SCRawl wrote:Good point, of course. In the case of pilot testing, and with 80+ driver testing, I presume that the skills required to complete the required manoeuvres is non-trivial. In other words, in order to pass these tests both of these groups will have to demonstrate competence which is not common to the general population (in the case of 80-year-olds, not common to that population).
Except I would maintain that the skills required for private piloting - the sort I do as contrasted with the sort
Wicked Pilot does - IS within the capability of 90% of the general population. So why does the US continue to churn out shitty auto drivers and yet has one of the safest, if not the safest, aviation systems in the world (we also have more private pilots than anyone else, too)
Well, for one thing, you can get away with being a shitty driver easier than you can get away with being a shitty pilot. Never mind the laws and regulations - physics gets in the way. Airplanes go faster, as a general rule, and aside from mountainous areas you just can't drop a car a vertical mile (or kilometer or two) by going off the road. Alcohol and drugs are even more lethal in aircraft than in autos. And so on and so forth. So Darwin effects eliminate the very worst pilots faster than the worst drivers.
But beyond that, most people wouldn't bother with getting a driver's license if the
process was as time consuming as that of getting a pilot's license. You have a substanial amount of "book learning", you need to learn to navigate for real, not just by following road signs (although it's gotten a
lot easier with cheap civilian GPS), and you have to actually do math in a competant manner. The written test is two hours, and it's considerably more complicated than the multiple-choice and true-false questions I get at the DMV. And you're videotaped during it, so if questions of cheating come up there's a record of your performance. There's an oral exam, which you must pass. Then there's the flight test, which is a couple hours at least. If you fail any part of the flight test you must retake that portion. And, oh yes, you pay the examiner for his time. Which works out to several hundred dollars under even the most efficient circumstances. (Examiners also pay to have their examiner skills examined - in which case the examinee rides for free, but then you have the FAA sitting behind you in the airplane literally looking over your shoulder. Hey, no pressure, right? And if you bust a reg they'll have the paperwork on your penalty completed before you land, how convenient). And, oh yes, that exam not only includes easy stuff like straight and level but an thorough testing of your abiltiy to handle emergencies and your judgement - at certain certain points the examiner tells you to break a reg or do something not wise and you have to have the wit to say "No, I'm not doing that". Failure to do so is a failure to pass, just as much as failing to hold altitude or heading.
(And yes, some people will go to a particular examiner with a reputation of being "easier". However, since the examiner is potentially liable for your screw-ups for several years afterward, there is little incentive for even the "easy" ones to let incompetence slide)
I'm not saying we should make driver's tests equally difficult (though I could probably take that stance in a debate) but I do think that if we treated driving a little more like the serious occupation it is, drivers would respond likewise. A serious driving test of an hour or more duration covering real-world situations and simulated emergencies would do more to promote highway safety than requiring those over 80 to get a note from the eye doctor stating they can still see past the hood ornament.
I was licensed to drive over 25 years ago - and at the time, in Michigan,
I wasn't even required to take a road test! Really - because I had completed a driver's ed course succesfully I only had to take a 20 question test at the DMV to be issued a license. Since that time, I have never been required to take a road test in any state I've lived in - the most that has ever been required was another short, laughably easy written test when I changed licenses due to a change in state residency. That's it. And that's pathetic. I mean, really - 25 years and
no one has ever tested my competency behind the wheel. I like to think that 25 years of accident-free driving is due, at least in part, to my skill in handling a vehicle and not just luck, but who really knows?