wsuffa
Touchdown! Greaser!
Morning news conference
Morning news conference
Cliff notes:
- a plane crashed
- 'i don't have that information'
- look at me, I am a politician, have nothing of substance to contribute, but I am here anyway, vote for me!
Take the plane crash away and you’ve described nearly every press conference. If they know anything, only the expensive professional PR person speaks.
I don't know why a fundraising flight would be inherently more risky than any other type of flight. Unless the suggestion is tat they should not be flying because of equipment, maintenance or crew issues.Sad. I really prefer the old airplanes flying instead of in museums, but there’s an inherent risk when they need to fly constantly to fundraise. :-(
If true, yes, I would have a real damn problem with that.I have heard the controller tape on the news and had a question. Does everyone think he was appropriate in stating that he had jets coming in and did the pilot really need to land right now? Just wondering what everyone else thought.
They didn’t declare an emergency at least on the portion of the tapes we have. He was trying to figure out how bad of a problem they were saying they had... no foul in him asking. Also, keep in mind that a tower controller is a the end of the funnel. If he shuts off his end of the funnel, everyone else in ATC gets busy keeping all the inbound traffic safe. The crew may have had their hands full, but using the emergency word gives the controller the information he needed...If true, yes, I would have a real damn problem with that.
Not inappropriate at all. The pilot in his initial request to return did not declare an emergency and the initial report of an issue with number 4 was somewhat vague. I'm honestly still not sure what he was saying/meant (sounded like he wanted to return to 'blow out' number 4) and I fly multi-engine radial warbirds.I have heard the controller tape on the news and had a question. Does everyone think he was appropriate in stating that he had jets coming in and did the pilot really need to land right now? Just wondering what everyone else thought.
I don't. I believe that he was prompting the B-17 pilot to declare an emergency.If true, yes, I would have a real damn problem with that.
Beautiful pictures! Sad day, RIP.I guess 7 fatal now. RIP. Some pics of 909 I took during better times.
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What I have a problem with are the politicos who suck up 1/2 the time and have zero factual information to contribute.
Kinda like your post replies here?
Kinda like your post replies here?
I see, still mad from the other thread.
All that said, my heart goes out to the crew, as they did the best they could, as they saw the problems that came their way. Their last few minutes of life was incredibly challenging, and they nearly made it home OK. Not much different than a WW 2 crew coming back with a crippled plane, and doing their best to get safely down.
From my misty eyes, I see nothing they did wrong. They just did not make it home.
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Comments on the huge surplus of power without a bomb load are exaggerated, as the de-rating from reducing the compression ratio to burn 100 octane instead of 150 octane is severe.
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I always wondered how these older giant radials behave with the different type of gas burned today. Surprised there is no way to get appropriate octane gas to keep something like this flying.. there's no "antique" gas that can be procured? Some kind of race grade gas?de-rating from reducing the compression ratio
What a travesty. The effective power output of those engines must be a fraction of what they once wereI can tell you that the turbo wastegates are welded fully open. They do not have the power add of the turbos, as those have been disabled, probably due to the lack of high test gas
Hopefully some friends and family have video to let us know what went wrong on the landing; I believe it was reported that they hit a nav tower, which may have started the loss-of-control event.This is not intended as speculation, but to put an idea out there as an opinion for other Warbird pilots who might read this and face a future emergency. Ever since I had to belly land our Cardinal after the hydraulic failure I’ve had a lot less fear of actually of keeping an intentional gear-up belly landing in the tool bag in an emergency situation if terrain looks favorable, and most runway environments would meet that criteria. The positives are maintaining a longer glide in an engine out situation and actually probably stopping in a much shorter space than a roll-out. The negatives are obvious, but numerous B-17s have belly landed before.
There is a penalty for declaring an emergency. The FAA may ground you until they decide that you now meet their requirements for the repair.
The tower guy did not suitably respond to the magnitude of the potential of an engine out at low altitude in an antique aircraft, resulting in useless radio calls, when he should have been rearranging his inbound flow to minimize possible conflict, until the B 17 was on the ground.
