Doggtyred
En-Route
One of the reports of the investigation into the mishap this summer involving the 6 plane, opposing solo pilot Capt Kuss was released today.
The brief version:
He was on his third flight of the day
He entered the Split S lower than normal, faster than normal, and he didn't disengage afterburners when he called that he was disengaging afterburner.
He kept burners on throughout the maneuver which included the inverted pull towards the ground, through vertical.
He initiated ejection at around 98 feet AGL, with a downward vertical speed of >5000 fpm (>80 ish FPS).
Aircraft hit trees at 48 feet or so AGL, with subsequent crash and fireball occurring.
The ejection sequence catapulted him through the fireball, burning the drogue and main chute, and resulting in no braking action. He hit the ground before seat-man separation occurred.
No evasive action or maneuvers before initiating ejection were recorded.
Cause of death was ruled blunt force trauma.
Cause of the mishap was ruled pilot error.
No mechanical blame was assigned.
No weather blame was assigned, although nearby clouds may have been a factor in pilot decisionmaking.
http://lmgcorporate.com/wsmv/documents/BlueAngelsCrash.pdf
The brief version:
He was on his third flight of the day
He entered the Split S lower than normal, faster than normal, and he didn't disengage afterburners when he called that he was disengaging afterburner.
He kept burners on throughout the maneuver which included the inverted pull towards the ground, through vertical.
He initiated ejection at around 98 feet AGL, with a downward vertical speed of >5000 fpm (>80 ish FPS).
Aircraft hit trees at 48 feet or so AGL, with subsequent crash and fireball occurring.
The ejection sequence catapulted him through the fireball, burning the drogue and main chute, and resulting in no braking action. He hit the ground before seat-man separation occurred.
No evasive action or maneuvers before initiating ejection were recorded.
Cause of death was ruled blunt force trauma.
Cause of the mishap was ruled pilot error.
No mechanical blame was assigned.
No weather blame was assigned, although nearby clouds may have been a factor in pilot decisionmaking.
http://lmgcorporate.com/wsmv/documents/BlueAngelsCrash.pdf
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