timwinters
Ejection Handle Pulled
And, of course, the contest has begun!
And, of course, the contest has begun!
I can't help but notice that they seem to have pulled the chute right near a bunch of nice open fields well within best glide distance of where they came down and hit a car on a busy road.
Nobody was killed or seriously injured so that's what matters. However given the altitude available and landing options in the area I'd hardly declare crashing into a car on a busy road as the amazing save the media is making it out to be.
The chute is a nice feature. I'd rather have one than not. But it seems like they threw a lot of other perfectly good options out the window and instead put people on the ground in danger. They could have gone for one of those nice fields and had plenty of time to pull the chute later if that wasn't going to work.
At the end of the day it's this that I think is the most valid criticism of "the chute" in that people often appear to throw normal emergency procedures drilled during good pilot training out the window and just yank the "we give up please save us" lever. I'm not so sure that's actually increasing safety in many situations, including this one.
CAPS sure did save another pilot. Saved the pilot from landing on a runway and getting his plane fixed.
Loss of oil pressure means you can't set the prop to coarse pitch, so yep its coming down like a rock.
As for the emergency descent, my guess is the oil pressure dropped and he wanted to get it on the ground as fast as possible.
...when he realized he couldn't make adequate power and then the engine seized...
It takes a while for an engine to seize without oil in my experience.
Just to correct some things. This plane has a composite prop that acts like a huge speed brake. The glide ratio with the composite prop is 8.6:1. The glide ratio being reported earlier in this thread is for a non-turbo without the composite prop.
Next, the pilot saw an oil pressure indication problem but the engine was probably running fine until it wasn't. Older Cirrus aircraft had a known issue with the wiring that would cause oil pressure and manifold pressure reading issues. It is possible the pilot turned to the airport as a precautionary measure and was descending for the approach when he realized he couldn't make adequate power and then the engine seized. This is a guess. At that point he lacked altitude and pulled. From other reports everyone walked away with minor scratches at worst.
Older Cirrus aircraft had a known issue with the wiring that would cause oil pressure and manifold pressure reading issues.
And they say there's no haters here...
WE have no clue what was happening up there. You were not there, I was not there.
Good comments.
Let's see what the final report says, but it looks like the big lesson here seems to reiterate what was drilled into me during pilot training. If the aircraft has an issue then unless it's on fire or has other issues that mean you must get on the ground ASAP stay as high as you can as long as you can, even if that means arriving at the airport with several thousand feet to kill. You can always then just do a few slow descending circles and break out to land. The Cirrus certainly has the avionics to easily find the airport and line up with a runway as such, even in IMC with 800 ft ceiling.
I don't understand why the pilot tried to lose altitude so fast at an airspeed clearly far far above best glide. Even with the engine having issues you could still go at a bit above best glide with no need to initiate a 2,500 ft/min decent, which only serves to remove the only thing you have in the bank at that point... air below you. Some falsely think this extra airspeed gives you something to play with later, but that demonstrates a lack of understanding of basic flight physics. Yes you can trade a bit of airspeed for altitude later, but you'll still be way worse off than if you followed best glide since the higher airspeed introduces a ton more drag that eats up energy.
Finally, just to be clear, this is not meant to be critical of the pilot. We all can make mistakes, but a key part of aviation safety is discussing what happened in accidents and what could/should have been done differently to produce a better outcome. That's the whole reason why the NTSB writes its reports.
If you look at the video taken from the backyard, it seems from the initial angle of the plane, that the chute was pulled pretty low. On initial deployment the plane is in a nose down attitude then transitions to a more flat attitude. So the pilot may have tried to set himself up for something and misjudged his glide and run out of options.
Definitely be interesting to hear the final report. Would love it if he did one if the AOPA videos for us.
Anybody know what the pilot's experience level was? Are Cirri the new Bonanza? Low experience / high money pilots getting in trouble and going for option one?
Are Cirri the new Bonanza? Low experience / high money pilots getting in trouble and going for option one?
I can't help but notice that they seem to have pulled the chute right near a bunch of nice open fields well within best glide distance of where they came down and hit a car on a busy road.
Nobody was killed or seriously injured so that's what matters. However given the altitude available and landing options in the area I'd hardly declare crashing into a car on a busy road as the amazing save the media is making it out to be.
The chute is a nice feature. I'd rather have one than not. But it seems like they threw a lot of other perfectly good options out the window and instead put people on the ground in danger. They could have gone for one of those nice fields and had plenty of time to pull the chute later if that wasn't going to work.
At the end of the day it's this that I think is the most valid criticism of "the chute" in that people often appear to throw normal emergency procedures drilled during good pilot training out the window and just yank the "we give up please save us" lever. I'm not so sure that's actually increasing safety in many situations, including this one.
What you have to understand here is how much pulling the chute is stressed as a primary emergency option during Cirrus flight training.
What you have to understand here is how much pulling the chute is stressed as a primary emergency option during Cirrus flight training.
