Dry Creek
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- Nov 30, 2021
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Dry Creek
Last Sunday a couple I am an acquaintance of, and their dog perished in an accident.
The couple owned the flight school I was attending earlier this year at KGDJ. That school closed down this summer, and a larger school opened a satellite office there. That is where I am currently training (In The Pattern).
Articles:
Local couple dies in Cleburne airplane crash | Breaking News | hcnews.com
UPDATED: Two killed in Sunday airplane crash in Cleburne | Local News | cleburnetimesreview.com
2 killed in small plane crash near Cleburne airport (fox4news.com)
There is an inconsistency that I noticed with each of the reports - they all state that the couple stopped at KCPT for fuel. The problem I see with that is the ADSB track doesn't corroborate that:
N8149Z Flight Tracking and History - FlightAware
If you drill down, it looks like they were on the RNAV approach to 33 and something happened before they made it to the field. Others have speculated the same thing, but wondered why they opted for a downwind approach based on the METAR. The METAR showed LIFR during that period. The other question was why they would divert to KCPT for fuel when their track actually was longer to KCPT, plus the fuel is a bit more expensive than at their destination. Another curious item was the speed shown in several instances. I saw 250 mph, which I believe could be in excess of VNE for a C-205. I really don't think that it achieved those speeds, but I do wonder if maybe they experienced some turbulence during those episodes of wildly fluctuating reported speeds.
Flightaware also shows that all of their last leg was flown as VFR, I am guessing that they did not have flight following either. You can see where they had to make at least one dogleg to avoid weather. I also noticed that the altitude chosen for a flight that long was pretty low - leading me to believe that maybe the conditions were IMC above their flight level.
The airplane involved in the accident apparently did not belong to them - it is registered to an attorney near Austin. I know that they owned a Grumman Cheetah, and it is what Will used when he instructed IFR at their flight school.
Both pilots were CFI, and I also believe both were CFI I too. Jeanette had been flying Part 135 for several months now, preferring that to being a flight instructor. It looks like Will had gone ATP after the flight school (Aviate at the Lake) closed. There were two relatively experienced and qualified pilots aboard that plane.
I am interested in seeing what the NTSB report finds on this one.
The couple owned the flight school I was attending earlier this year at KGDJ. That school closed down this summer, and a larger school opened a satellite office there. That is where I am currently training (In The Pattern).
Articles:
Local couple dies in Cleburne airplane crash | Breaking News | hcnews.com
UPDATED: Two killed in Sunday airplane crash in Cleburne | Local News | cleburnetimesreview.com
2 killed in small plane crash near Cleburne airport (fox4news.com)
There is an inconsistency that I noticed with each of the reports - they all state that the couple stopped at KCPT for fuel. The problem I see with that is the ADSB track doesn't corroborate that:
N8149Z Flight Tracking and History - FlightAware
If you drill down, it looks like they were on the RNAV approach to 33 and something happened before they made it to the field. Others have speculated the same thing, but wondered why they opted for a downwind approach based on the METAR. The METAR showed LIFR during that period. The other question was why they would divert to KCPT for fuel when their track actually was longer to KCPT, plus the fuel is a bit more expensive than at their destination. Another curious item was the speed shown in several instances. I saw 250 mph, which I believe could be in excess of VNE for a C-205. I really don't think that it achieved those speeds, but I do wonder if maybe they experienced some turbulence during those episodes of wildly fluctuating reported speeds.
Flightaware also shows that all of their last leg was flown as VFR, I am guessing that they did not have flight following either. You can see where they had to make at least one dogleg to avoid weather. I also noticed that the altitude chosen for a flight that long was pretty low - leading me to believe that maybe the conditions were IMC above their flight level.
The airplane involved in the accident apparently did not belong to them - it is registered to an attorney near Austin. I know that they owned a Grumman Cheetah, and it is what Will used when he instructed IFR at their flight school.
Both pilots were CFI, and I also believe both were CFI I too. Jeanette had been flying Part 135 for several months now, preferring that to being a flight instructor. It looks like Will had gone ATP after the flight school (Aviate at the Lake) closed. There were two relatively experienced and qualified pilots aboard that plane.
I am interested in seeing what the NTSB report finds on this one.