both of these pilots do some careful soul searching and reexamining of their priorities. Their recklessness made the whole sport of skydiving look bad. If the FAA didn't revoke their certificates, it would be setting a bad precedent, and invite more bad pilot behavior.
    • but they also failed to perform said stunt and wrecked an airplane as a result

      Stunts fail to get performed all the time. If they all worked with 100% certainty they would be boring and not a stunt.

      That said one pilot did it, so it wasn't a complete failure. But they went into this expecting that it was likely both planes could get wreaked. That's generally what happens in a stunt. There's nothing from them to learn about this stunt.

      There's plenty to learn about how to discuss rules with the FAA in the leadup to said stunt. Begging for forgiveness is something reserved for the wife af

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. I hope these two assholes never get certified again.

  • Appeals process (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday May 14, 2022 @02:00PM (#62533162)

    When you ask for permission and get told no and get punished for doing it anyway realistically your appeal process should be someone coming and kicking you in the balls really hard and telling you to fuck off.

    There's nothing to appeal. They ignored a very clear instruction.

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Saturday May 14, 2022 @02:04PM (#62533176) Homepage

    The US is far more restrictive when it comes to these kind of stunts than smaller countries.

    Or even India - which is in no way a Banana Republic. But it is a lot easier to convince the DGCA-India to let you try something like this than the US's FAA

    • Yeah, this. If you want to do stupid things with planes, the USA is not it and I'm HAPPY with that. We almost got 10 years without a fatality on a major carrier. The way I see it, the FAA does a fine job when compared to what you see in many other countries. These guys are getting exactly what they deserve. Fly stupid, lose your license to fly in the USA.

      • We almost got 10 years without a fatality on a major carrier.

        And if someone had tried this every year for the last ten, and died in the attempt, we would still be without a fatality on a major carrier for "almost ten years"....

    • Red Bull sponsoring you?

      Fine, get them to sponsor you to do that stunt in a country where that stunt is approved.

      Not do it when it is not approved and get into legal hot water.

      It's not like this is 2 random people doing a stunt and then saying "ops, I didn't know I couldnt do this". These are people holding CPLs, which I believe qualify them to be airline pilots. You don't want an airline pilot to suddenly decide to do crazy stunts when you are in the airline, do you?

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      The US is far more restrictive when it comes to these kind of stunts than smaller countries.

      Or even India - which is in no way a Banana Republic. But it is a lot easier to convince the DGCA-India to let you try something like this than the US's FAA

      And yet, the US is one of the freest countries in which one person can fly in. And one of the most respected - despite certain issues, FAA approval of something pretty much guarantees approval in Europe and other places. I'm sure if India approves a plane, everyon

  • 1) Good.
    2) Why is this on Slashdot?

  • He argued the stunt would "be in the public interest because it would promote aviation in science, technology, engineering and math."

    I'm part of the public but I don't think one bit that this is my interest at all. In fact I think it's dumb and pathetic. I know it's done over the Arizona dessert, but the planes could still glide into something or someone. What happens then? We pay a few millions for the damage? It's not that easy! It's one thing to cause and accident and pay for it, but it's an entirely different thing to deliberately defy FAA's saying "no" and pull a massively reckless stunt and possibly getting someone killed. You ca

  • IANAL so I don't know if they share any LEGAL responsibility, but by sponsoring this stunt without checking that laws and regulations were being followed, they share moral responsibility.

    Fortunately, nobody was hurt and as far as I know, the only property damage was to the plane and to the hunk of dirt the plane landed on. But if someone who wasn't involved had been hurt or lost property, Red Bull would've been morally and perhaps even legally obligated to acknowledge its responsibility and pay damages.

    As

  • The nearly earned The Darwin Award.

  • So the FAA has revoked the Certs for the two pilots but I have to wonder if the pilots knew that the FAA had not granted permission for the stunt.

    Even though the FAA told Red Bull "nope! you can't do that" Red Bull went ahead with it anyway.

