HarvardIV wrote:
It sounds like the Lance T-6 pilot didn't have his shoulder harness secured. You say yes you should, but for no clear reason if your shoulder harness is on.
You would be very surprised how much even properly secured belts and harnesses can stretch during a crash, and add to that the deflection of the seat and supporting structure. The stretching and deflecton reduces yur body's deceleration rate which could otherwise just snap your neck. In fact, the proximity to the panel has probably saved a lot of pilots from having a Dale Earnhart type neck/spinal injury.
I won't mention names but a friend of mine hit his helmet on the instrument panel during an off field landing a few years back. The helmet saved him. His plane was totally destroyed, but the paramedics found him walking dazed around his plane. He didn't even know where he was and didn't remember the crash- but only spent the night at the hospital under observation. The panel is at least 2 feet from his face in the seated position, and his head was actually guided to the instrument panel after being deflected off of the forward portion of the windscreen.
Incidentally, his seat, seat supporting structure, and harness were not damaged during the accident!