PaulS
Touchdown! Greaser!
2 dead, RIP. Definitely wasn't fuel exhaustion.
A plane crash kills two near North Perry Airport in Florida | Miami Herald
A plane crash kills two near North Perry Airport in Florida | Miami Herald
https://www.google.com/maps/place/SW+13th+St+&+SW+72nd+Ave,+Pembroke+Pines,+FL+33024/@25.998171,-80.2331875,964m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x88d9a92a123c6449:0x6c53e8104c536625!8m2!3d25.9985027!4d-80.2313438
Here's where they made it to when attempting to return to the airport after apparent engine failure.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/SW+13th+St+&+SW+72nd+Ave,+Pembroke+Pines,+FL+33024/@25.998171,-80.2331875,964m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m5!3m4!1s0x88d9a92a123c6449:0x6c53e8104c536625!8m2!3d25.9985027!4d-80.2313438
Here's where they made it to when attempting to return to the airport after apparent engine failure.
10L was their departure runway. There's a Live ATC clip of them being cleared for takeoff and a left downwind departure. You don't hear the pilot's response, or if he called back in in trouble or anything.Any idea which runway they departed from ... 10R or 10L?
That's about as tough an environment as I have ever seen. Zero options once you cross the numbers on the far end.
That is hard to watch. Didn’t look like a stall to me, appears he had plenty of speed but all that can be calculated by the investigation.
altitude is your friend.
If he wasn’t stalled he was sure coming down at a steep angle. I know bonanzas aren’t the best gliders but damn.
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2 dead, RIP. Definitely wasn't fuel exhaustion.
A plane crash kills two near North Perry Airport in Florida | Miami Herald
I'd say it wasn't fuel exhaustion based on the fire spread. However, doesn't mean it wasn't fuel a starvation issue.Don't assume that, many planes have gone down with plenty of fuel onboard, but the engine was trying to run on a dry tank.
Unforgiving yes. Basically every airport in the LA area.Any idea which runway they departed from ... 10R or 10L?
That's about as tough an environment as I have ever seen. Zero options once you cross the numbers on the far end.
I'd say it wasn't fuel exhaustion based on the fire spread. However, doesn't mean it wasn't fuel a starvation issue.
Agreed I was just commenting on the fact I doubt it was fuel exhaustion but rather starvation of fuel related AND possibly fueled with the wrong type.The plane had very limited hours on it over the past 10 years in a corrosive environment out in Florida. I think it averaged 4.9 a year since a major rebuild and only had 350ish hours total time. Then again, it could be any number of things. I just always feel a plane being flown a lot is a safer plane to fly.
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Mine is like that. I brief every takeoff. At my home airport the brief is always the same. If the engine quits on takeoff it's going to hurt real bad. Taking off to the west maybe I can get around and land in the cow pasture west of the airport. Taking off to the east I'm looking at crowded neighborhoods. The one saving grace in all this is my airport has parallel runways, so I only have to do a 180. In this sort of situation I'd be happy to make it back to the airport environment. Heck, in this sort of situation I'd be glad to make it to clear patch of ground.They build airports on cheap rural land and then they come and build homes right up to the edge of them. I hate these types of airports where there is simply nowhere to go after takeoff.
Ugh. I literally had this what if conversation on Saturday at my home airport. What if it fails on takeoff on 27. New neighborhood off the end of the runway extending far to the north, and to high tension wires to the South. Impossible turn but he had zero other options. My condolences
The county just approved a new neighborhood in our downwind. A bunch of us attended multiple meetings but they completely ignored everything we said and ended the meetings stating incorrect facts as the reason for their decision to allow the zone change. Facts like “planes landing and taking off aren’t flying over this land, as it’s to the side of the runway not at the ends”.... this is despite me spending my whole three minutes explaining what a pattern is and how the FAA recommended approach to the airport would put aircraft over the neighborhood constantly.
It was very frustrating.
Ugh. I literally had this what if conversation on Saturday at my home airport. What if it fails on takeoff on 27. New neighborhood off the end of the runway extending far to the north, and to high tension wires to the South. Impossible turn but he had zero other options. My condolences
The only thing they did that made any sense was insist on a rider to the deed stating that they understand there is an airport next door. I doubt most people will notice or understand the ramifications.Sounds like a classic case of "our minds are made up...don't confuse the issue with facts".
And watch, they will will build new houses, people will move in, and then complain about the noise from the airport!
Sometimes the impossible is just that. We don't know when it quit. We don't know his altitude or anything. I agree that you don't need to make it to the runway to be able to walk away but it's easy to play Monday morning quarterback. Maybe he did everything textbook and just didn't have the altitude or the energy. A Cherokee Six isn't going to pull off what a Cub can.Brief an engine out on takeoff every time. If reaction time is there and the disclipline is there to lower the nose to get a good rate of turn without death spinning it, the "turn" is not "impossible". And most of the time, not making it to the runway pavement is no big deal. The airport environment is full of flat spaces without obstacles...... most of the time.
I'm not the best at it yet, but I'm trying to develop a habit of assuming the engine is going to quit on every takeoff. I don't mind being wrong.
Sometimes the impossible is just that. We don't know when it quit. We don't know his altitude or anything. I agree that you don't need to make it to the runway to be able to walk away but it's easy to play Monday morning quarterback. Maybe he did everything textbook and just didn't have the altitude or the energy. A Cherokee Six isn't going to pull off what a Cub can.
One of my employees was a former ATC from Hawthorne, CA. He says his boss specifically bought a house that was near the airport so it would be a short commute to work, and then proceeded to gripe to his coworkers about the airplane noise.Sounds like a classic case of "our minds are made up...don't confuse the issue with facts".
And watch, they will will build new houses, people will move in, and then complain about the noise from the airport!