    The two pilots probably didn't know about the lack of permission as they had just been hired for the stunt, not get the permits themselves, so when Red Bull said "lets do this!" they just did what they were hired to do trusting that Red Bull had taken care of all the pa

    • The summary says: "Aikins had shared a statement on Instagram after the stunt, saying he made the "personal decision to move forward with the plane swap" despite the lack of the FAA exemption." Both pilots knew they were denied an exemption but performed the stunt anyway. This is most likely why their licenses were revoked so quickly.
      • My morning mega dose of caffeine hadn't fully kicked in when I posted and I missed that part.

        I stand better informed. Thank you for calling that out to me.

  • These 2 asshats left 2 planes uncontrolled, so they could crash $diety knows where (and the video proves they didn't know) for views.

    As a ground hugging person, I don't look kindly on assholes crashing planes on my head because "views, man. views".

    If I owned a cabin within 50 miles of this stunt I'd be looking for a DA to charge them with attempted murder at the least, and anything else the DA thought they could make stick.

    Not to mention the civil suits
    • The debate isn't about that. This wasn't just 2 people. It was a large co-ordinated team arranging a stunt with checks and balances in place. Their only concern was the application of a rule not written for the scenario being discussed. Also the planes weren't left uncontrolled. They actually wrote a custom autopilot for it and modified the planes so that the autopilot would function during a nosedive. The fact it failed didn't mean they left the plane uncontrolled, and they had a designated and well known

      • You read that and took away the wrong piece of information. The main issue wasn't the seatbelt at all, it is "pilots must be at the helm", The seatbelt is safety mechanism but I would have thought it would not have even entered into the ruling apart from stating the whole rule.
  • I imagine RedBull themselves must be very pissed at them, potentially exposes them to liability issues as well as will make getting approvals in the future that much more difficult.
  • I would understand the FAA's logic if there were a significant number of random people within range of the stunt, but it sounds pretty remote.
  • Great advertising potential there. *rolls eyes*

  • Most likely sponsor pressure. There's a couple cases where people doing crazy shit for Red Bull have died or seriously injured themselves. The company is so desperate to maintain their "cool" image with every more extreme stunts and not a fuck given for the safety of the people doing them.

    • A fuck is surely given. A strong fuck, with NDAs in the planning stages and lots of pressure to keep fuck-ups under wraps. The reason for the fuck isn't concern for the people, it's concern for the possible bad PR.

      They'll probably outsource the development to a TV company, or something like that, to provide a layer of plausible deniability.

  • Both pilots had previously conducted more than 20,000 skydives

    20,000 / 365 -> 54 years, divided by two pilots makes 27 years - one dive a day. Assuming you do 10 or 15 when you go out for sky diving, that means roughly a sky diving trip per week.

    Does not really sound plausible.

    • You can do more than one skydive a day. Also not every skydive was probably done at maximum altitude. The one time I went skydiving most of the people on the plane jumped at low altitude (1400 ft) as they needed jumps for certification. They immediately opened their chutes once clear so they only took a few minutes to go to the ground.
      • You can do more than one skydive a day.
        I included that in the calculation :P
        Perhaps you want to reread what I posted.
        However it is not important.

        • 20,000 / 365 -> 54 years, divided by two pilots makes 27 years - one dive a day

          Can you read what you wrote or are you lying about what you wrote?

          • No idea what you mean ...

            • I mean did you forget your own words which you can scroll up and see?
              • Sorry, if you do not say a single word about what you mean/what to say: so no I have no clue what you mean.

                I calculated down that 20,000 sky dives are nearly impossible, if you see a flaw in my math: point it out. But if you want to pretend to be a dumb smartass on the interwebs: go ahead. /. is full of them.

                • This is what you wrote:

                  20,000 / 365 -> 54 years, divided by two pilots makes 27 years - one dive a day.

                  So your new tactic is denial that you write ONE DIVE A DAY. Is that your amnesia or dishonesty? Pick one.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Sunday May 15, 2022 @06:01AM (#62534852)

    Can't they just swap wives, like normal people?

  • ... as drinking Red Bull.

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