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Pilawt
Looks like a TFR up over the airport now.
I wonder if it was a "just take a look" approach. Or slant range erased the airport. A horrible mess either way.Per Flightaware it was LAS-F70, arrived 4:14 am local. Got down to 1600' (LPV DA), made missed approach. Accident was on the second approach.
KF70 081115Z AUTO 00000KT 1/2SM FG OVC003 12/12 A2986
When they took off from LAS the destination was clear.
KF70 081015Z AUTO 00000KT 10SM CLR 12/10 A2985
Very unfortunate.Damn it another crash near F70. I just flew there last sat. Since then 2 crashes with fatalities.
I wonder if it was a "just take a look" approach. Or slant range erased the airport. A horrible mess either way.
Edit: executed a missed approach, and gave it another go. Seems like it would have been a good time to divert.
Hearing voices of people who perish shortly thereafter always makes me feel...uncomfortable/uneasy/anxious. So sad. "Talk to you in a bit" made this one stand out.
I have seen this story before, unfortunately.I wonder if it was a "just take a look" approach. Or slant range erased the airport. A horrible mess either way.
Edit: executed a missed approach, and gave it another go. Seems like it would have been a good time to divert.
Well ...Don’t some part 135 ops have higher min depending on airport or situation??
Well ...
Published minimum visibility is 7/8 mile. ASOS data one minute after the incident said 1/2 mile. Just sayin'.
I looks as though the PAX were not wearing seat belts.More info here, plus a drone video of the crash site. Part of the video shows some white sheets on the roadway starting around 00:40 or so. I would rather not think about what they might be covering.
https://nypost.com/2023/07/09/6-killed-in-southern-california-plane-crash-identified/
Rather gruesome, no speculation required. Passengers and/or crew ejected.More info here, plus a drone video of the crash site. Part of the video shows some white sheets on the roadway starting around 00:40 or so. I would rather not think about what they might be covering.
https://nypost.com/2023/07/09/6-killed-in-southern-california-plane-crash-identified/
I looks as though the PAX were not wearing seat belts.
Good question. I remember flying from Wichita to Westchester County Airport (HPN) about 20 years ago in a Baron 58. We first stopped in Ohio for fuel andWhat if he got the runway in sight at DA so continued the Approach. Then ,on short final, which is where the crash occurred, poof, the lights go out. Did he click them on again for the second Approach.
Yeah. The scenario I was bringing up is he got the lights. First time because he did click them on but missed for whatever reason. On the second approach he got the lights again. But not because he clicked them on again, but because they were still on. They stay on for awhile and then time out and go off. I think about 15 minutes is typical. It could have happened on very short final and he got startled and didn’t react all that well.Good question. I remember flying from Wichita to Westchester County Airport (HPN) about 20 years ago in a Baron 58. We first stopped in Ohio for fuel and
then we needed to stop again in State College, PA so we could wait out a significant line of thunderstorms. Anyway, (after about 3.5 hours on the ground) I
think that we got flying again at around 10:30 pm or so. When we got to HPN the tower was closed and I thought that there were some layers of foggy clouds
near the ground, but there wasn't.
It was partial IMC on the approach into HPN and I believe the ASOS was saying a 1,200' broken ceiling or something like that - so it wasn't technically IFR -
or it was close, I forget. I think we broke out on the approach not too far inside the outer marker (maybe around 3 miles or so) and I'm looking for the damn
runway and I don't see anything except for pitch black, but my training also told me to stay on the instruments.
I had a copilot (who sold us the plane) who was supposed to be helping me - but we both forgot to click the mike five times because the tower was
closed. I guess that you can give us both a break because I just got through training in the plane and it was a long day. I wasn't new to the Baron, but
I was new to the Garmin 530's and 430' - and that's why the co-pilot was with me - to help me out with that stuff, to no avail and I was more than a bit busy
with everything else as well as trying to make sense of the new avionics.
Anyway, we get down to minimums and nothing - so I go missed and we're back into the soup on the upwind, but not until 1,200' or so - but I didn't want
that after a long day. But adrenaline must have kicked in when being vectored for the second approach and I started thinking. When we're at the outer
marker again and we appear to break out, I'm like holy smokes - we need five clicks! If I didn't think of that (and there's no telling what the heck my co-pilot
was thinking, if at all) we never would have found the runway. Anyway, five clicks and low and behold, the runway lights up like a Christmas tree and we get the
MALSR and runway lights - the rabbits were a great sight to see!
The bottom line is that I originally thought that the runway was being obscured by patchy fog at night. I've seen that before going into HPN (my home base)
and it was a very plausible explanation. Sometimes those patches are near and around the runway but they don't obscure it - it can be tricky so you just
need to be ready to go missed if you lose the runway close to the ground. But difference this time is that you can usually see some patches of fog at
night because nearby lights (from the streetlights, houses, airport lighting etc.) appear to light them up. This time I didn't see anything except for black.
Anyway, when we broke out of the clouds for the second time (near the outer marker), I thought some more and luckily I did. There was nobody else to
help because the controller didn't know and my copilot wasn't being much of a copilot except for tuning the nav and coms well - which was definitely
different than the Bendix / Kings that I was used to. I had a great feel for the plane in general (with about 1,200 hours in type), just not the avionics.