Unfortunately, the B 17 crew, at least initially, was trying to salvage the rest of the days flights by bringing the B 17 in without an emergency, for what initially was a repairable malfunction.
Certainly they could use a fuel similar to what is used in some of the higher-end "gasser" racing; it's quite pricey, however, and makes 100LL look like a bargain.I always wondered how these older giant radials behave with the different type of gas burned today. Surprised there is no way to get appropriate octane gas to keep something like this flying.. there's no "antique" gas that can be procured? Some kind of race grade gas?
Also, how did they reduce the compression ratio? Is it a "hack" with the valve timing or did they actually swap out the connecting rods with different length ones?
What a travesty. The effective power output of those engines must be a fraction of what they once were
I always wondered how these older giant radials behave with the different type of gas burned today. Surprised there is no way to get appropriate octane gas to keep something like this flying.. there's no "antique" gas that can be procured? Some kind of race grade gas?
They also open up the waste gates to be "easier" on the engines to help them last longer, not just fuel related.The highest octane race gas I've seen is 110. Getting the leaded 130 is probably prohibitively expensive. One person who was working on an engine-related STC had to get "100LL" that was exactly at each end of the octane tolerance for testing, and IIRC it was in the neighborhood of $100/gal. You want to ground all these old birds, making them burn a wartime gas blend that they have to buy in the quantities they would be able to burn would do it.
I always wondered how these older giant radials behave with the different type of gas burned today. Surprised there is no way to get appropriate octane gas to keep something like this flying.. there's no "antique" gas that can be procured? Some kind of race grade gas?
Also, how did they reduce the compression ratio? Is it a "hack" with the valve timing or did they actually swap out the connecting rods with different length ones?
What a travesty. The effective power output of those engines must be a fraction of what they once were
I have heard the controller tape on the news and had a question. Does everyone think he was appropriate in stating that he had jets coming in and did the pilot really need to land right now? Just wondering what everyone else thought.
A Google search did not bring up the ferry flight if the B 24 from Canada to Harlingen Texas, and their epic fight with the FAA after their first engine failure. The FAA canceled their ferry permit, but they successfully avoided being "served" notice, with the aid of airport personnel who sympathized with the WW 2 pilots and mechanics who were flying the old bird. From the second airport, they flew so low the FAA could not track them.
Their time in service had brought them to a willingness to take risks that some others would call foolish, but they were willing to take.
Their third engine out stop was a wheat field in Kansas, the farmer agreed not to call and report them down, supplied them with the hydraulic hose they needed , and brought out his gas truck to top up their tanks and give them the range to make it to Harlingen, non stop. The B 24 was at home on a smooth 'grass strip' such as a wheat field, and took off just fine.
The FAA did serve the papers at Harlingen, but grounding it there was immaterial.
Some of the spirit of those guys may have been in 909 at Bradley. They didn't need to risk getting grounded for a single engine failure, just go back and fix it. Then the second went out..............
The second guessers will have a field day, but I am with the pilots on this one.
I have heard the controller tape on the news and had a question. Does everyone think he was appropriate in stating that he had jets coming in and did the pilot really need to land right now? Just wondering what everyone else thought.
Ah, OK, gotchaFailure to declare an emergency would make the difference in the trucks being in position and waiting vs driving out to the site after the crash. Better to declare and not need help rather than not declare and need it.
Damn, that sucksThe highest octane race gas I've seen is 110. Getting the leaded 130 is probably prohibitively expensive. One person who was working on an engine-related STC had to get "100LL" that was exactly at each end of the octane tolerance for testing, and IIRC it was in the neighborhood of $100/gal. You want to ground all these old birds, making them burn a wartime gas blend that they have to buy in the quantities they would be able to burn would do it.
The ONLY press conferences worth watching are the ones hosted by the on-scene NTSB lead investigator.Take the plane crash away and you’ve described nearly every press conference. If they know anything, only the expensive professional PR person speaks.