CanyonAg77 said:
Pilots are the world's worst in blaming the victim. I think there is a level of fear, knowing a small screwup can kill you.
So when someone does die, the rest of the community wants to find some way that the guy messed up, and to reassure yourself that you'd never be that stupid/careless/distracted/behind the plane.
When the truth is, all of us are more than capable, and probably have made far larger mistakes, but gotten away with them because we weren't flying a 60-year-old, high performance aircraft.
As a 36 year, 13000 hour pilot, I'm gonna disagree. No, the IP didn't save the day and "should" have, but task saturation can be subtle and very real. Been there, done that and sometimes, regrettably, the last line of defense is "but for the grace of God go I." Been there too. The best tools against that in my experience, are training, experience, judgement, and the humility to not blame the victim, but figure out what went wrong with "them" so you hopefully won't repeat it by learning from their "mistakes". While I have all Civillian time, I've nudged "the line" enough times when I was younger and dumber that I know where that line is all to well, now that I'm older. It's just not fun when you are the one being analyzed, be you dead, or alive.
The truth is that the age of airplane doesn't matter, nor does the performance, I've lost friends in both Piper Cubs and C130's. You can do dumb things and get away with it, and if it's not your day, it's not going to be your day no matter how much Chuck Yeager you have in you. The training, experience, and judgement can move things in your favor, just as the opposite is as likely to make it easy for it not to be your day. All you can do is your best to keep the grim reaper at bay until you make it, or you don't.