maxkillz said:
that graph seems a bit off...50mW isn't 10 times more visible than a 5mW it's more like 3-4 times more ever 4x the power 2x the brightness because our vision isn't linear. I wonder if they thought about the divergence of a laser and the angle of the plane. I have planes flying over my house all the time that are only a few hundred feet up and I can't even see the windshields on them. they would have to be much lower and at an angle to even the the laser in the cockpit. I live just about 2 miles away from an airport so I don't use my laser outside anyway just in case
Every airport is different, so every approach pattern is different. I live about 3/4 mile from the end of an airport runway, and I'm fairly certain I could put a dot from a handheld pointer on the cockpit window of 90% of the planes that land on that runway from that direction. With where I live, the timing (from the plane's perspective) of when I could hit the cockpit window would be anywhere from over 2 minutes to within 20 seconds before touchdown.
Granted, these won't be steady, they'll be flashes. But ILDA and experts aren't and haven't been talking about steady covering the window or permanent damage from direct eye hits.
For everyone (not just maxkillz), here's the best comparison I can think of: You're driving down the highway in the middle of the night at 80mph, and you're coming up on a construction site with a narrow bridge, barely wider than your car. Your eyes are completely night adapted, with dilated pupils. So you're aiming this vehicle between the guardrails, and 20 seconds before you're going to go through this bridge, a camera flash fills the entire windshield. You're 20 seconds from having to thread a needle in a car going 80mph, and you suddenly can't see anything. I'm sure we've all experienced camera flashes in very dark places. Sure, there's no permanent damage, and your vision will be back fairly quickly, maybe 10s or so, but in the meantime you're 20 seconds from head-on collision that will probably be fatal. Does that sound like a good situation?
What they're talking about is not a big need fro protection from being completely blinded or harmed by lasers, they're talking about distraction and flash blindness from the presence of a REALLY bright light, like a camera flash. Laser goggles are not a good solution for that. A good solution is to try to get people to stop shining them at airplanes or, regretfully, ban laser pointers. Yes, it's dumb, but airlines will win that battle unless there's no need for the battle to ever be fought, and the only way to prevent that battle is to stop shining lasers at airplanes.
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ilda- As far as what you're saying about pilot training, I think that is absolutely essential. After the recent story where a pilot suffered a stroke and was still helped to land safely, it got me thinking about how, with big airliners, those planes SHOULD be able to land with blind pilots. Pilots should definitely be trained to be able to land a plane even when they can't see. Whether it be from an accidental laser flash, an intentional blinding effort, or a sudden stroke like that pilot in the UK a few weeks ago, there's no reason in this day and age that pilots shouldn't be trained on what to do in cases of a sudden loss of vision. Keep up the good work on your site.