I'm not quite ready to say that Brett Buck is always right, but I experienced an event today that made me think of some long threads that he's been involved in here in past years.
It involves his cutoff switch rule for 'lectrics. That's the one that says that if you're flying on electron power then your plane needs to be restrained any time the battery is connected to the rest of the system.
So, today, flying my newly-converted-to-electric plane, I suffered an event. I'm pretty sure it's a loose connection, although it could be a heat issue or software or some interplay of the two. My plane cut out early, and landed. when I was about six feet away from it the motor started up -- I did the gentlest-ever tackle, and caught the plane. It could have gone the other way -- in my case, the plane would have ended up in the blackberries, or in a tree. At a contest it could have ended up wrapped around someone's head, or chewing a hole in their shins with that nice strong CF prop.
The timing was just right for a maneuver to have caused a loose connection to the timer's "on" switch to have cut out in the air, then have been jostled back into connection when the plane hit the ground. If this did happen, then it came on again right after the 30-second wait for the pilot to get to the handle. I happen to be flying a timer of my own design, but the wiring scheme is the same as the Igor Burger timer (i.e.: power on the timer, it handles things from there).
And -- Brett Buck was right. Mysterious Forces can cause a 'lectric plane to start up unexpectedly. As I recall, when he introduced the rule all the debate was about the possibility of a software fault; not one of us (again, as I recall -- it may have come up) considered a wiring fault. So -- his point was that unexpected s**t can make a plane start up, and by golly, he was right!
Just food for thought, for anyone wanting to disagree with Brett's rule at this late date.