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Just call it a Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS DEATH MACHINE

 
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awos
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Mar 31, 2007 11:13 pm    Post subject: Just call it a Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS DEATH MACHINE Reply with quote



Too fucking bad that Belfort Instruments Co-owner Bruce R. Robinson,
Belfort Co-Owner Nicholas C. Kaufman, Belfort President Mark W.
Decker, Belfort Vice President Debra S. Alascio, Belfort CFO WIlliam
C. Gordon or Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS Sales Director Ralph F.
Petragnani weren't all aboard this Beechcraft cargo plan that crashed.
This is REAL fucking nice that we have an absolute piece of shit AWOS
weather station called Digiwx in the US marketplace! Here is
definitive proof of what pilots can expect from Digiwx AWOS:


FAA NTSB Report

Date: 18 MAR 2006
Time: ca 14:48
Type: Beechcraft C.99
Operator: Ameriflight
Registration: N54RP
C/n / msn: U-218
First flight: 1983
Engines: 2 Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-36
Crew: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Passengers: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 0
Total: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Airplane damage: Written off
Location: 13 km (8.1 mls) SW of Butte, MT (USA)
Phase: En route
Nature: Cargo
Departure airport: Helena Airport, MT (HLN/KHLN), USA
Destination airport: Butte (Bert Mooney) Airport, MT (BTM/KBTM), USA
Flightnumber: 2591


Narrative:


The Beech 99 departed Helena (HLN) at 14:35 on flight to Butte (Bert
Mooney, BTM) and was carrying only about 10 pounds of freight. The
aircraft was cleared for the VOR B approach to Butte at 14:48. Butte
controllers noted that a weather front that included icing conditions
and heavy snow had been approaching the area from the south to the
north/northeast even though a UNICOM-based Digiwx AWOS reported clear
skies with good visibility and gentle winds in the mountains. During
the
descent, the airplane collided with trees and subsequently the
terrain.
Search crews found the wreckage of the plane on March 20. Upon
investigation, one of the cockpit radio was found to be tuned to
123.0
MHz which is the airport's CTAF/UNICOM.


Preliminary results strongly suggest that the Beechcraft pilot
received
incorrect and faulty data from a Digiwx AWOS weather reporting
station
on the field at Butte (BTM) airport. FAA and NTSB continue to probe
the
weather data being disseminated from this Belfort Instruments Digiwx
AWOS which has never been formally FAA commissioned. Cary Gates from
the
Northwest Mountain Region of the FAA in Helena, MT notes that the
barometer setting is the only FAA Approved weather sensor on the
Digiwx
AWOS weather station; all remaining weather sensors on the Digiwx
AWOS
(wind direction, wind speed, temperature, dewpoint, relative
humidity,
visibility, ceilometer, density altitude, condensation altitude) are
all "advisory." According to the FAA, "Advisory Use ONLY" means not
for
actual in-flight aviation use. It should be noted that Belfort
Instruments website even makes mention in a disclaimer that "weather
readings shown on the Internet are advisory only."


Sources: 2 killed in crash of cargo plane (Billings Gazette
20-3-2006);
FAA NTSB
Back to top
Bob Gardner
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 5:39 am    Post subject: Re: Just call it a Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS DEATH MAC Reply with quote



Seems to me that the FAA took Belfort off the hook quite nicely. Pilots have
to fly with the weather that exists, not what a machine says it is. Are you
suggesting that the pilots did not realize that it was not clear and a
million until it was too late? You are letting them off the hook. If the
only certified data was the altimeter setting, they were taking a lot for
granted.

Bob Gardner

"awos" <awos_asos (AT) yahoo (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:1175364816.249789.6610 (AT) o5g2000hsb (DOT) googlegroups.com...
Quote:
Too fucking bad that Belfort Instruments Co-owner Bruce R. Robinson,
Belfort Co-Owner Nicholas C. Kaufman, Belfort President Mark W.
Decker, Belfort Vice President Debra S. Alascio, Belfort CFO WIlliam
C. Gordon or Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS Sales Director Ralph F.
Petragnani weren't all aboard this Beechcraft cargo plan that crashed.
This is REAL fucking nice that we have an absolute piece of shit AWOS
weather station called Digiwx in the US marketplace! Here is
definitive proof of what pilots can expect from Digiwx AWOS:


FAA NTSB Report

Date: 18 MAR 2006
Time: ca 14:48
Type: Beechcraft C.99
Operator: Ameriflight
Registration: N54RP
C/n / msn: U-218
First flight: 1983
Engines: 2 Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-36
Crew: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Passengers: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 0
Total: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Airplane damage: Written off
Location: 13 km (8.1 mls) SW of Butte, MT (USA)
Phase: En route
Nature: Cargo
Departure airport: Helena Airport, MT (HLN/KHLN), USA
Destination airport: Butte (Bert Mooney) Airport, MT (BTM/KBTM), USA
Flightnumber: 2591


Narrative:


The Beech 99 departed Helena (HLN) at 14:35 on flight to Butte (Bert
Mooney, BTM) and was carrying only about 10 pounds of freight. The
aircraft was cleared for the VOR B approach to Butte at 14:48. Butte
controllers noted that a weather front that included icing conditions
and heavy snow had been approaching the area from the south to the
north/northeast even though a UNICOM-based Digiwx AWOS reported clear
skies with good visibility and gentle winds in the mountains. During
the
descent, the airplane collided with trees and subsequently the
terrain.
Search crews found the wreckage of the plane on March 20. Upon
investigation, one of the cockpit radio was found to be tuned to
123.0
MHz which is the airport's CTAF/UNICOM.


