Interesting! Brings up a question.... if you were the pilot with an engine failure, and had a couple marginal landing areas in the vicinity, would you deploy the chute or try to land the plane yourself?
Now I haven't flown a cirrus and I'm not familiar with the normal procedures associated with it, but personally I'd probably be more interested in landing the plane rather than deploying the chute. Just me though.
After landing and they got out, probably a nice tailwind came along and lifted it up on a wing tip/nose gear leg, then flipped it over. Once wind got up under the wing and HS to help the chute out, it was all over.
It's not e very light airplane for the wind to just lift it up. Although the chute might have helped.
Interesting! Brings up a question.... if you were the pilot with an engine failure, and had a couple marginal landing areas in the vicinity, would you deploy the chute or try to land the plane yourself?
Now I haven't flown a cirrus and I'm not familiar with the normal procedures associated with it, but personally I'd probably be more interested in landing the plane rather than deploying the chute. Just me though.
It's not e very light airplane for the wind to just lift it up. Although the chute might have helped.
What amazed me is the chute alone BROKE the power pole in half... Either it was a rotten pole or that chute has a tremendous pulling power...
From the news reel:
"It's not clear if the chute was deployed before or after the plane came to the ground."
Although technically and journalistically a correct statement, I think it would be okay to make an assumption based on the normal operation of parachutes. Retractions, corrections and erratum happen tomorrow.
If I am not sure that I can land it safely I'd use he chute. Insurance can take care of the rest.
I just got an SR-22 this past summer and went through the VFR and IFR transition training. While Cirrus recommends deploying the chute under many different conditions, if there's any possibility of flying the plane to the ground, that's what I'm going to do. I would much rather be in control of my own destiny than in the cords of the chute. If I'm in the soup with a catastrophic engine failure, I'll probably pull the chute, unless I see an opening and a nice field. Just my opinion
I opined that a chute pull has its own risk, which it does. You go from pilot to passenger, and are at the whim of the prevailing winds. Easy to envision drifting down into a power station, or into the path of a semi, getting dragged along - that sort of thing.
Once you pull the chute is the plane going to be totaled by the insurance company?
That's like saying there are times when wearing your seat belt will kill you in an otherwise survivable crash. And, while that's true, the odds are so minuscule that we still wear our seat belts.
For me, it's not "easy to envision drifting down into a power station, or into the path of a semi" as those types of hazards probably constitute less than 1/100th of 1% of the surface area below.
I just got an SR-22 this past summer and went through the VFR and IFR transition training. While Cirrus recommends deploying the chute under many different conditions, if there's any possibility of flying the plane to the ground, that's what I'm going to do. I would much rather be in control of my own destiny than in the cords of the chute. If I'm in the soup with a catastrophic engine failure, I'll probably pull the chute, unless I see an opening and a nice field. Just my opinion
There is a video floating around that is disturbing.
Cirrus clipped a glider tow line.
They pulled the chute but then the plane caught fire.
They were floating to the ground but burning inside.
What a horrible way to go.
For me, it's not "easy to envision drifting down into a power station, or into the path of a semi" as those types of hazards probably constitute less than 1/100th of 1% of the surface area below.
How about power LINES, like the one this guy's plane hit?
If you can land it, LAND it.
If you can land it, LAND it.
This is a terrible idea in a Cirrus unless it's a runway or a runway-like improved field. My SR22 weighs 3,600 lbs at gross and stops flying, assuming I have full flaps and set it down right at stall, around 70mph. I have 3 really skinny tires that can't retract surrounded by fairings that have about 2" of ground clearance. My front nose wheel is tiny with one skinny strut holding it onto the plane. With full fuel, I'm carrying 94.5 gallons of 100LL in a wet wing. As several fatal accidents can attest, taking that much energy into an off field landing with that landing gear often doesn't end well.
In fact, my landing gear is designed to collapse. Why? Because my plane is designed to land under a chute and protect it's passengers. This means the gear collapses to absorb the vertical impact as does the seat which is made out of a honeycomb structure. That's why the survival rate of pulls made within parameters is 100% so far. You can't say the same with the alternative so why try it? The design choices made to make a chute landing survivable may make an off field landing less so.
My DA40 on the other hand stalled at 49 knots, had a 28g cockpit, sealed fuel tanks with steal braided fuel lines, air bags and seats bolted straight into the hull that couldn't move. Even if it came with a chute, I'd consider it a second option. In the Cirrus the chute is plan A.
This is a terrible idea in a Cirrus unless it's a runway or a runway-like improved field.
I hadn't realized that the Cirrus was that fragile.
Still, one thing that landing it does that the chute doesn't is that you have the opportunity to pick your crash site.
Still, one thing that landing it does that the chute doesn't is that you have the opportunity to pick your crash site.
We're looking at maybe 60-70 chute pulls vs. tens of thousands of glide in off airport landings. Not enough data.
*Including me, when the left wing departed and I fought for control all the way to ground impact, never even considering CAPS until it was too late.
Fortunately, we could reset the simulator after discussing my poor performance. In real life, that's often not an option.
2) IMHO, having the CAPS cover in place could have fatal consequences. In this case, I don’t care what the POH says (and that means something coming from me!). If the cover is a required placard, maybe it could be Velcro’d to the ceiling next to the handle (I think Mike has the “Pull Procedure” laminated in the handle’s recess). Turns out in my scenario I also had the pin in place - again, I blame this on not having my own checklist which I’m very used to. Still, it shows poor use of the checklist which was provided.
Glad you learned something. Glad there was a reset button.
I'd wondered about those covers. Please correct if wrong, but I recall that in G3+ removing the cover is a preflight action whereas pre G3 is as you describe. It would seem to me that the cover could be a explanation as to why some of the fatals didn't pull; cover was in the way and it takes extra time.