Ed Haywood
En-Route
Watching mess on local news. Big fire, several homes destroyed. No info on aircraft type yet. Looks like a bad one.
Winds in the area were NW and favored runway 34.^^^ Odd.
Looks like left downwind, but instead of turning NE for base turned south and then west away from the airport. When the report stated Clwr Mall I thought PIE, plane was miles from CLW.
There are no IAPs to CLW. Nothing about the final several minutes of the flight path would be indicative of IFR work, anyway.Winds in the area were NW and favored runway 34.
FAA says destination was CLW and pilot reported engine failure.
I think he tried straight in approach to 34, was not lined up, went around, ran out of gas and failed to switch. Clearly he had fuel because the fire was big.
I'm not an IFR guy. Someone who is, where is the IAF for runway 34 approach? Looks to me like he was turning to line up for another straight in approach when he went down.
That sure looks like a petroleum fueled fire to me.
I flew about an hour earlier on other side of the bay. Weather was CAVU.
Alignment with CLW runway makes me think it was an attempted landing. Maybe not able to identify runway from surrounding lights, went around, ran out of gas and fumbled the tank switch?
I had a plane hangared there for a few years about 20 years ago. Don't recall any issues locating it, but I don't think I ever flew at night.I have rented out of KCLW and trained for my multi out of there. It isn't the easiest airport to find in the daytime, much less at night. No IAPs. It's right traffic for rwy 34, maybe when he was having issues he decided to divert to PIE instead.
The setups with airspace like that certainly complicate things when you’re lost and looking. That could explain the left turn away from a right-traffic runway as well as staying fairly low throughout the maneuver.I'm based out of Brooksville. I've only landed at CLW once. It is hard to see in the daytime, I can understand difficulty at night. KCLW is only about a mile NW of KPIE's airspace and also only about a mile West of the 1200ft shelf of the Tampa Bravo. However, I assume since he had been IFR he had clearance through those. Sad situation!
2 dead on ground, plus pilot. News reports say pilot reported he could not see the airport and had engine trouble. Apparently there is a LiveATC recording out. Anyone have a link?
Old Tampa Bay was about 1200’ from the crash site.I fly up and down that coast fairly often. I have an A36, and my plan on an engine out and not near an airport is to ditch gear up in the water. If he had done this the water in the intercoastal waterway is only 2 miles west of KCLW, is fairly calm protected water, and there are plenty of lights there to see what your doing. That probably would have saved 3 lives.
God be with her, her family, and all of the victims. I'll second CLW being difficult to pick out visually even in the daytime. Witness accounts say they went down at high speed. Night disorientation, power loss (for whatever reason), stall, and loss of control?A friend of our family, Mary Ellen Pender (54), was killed on the ground. She had stayed behind at a friend's place to help clean up after a day of golf, the kind person that she was. RIP
LiveATC tape is out there. Anyone found it?
Thanks. Not a lot there, but does confirm the basic scenario. He lined up for a straight in approach to runway 34 at CLW. Attempted to land, could not see airport, diverted to Albert Whitted, then reported he was losing his engine.Yes, someone made a condensed version of it and it’s posted at LiveATC under “interesting recordings.”
Oh you betcha, left of your calf and down. Leans special at night. Hell just fumbling with it when in a panic cuz the engine is sputtering will give you a run for your money. I reckon most people will want to visually eyes-on/read the selection if the engine is already quitting, as opposed to the more typical doing it by feel and assuming it's correct since the engine isn't quitting in the first place. A prolonged head movement in the former case, trying to read/verify the selection with crap readability at night and in a hurry, with an airplane slowing and naturally pitching down to last trimmed speed, I can totally see the channelization and spatial D loss of control from that ergonomics dumpster fire. No ground rush either to end game it peripherally, like one could in daytime. Game over.Where is tank selector on a Bonanza? Would pilot have to bend over and drop head below panel to operate?
most all spam cans are ergonomics nightmares for 2024 standards.
That’s why Fuel Selector - Fullest Tank is on my Approach checklist, done at top of descent, or no later than five miles out. One less thing to do when time and altitude is tight.
Yes, it is similar to a Cherokee. I wonder if the pilot did switch to the fullest tank as part of his before landing checklist, but did not get it all the way into the detent.“Left of your calf and down” means it’s not just hard to reach, but can’t be seen in the dark. Sounds the same as a Cherokee.
Yes, it is similar to a Cherokee. I wonder if the pilot did switch to the fullest tank as part of his before landing checklist, but did not get it all the way into the detent.