Dragging it in on approach, wants to hit the first stripe.How does a pilot with 3500 hours do that?
Yea, 3 deg. to the numbers is still just under 20 ft. at the white line of the traffic lane.If I'm not mistaken, 4 degrees is kind of on the steep side for a normal approach. I'm not instrument rated, but when I looked at the two instrument procedures it looks like both call for right at 3 degree approaches. I realize that you shouldn't be trying to land on the threshold, but 3 degrees at 250 feet back is only 13.1 feet! It seems like this may have been an accident waiting to happen.
Lodi, 1O3, is also nice: https://goo.gl/maps/WkHLfVijQFx I think the threshold is displaced enough, but I haven't done the math.
If you're talking about the Cessna vs. Volvo incident... that was as much the Volvo's fault as it was the pilot.52F, and we've had it happen before....
https://www.google.com/maps/@33.0562169,-97.2319558,188m/data=!3m1!1e3
View attachment 53439
This is the Google street view of the Watts-Woodland airport. It feels like you're scraping the tops of cars when you land there. I'm surprised something like that hasn't happened here yet.
Lodi, 1O3, is also nice: https://goo.gl/maps/WkHLfVijQFx I think the threshold is displaced enough, but I haven't done the math.
Your math is correct.Am I doing my math wrong? With the road being 250ft. from the threshold, a 4deg. glide scope would put you at 17.5 feet over the road. Doesn't sound right, I probably screwed it up. That is not much clearance over traffic. Also, I don't know where the vasi lights are or what their angle is.
View attachment 53434
Four degrees isn't all that steep for a VFR arrival.If I'm not mistaken, 4 degrees is kind of on the steep side for a normal approach. I'm not instrument rated, but when I looked at the two instrument procedures it looks like both call for right at 3 degree approaches. I realize that you shouldn't be trying to land on the threshold, but 3 degrees at 250 feet back is only 13.1 feet! It seems like this may have been an accident waiting to happen.
Four degrees isn't all that steep for a VFR arrival.
Yep, out at Parker County a number of years ago, a student put a 150 in the side of a trailer...I-20 at that point is like 25 feet below the end of the runway.Didn't this just happen a couple of years ago at the same airport to an SUV? I remember reading about it on here.
Found it: http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Video-Shows-Plane-Hitting-SUV-177201321.html
My point wasn't that four degrees is too steep, but that it's on the steeper side of normal. With the two published instrument procedures for that runway being right at 3 degrees, you would kind of expect that to offer better clearance than it does. I'm sure it will come down to being the pilot's fault as he could have, and should have, been higher over the road. However, the point I was trying to make is, that I can understand how a pilot could be fixating on the runway on short final, an easily not notice he is a few feet too low over the road. In my opinion, the threshold should be displaced a little farther!
Aren't most VASIs for instance set at 3deg?
Sure, the "standard" probably is 3 deg +/-, but remember that the vasi, papi are not located at the exact runway threshold, but further down near the touch-down zone.
Yes, I know, the guy obviously screwed up and was too low. I just have some sympathy for him, and am glad that no one was hurt.
I thought the point was the geometry was such that he could have been on a 3deg pretty standard glideslope at that airport (i.e. not a screw up) and still hit the truck?
I don't think he could have hit the truck if he was on the 3 deg path from the expected touchdown point down the runway, where they usually put the PAPI's. However, I don't think that would apply if you calculate it from the threshold.
Yup, especially since the runway is only 1659 feet long. I've heard it's worse coming in the other way over the trees.Holy crap. I'd be worried about clipping the fence itself on that one.
Yup, especially since the runway is only 1659 feet long. I've heard it's worse coming in the other way over the trees.
http://www.airnav.com/airport/9B1
Holy crap. I'd be worried about clipping the fence itself on that one.
The entire length of that runway is definitely not usable. It's probably really only practical for STOL planes, or daring highly skilled pilots!