Preliminary results strongly suggest that the Beechcraft pilot
received
incorrect and faulty data from a Digiwx AWOS weather reporting
station
on the field at Butte (BTM) airport. FAA and NTSB continue to probe
the
weather data being disseminated from this Belfort Instruments Digiwx
AWOS which has never been formally FAA commissioned. Cary Gates from
the
Northwest Mountain Region of the FAA in Helena, MT notes that the
barometer setting is the only FAA Approved weather sensor on the
Digiwx
AWOS weather station; all remaining weather sensors on the Digiwx
AWOS
(wind direction, wind speed, temperature, dewpoint, relative
humidity,
visibility, ceilometer, density altitude, condensation altitude) are
all "advisory." According to the FAA, "Advisory Use ONLY" means not
for
actual in-flight aviation use. It should be noted that Belfort
Instruments website even makes mention in a disclaimer that "weather
readings shown on the Internet are advisory only."


Sources: 2 killed in crash of cargo plane (Billings Gazette
20-3-2006);
FAA NTSB
Back to top
Jim Stewart
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 5:57 am    Post subject: Re: Just call it a Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS DEATH MAC Reply with quote



Bob Gardner wrote:
Quote:
Seems to me that the FAA took Belfort off the hook quite nicely. Pilots have
to fly with the weather that exists, not what a machine says it is. Are you
suggesting that the pilots did not realize that it was not clear and a
million until it was too late? You are letting them off the hook. If the
only certified data was the altimeter setting, they were taking a lot for
granted.

And if you read the actual NTSB reports, they don't seem to
match the quoted text at all....

http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20060329X00363&key=1

http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/GenPDF.asp?id=SEA06FA068&rpt=fa




Quote:
Bob Gardner

"awos" <awos_asos (AT) yahoo (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:1175364816.249789.6610 (AT) o5g2000hsb (DOT) googlegroups.com...

Too fucking bad that Belfort Instruments Co-owner Bruce R. Robinson,
Belfort Co-Owner Nicholas C. Kaufman, Belfort President Mark W.
Decker, Belfort Vice President Debra S. Alascio, Belfort CFO WIlliam
C. Gordon or Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS Sales Director Ralph F.
Petragnani weren't all aboard this Beechcraft cargo plan that crashed.
This is REAL fucking nice that we have an absolute piece of shit AWOS
weather station called Digiwx in the US marketplace! Here is
definitive proof of what pilots can expect from Digiwx AWOS:


FAA NTSB Report

Date: 18 MAR 2006
Time: ca 14:48
Type: Beechcraft C.99
Operator: Ameriflight
Registration: N54RP
C/n / msn: U-218
First flight: 1983
Engines: 2 Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-36
Crew: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Passengers: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 0
Total: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Airplane damage: Written off
Location: 13 km (8.1 mls) SW of Butte, MT (USA)
Phase: En route
Nature: Cargo
Departure airport: Helena Airport, MT (HLN/KHLN), USA
Destination airport: Butte (Bert Mooney) Airport, MT (BTM/KBTM), USA
Flightnumber: 2591


Narrative:


The Beech 99 departed Helena (HLN) at 14:35 on flight to Butte (Bert
Mooney, BTM) and was carrying only about 10 pounds of freight. The
aircraft was cleared for the VOR B approach to Butte at 14:48. Butte
controllers noted that a weather front that included icing conditions
and heavy snow had been approaching the area from the south to the
north/northeast even though a UNICOM-based Digiwx AWOS reported clear
skies with good visibility and gentle winds in the mountains. During
the
descent, the airplane collided with trees and subsequently the
terrain.
Search crews found the wreckage of the plane on March 20. Upon
investigation, one of the cockpit radio was found to be tuned to
123.0
MHz which is the airport's CTAF/UNICOM.


Preliminary results strongly suggest that the Beechcraft pilot
received
incorrect and faulty data from a Digiwx AWOS weather reporting
station
on the field at Butte (BTM) airport. FAA and NTSB continue to probe
the
weather data being disseminated from this Belfort Instruments Digiwx
AWOS which has never been formally FAA commissioned. Cary Gates from
the
Northwest Mountain Region of the FAA in Helena, MT notes that the
barometer setting is the only FAA Approved weather sensor on the
Digiwx
AWOS weather station; all remaining weather sensors on the Digiwx
AWOS
(wind direction, wind speed, temperature, dewpoint, relative
humidity,
visibility, ceilometer, density altitude, condensation altitude) are
all "advisory." According to the FAA, "Advisory Use ONLY" means not
for
actual in-flight aviation use. It should be noted that Belfort
Instruments website even makes mention in a disclaimer that "weather
readings shown on the Internet are advisory only."


