Matt Gunsch wrote:
some of the early seat were powered by nothing more than a cannon shell, and the ejection could be quiet violent, resulting in compressed or broken backs. .
Yes, I realize that, but my point is this. Which is better - to live with a compressed spine and/or flailing injuries caused by the ejection, or die. It's a simple matter of the lesser of two evils. Most ejection seat injuries can be prevented by having a proper ejection seat posture prior to pulling the handles. One must practice the posture constantly and be ready to use it on a moment's notice. A manual bailout will do you ZERO good if you have uncontrollable flight near the ground.
Matt Gunsch wrote:
at one time the T-33s I was taking care were required to have cold seats and bolted on tip or drop tanks. The prob is, if you do not get a even feed from the tips, it is possiable to have enough fuel on one side that you cannot hold up the wing on landing, the only way to land is to punch off the tips. Dave Zuchell was killed when one of the drop tank seperated during a belly landing and the plane cart wheeled. He could not punch off the tanks thanks to the FAA.
I looked at it this way, if you are a pilot, you have no rights to try and save yourself, but if you are on death row, you had more of a right to try and save yourself.
Oh and the T-33s, yes the seats and tanks were cold and bolted when the FAA looked at the planes, but as soon as they were out of the hangar, everything became operational. I would rather face questioning and problems from the FAA, than tell some that thier loved died because they could not get out of a plane, or jettison fuel tanks.
Yes, I agree completely. Don't even get me started on the supremely assonine policies of the FAA when it comes to ejection seats. The FAA doesn't care about the safety of the pilots at all. I would have done the same thing. Ejection seats were built by the aircraft manufacturers for a reason - to save the pilots' lives!