PaulS
Touchdown! Greaser!
Tough to watch.... said he was 90 mph on final for "trees and altitude density", that made me scratch my head. Don't know if that is fast or not for this airplane, but it sounds fast
Fast is why the accident happened. Altitude density? Did he really have a pilot certificate?
He was too fast but the airplane to slammed into the ground when he flared? Seems contradictory.
Flare? What flare?
He was too fast but the airplane to slammed into the ground when he flared? Seems contradictory.
Crosswind anxiety maybe? Sometimes the fear of crosswinds (and the ham-fisted things we do because of those fears) are way worse than the crosswind itself.Yea, I don't think "crosswind" had anything to do with it.
Yep, that's what I saw.Don't know what you guys are seeing. He had a tailwind, not enough right rudder and dropped it in with the nose up. Too slow, IAS-wise; too fast, GS-wise. IMO.
That too...Yeah, lotta nonsense being attributed to the pilot just freezing and riding the airplane into the ground.
The sound track in my head was the same but it had “ohhh my back” at the end.I might be a horrible person, but it makes me laugh every time I see that little hop towards the end. The first time I watched it I involuntarily said "wheeeee" when it happened.
Hard to tell what happened from that angle. Had to have a fair amount of energy to slide that far though.
You certainly have much more experience than I do, but it seems like there wouldn't be enough energy to slide off the runway, over the grass, and then launch that high into the air that far from touchdown if he was "too slow".Don't know what you guys are seeing. He had a tailwind, not enough right rudder and dropped it in with the nose up. Too slow, IAS-wise; too fast, GS-wise. IMO.
Navy landing
Don't know what you guys are seeing. He had a tailwind, not enough right rudder and dropped it in with the nose up. Too slow, IAS-wise; too fast, GS-wise. IMO.
You certainly have much more experience than I do, but it seems like there wouldn't be enough energy to slide off the runway, over the grass, and then launch that high into the air that far from touchdown if he was "too slow".
I'm looking at the sock. Reads "tailwind" to me.I think he was saying, the guy was slow in the air but fast on the ground due to a tailwind.
that American flag does look like it's showing a slight crosswind but it's hard to say.
I'm looking at the sock. Reads "tailwind" to me.
Agree there was a light quartering tailwind. But to me, it looks like he just flew it hard into the ground. I can't see any sort of pitch up or flare in the last 30 ft. of his descent... that just doesn't work. If it was low IAS due to the tailwind, leading to a stall, you would still see some sort of flare, or the nose dropping after the stall. Instead, you just the the airplane descending quickly toward the runway, striking the runway, and then sliding off the runway.I'm looking at the sock. Reads "tailwind" to me.
Agree there was a light quartering tailwind. But to me, it looks like he just flew it hard into the ground. I can't see any sort of pitch up or flare in the last 30 ft. of his descent... that just doesn't work.
I can't tell much from that wx rpt. It was 29 miles away. Which do you believe, the wind 29 miles away or your lyin' eyes?Winds were 110/006
HW component 1.04kts
XW component 5.91kts
for Rwy 19
Temp 32C
Elev 687'asl
DA 3153'
Rwy 19 (3300 x 60 dry asphalt)
I can't tell much from the video.
It’s a lot easier to jump to stupid pilot trick when the pilot says he was doing stupid things, like adjusting indicated airspeed due to high DA.Using the “Principle of Charity”, can we assume that in the past, this pilot made hundreds or thousands of decent, successful landings with a properly executed roundout and flare?
So, we have to focus on what went wrong in this specific case.
What I can think of...
1) A freak gust or wind shear that hit the plane right at the moment the pilot began to flare.
2) The pilot was somehow distracted at a critical moment, delaying his normal landing process at exactly the wrong time.
3) Some sort of visual illusion which threw off the pilot’s perception of height, delaying his roundout and flare.
I’m sure there are other possible explanation. Yes, it could have simply been an isolated case of poor piloting. But I think it’s to easy to jump to “stupid pilot trick” when other factors - factors we as pilots may also sometimes fall victim to - could have at the very least exacerbated the situation.