Sources: 2 killed in crash of cargo plane (Billings Gazette
20-3-2006);
FAA NTSB



Back to top
Bob Gardner
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Apr 01, 2007 6:11 am    Post subject: Re: Just call it a Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS DEATH MAC Reply with quote

To be honest, I have been ignoring all of the threads about Belfort until
now, but the Sclairs are friends of mine and I have written for the General
Aviation News, so I had to get involved.

Bob Gardner

"Jim Stewart" <jstewart (AT) jkmicro (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:Z--dnUwut5oTnpLbnZ2dnUVZ_vumnZ2d (AT) omsoft (DOT) com...
Quote:
Bob Gardner wrote:
Seems to me that the FAA took Belfort off the hook quite nicely. Pilots
have to fly with the weather that exists, not what a machine says it is.
Are you suggesting that the pilots did not realize that it was not clear
and a million until it was too late? You are letting them off the hook.
If the only certified data was the altimeter setting, they were taking a
lot for granted.

And if you read the actual NTSB reports, they don't seem to
match the quoted text at all....

http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?ev_id=20060329X00363&key=1

http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/GenPDF.asp?id=SEA06FA068&rpt=fa




Bob Gardner

"awos" <awos_asos (AT) yahoo (DOT) com> wrote in message
news:1175364816.249789.6610 (AT) o5g2000hsb (DOT) googlegroups.com...

Too fucking bad that Belfort Instruments Co-owner Bruce R. Robinson,
Belfort Co-Owner Nicholas C. Kaufman, Belfort President Mark W.
Decker, Belfort Vice President Debra S. Alascio, Belfort CFO WIlliam
C. Gordon or Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS Sales Director Ralph F.
Petragnani weren't all aboard this Beechcraft cargo plan that crashed.
This is REAL fucking nice that we have an absolute piece of shit AWOS
weather station called Digiwx in the US marketplace! Here is
definitive proof of what pilots can expect from Digiwx AWOS:


FAA NTSB Report

Date: 18 MAR 2006
Time: ca 14:48
Type: Beechcraft C.99
Operator: Ameriflight
Registration: N54RP
C/n / msn: U-218
First flight: 1983
Engines: 2 Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-36
Crew: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Passengers: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 0
Total: Fatalities: 2 / Occupants: 2
Airplane damage: Written off
Location: 13 km (8.1 mls) SW of Butte, MT (USA)
Phase: En route
Nature: Cargo
Departure airport: Helena Airport, MT (HLN/KHLN), USA
Destination airport: Butte (Bert Mooney) Airport, MT (BTM/KBTM), USA
Flightnumber: 2591


Narrative:


The Beech 99 departed Helena (HLN) at 14:35 on flight to Butte (Bert
Mooney, BTM) and was carrying only about 10 pounds of freight. The
aircraft was cleared for the VOR B approach to Butte at 14:48. Butte
controllers noted that a weather front that included icing conditions
and heavy snow had been approaching the area from the south to the
north/northeast even though a UNICOM-based Digiwx AWOS reported clear
skies with good visibility and gentle winds in the mountains. During
the
descent, the airplane collided with trees and subsequently the
terrain.
Search crews found the wreckage of the plane on March 20. Upon
investigation, one of the cockpit radio was found to be tuned to
123.0
MHz which is the airport's CTAF/UNICOM.


Preliminary results strongly suggest that the Beechcraft pilot
received
incorrect and faulty data from a Digiwx AWOS weather reporting
station
on the field at Butte (BTM) airport. FAA and NTSB continue to probe
the
weather data being disseminated from this Belfort Instruments Digiwx
AWOS which has never been formally FAA commissioned. Cary Gates from
the
Northwest Mountain Region of the FAA in Helena, MT notes that the
barometer setting is the only FAA Approved weather sensor on the
Digiwx
AWOS weather station; all remaining weather sensors on the Digiwx
AWOS
(wind direction, wind speed, temperature, dewpoint, relative
humidity,
visibility, ceilometer, density altitude, condensation altitude) are
all "advisory." According to the FAA, "Advisory Use ONLY" means not
for
actual in-flight aviation use. It should be noted that Belfort
Instruments website even makes mention in a disclaimer that "weather
readings shown on the Internet are advisory only."


Sources: 2 killed in crash of cargo plane (Billings Gazette
20-3-2006);
FAA NTSB


Back to top
Matt Barrow
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Apr 02, 2007 1:06 am    Post subject: Re: Just call it a Belfort Instruments Digiwx AWOS DEATH MAC Reply with quote

"Bob Gardner" <bobmrg (AT) comcast (DOT) net> wrote in message
news:JYGdndt0O_aEjZLbnZ2dnUVZ_r-onZ2d (AT) comcast (DOT) com...
Quote:
To be honest, I have been ignoring all of the threads about Belfort until
now, but the Sclairs are friends of mine and I have written for the
General Aviation News, so I had to get involved.

Bob Gardner

Ignore the trolls, especially those who have, IIRC, lost courts case.
Back to top
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