warbirdcrew wrote:
in the end the life of the pilot should not be put above the lives of the innocent bystanders on the ground.
Okay, you're going to have to define this one a little better than that.
As someone who rides an ejection seat every day, I have put plenty of thought into when I'll pull the handles and when I won't.
When I am ejecting, it is a life and death situation. I very likely *am* going to die if I don't bail out.
There is a *chance* that the airplane might hit something on the ground. A *chance* that another person might be maimed or killed.
This, however, is the important part...depending on what the problem is that is causing me to get out of the airplane,
I may or may not have a choice where the airplane impacts anyway. For example, if there has been a midair and the wing has departed the aircraft, the airplane will go where it's going to go, regardless of if I'm with it or not. If the airplane is on fire, and I don't punch, but die in the fire...I have no control where the airplane lands. If the airplane is on fire, and later explodes...I have no control over where the wreckage lands. If the airplane is out of control and not responding to my inputs...I have no control where the airplane lands.
Bottom line, I can only think of a very few situations where, by staying with the aircraft and "sacrificing his life", the pilot of a mortally wounded aircraft with an ejection seat can influence where the airplane lands, thus avoiding "civilian" casualties on the ground.
So, what situations is the pilot's certain mortality outweighed by the potential for someone to get hurt on the ground?