If I didn't that missed approach could have been dicey, but it went well. At that point I learned that my copilot wasn't as experienced as 'advertised.'
Because, if he was, he would have said five clicks are necessary while I was really busy with everything else - particularly flying the plane!
The moral of the story is that there's so much involved in flying - particularly instrument flying at night. If I didn't have a fair amount of night experience
in the Baron, I would probably not have remembered to give it those five clicks the second time around. And sometimes we just need to save our own
hides because there might not be much help, if any. And that's why proficiency is key.
Here's a good article on how to legally use the more powerful approach lighting systems:Good question. I remember flying from Wichita to Westchester County Airport (HPN) about 20 years ago in a Baron 58. We first stopped in Ohio for fuel and
then we needed to stop again in State College, PA so we could wait out a significant line of thunderstorms. Anyway, (after about 3.5 hours on the ground) I
think that we got flying again at around 10:30 pm or so. When we got to HPN the tower was closed and I thought that there were some layers of foggy clouds
near the ground, but there wasn't.
It was partial IMC on the approach into HPN and I believe the ASOS was saying a 1,200' broken ceiling or something like that with about 5 miles visibility -
so it wasn't technically IFR - or it was close, I forget. I think we broke out on the approach not too far inside the outer marker (maybe around 3 miles or so)
and I'm looking for the damn runway and I don't see anything except for pitch black, but my training also told me to stay on the instruments.
I had a copilot (who sold us the plane) who was supposed to be helping me - but we both forgot to click the mike five times because the tower was
closed. I guess that you can give us both a break because I just got through training in the plane and it was a long day. I wasn't new to the Baron, but
I was new to the Garmin 530's and 430' - and that's why the co-pilot was with me - to help me out with that stuff, to no avail and I was more than a bit busy
with everything else as well as trying to make sense of the new avionics.
Anyway, we get down to minimums and nothing - so I go missed and we're back into the soup on the upwind, but not until 1,200' or so - but I didn't want
that after a long day. But adrenaline must have kicked in when being vectored for the second approach and I started thinking. When we're at the outer
marker again and we appear to break out, I'm like holy smokes - we need five clicks! If I didn't think of that (and there's no telling what the heck my co-pilot
was thinking, if at all) we never would have found the runway. Anyway, five clicks and low and behold, the runway lights up like a Christmas tree and we get the
MALSR and runway lights - the rabbits were a great sight to see!
The bottom line is that I originally thought that the runway was being obscured by patchy fog at night. I've seen that before going into HPN (my home base
back then) and it was a very plausible explanation. Sometimes those patches are near and around the runway but they don't obscure it - it can be tricky so you just
need to be ready to go missed if you lose the runway close to the ground. But difference this time is that you can usually see some patches of fog at
night because nearby lights (from the streetlights, houses, airport lighting etc.) appear to light them up. This time I didn't see anything except for black.
Anyway, when we broke out of the clouds for the second time (near the outer marker), I thought some more and luckily I did. There was nobody else to
help because the controller didn't know and my copilot wasn't being much of a copilot except for tuning the nav and coms well - which was definitely
different than the Bendix / Kings that I was used to. I had a great feel for the plane in general (with about 1,200 hours in type), just not the avionics.
If I didn't that missed approach could have been dicey, but it went well. At that point I learned that my copilot wasn't as experienced as 'advertised.'
Because, if he was, he would have said five clicks are necessary while I was really busy with everything else - particularly flying the plane!
The moral of the story is that there's so much involved in flying - particularly instrument flying at night. If I didn't have a fair amount of night experience
in the Baron (and other planes), I would probably not have remembered to give it those five clicks the second time around. And sometimes we just need
to save our own hides because there might not be much help, if any. And that's why proficiency is key.
PS:
I'm guessing that clicking the runway lights might not have anything to do with this unfortunate Citation accident - but that's just a guess.
I say that because the ceiling and visibility was so low - the fog was so thick nothing could have saved them except for maybe high-intensity
runway lighting.
I don't think that it's talked about enough. Going into such a low ceiling and visibility (which was probably illegal for this likely 135 crew)
without more 'help' can be too much to ask even if it's legal for Part 91. I think that more people should fly into airports that have at least
MALSR lighting to see what I mean. And if they can get to ALSF I (and particularly II) which are used for things like Category II and III ILSs, you'll
know what I mean - it's a lot safer than just relying on relatively wimpy runway end identifier lights or REILs. REILs are OK, particularly for
night landings, but not for very low visibility landings - particularly at night.
And that's all the pilots in this RNAV approach into runway 18 had, was the REILs.
This is impressive stuff - and it could be life saving.
Good points. I know from personal experience that the missed approach (when you can't see anything at allYeah. The scenario I was bringing up is he got the lights. First time because he did click them on but missed for whatever reason. On the second approach he got the lights again. But not because he clicked them on again, but because they were still on. They stay on for awhile and then time out and go off. I think about 15 minutes is typical. It could have happened on very short final and he got startled and didn’t react all that well.