Indeed and I don't understand this.
I had that issue on my 2003 SR22.
Looking over and seeing zero oil pressure was a little unnerving.
But watching the oil temperature like a hawk and seeing it holding steady is evidence of a problem with the indication, not a real loss of oil pressure.
One never wants to become complacent and simply assume it's the gauge. Then again, one must consider that possibility before doing anything too drastic.
Does the 100% save statistic, when deployed within parameters, make it easier to understand?
Trying to stretch a glide to an airport, road, or field is 100-X, with X being a non-zero number.
If a frog had wings, he wouldn't bump his ass when he hops. The fact of the matter is that there are pilots and passengers who would be dead today if their planes didn't have chutes. Whether the cause would have been unrecoverable mechanical issues or pilot stupidity is immaterial to these people. Sure, there are some other people who pulled but might have lived anyway (e.g., the guy at ADS who flew home trailing his parachute), but we'll never know which folks are in which category.The point is that when the chutes get deployed it's often because the pilot put the aircraft in a situation that arguably needed a chute.
The question then becomes would a better trained pilot have avoided that situation entirely?
I agree. If people are spending their money on chutes instead of training, it is a problem. Training is more valuable in more situations and in keeping one out of situations where one might need a chute. Ideally the pilots buying these planes would get both. But once you're at that point where you're having an emergency in a plane with a chute, if there's some doubt that you're going to make it down safely, why not pull? Land if you can, but if it isn't clear, pull it. The insurance company would much rather pay for a new plane than dead passengers.The safety question is not "is it safer to land in an emergency with or without a chute" but rather are we letting people substitute technology for good old fashion training on safe flying and thus ultimately coining less safe pilots.
Loss of oil pressure means you can't set the prop to coarse pitch, so yep its coming down like a rock.
As for the emergency descent, my guess is the oil pressure dropped and he wanted to get it on the ground as fast as possible.
Be careful. I investigated a fatal helicopter accident once where the main transmission lost fluid. The pilot reported zero pressure, but that his temp was steady. Not long after that the main rotor blades locked up around 1200 AGL.
Be careful. I investigated a fatal helicopter accident once where the main transmission lost fluid. The pilot reported zero pressure, but that his temp was steady. Not long after that the main rotor blades locked up around 1200 AGL.
I thought the same thing. See my post earlier.Am I hearing that right? He was 3 miles from the airport at 3500' with low oil pressure?
Something seems funny here. He was easily in reach of the runway. What's the glide ratio of a Cirrus?
I thought the same. If unable to maintain altitude, declare and go direct to the airport, whichever rwy. I try to be mindful of others but if I have engine trouble, my bacon in that situation is more important than the controller pushing some tin around to get them out of my way.No, I don't think you're hearing it right. ATC was bugging him to cancel IFR because he wasn't maintaining Minimum Vectoring Altitude for that area.... which was in the 3300' range. He was already below that, unable to maintain altitude, and pulled the chute.
I wouldn't respond to ATC bugging me about canceling IFR. I have bigger fish to fry. "Just give me vectors and point out the airport location and distance, buddy!"
It's almost like the controller thought he was going to get a "deal" (their term) for vectoring IFR traffic too low. I would think an emergency like this would trump... but I didn't hear an emergency declared either, by either party. To be fair, this feed had multiple frequency, so it's very likely that some relevant chatter was blocked by other frequencies on the scanner.
That was a joke. And a funny one.
Look at the clouds in the video. Not sure if it was the angle of the video I saw, but they appeared more broken than scattered. Popping out of a deck at 800 AGL does not provide much time to select a good landing spot.
Keep in mind that pilots kill themselves performing "normal emergency procedures" all the time. We read about them on the news. On the flip side, I am unaware of any fatalities caused by a CAPS deployment under recommended deployment conditions. When your survival rate is close to 100% with CAPS, and something significantly less performing "normal emergency procedures", how can you say it doesn't increase safety? How the occupants fare is the correct metric, IMO, not how the aircraft fares.
There are a ton of dead pilots that didn't make landing they thought they would. Lots of things can happen on an engine out landing especially if you don't have much real estate to work with.
I remember one CFI with his student had an engine out and told ATC they had a nice piece of land to land on. Even told them where it was and where to pick them up. Rescue showed up and the plane had fliped on landing and caught fire, killing both of them.
Can't fault a guy for pulling the chute, just look at the numbers. If you pull the chute your chances of survival are extremely high.
OK I'm convinced. I am going to use the CAPS system for every landing just to be safe. Fly to destination(or close) pull handle, call the insurance company, then hail an Uber ride the rest of the way.
What are you convinced of? Whatever that is you just wrote certainly isn't what I said. Pretty sure I never said every landing or emergency should involve a CAPS deployment, but nice Straw Man!
OK I'm convinced. I am going to use the CAPS system for every landing just to be safe. Fly to destination(or close) pull handle, call the insurance company, then hail an Uber ride the rest of the way.