Dang it! Sound like he was only 10 nm from his destination, and clear of the mountains.
Wouldn't he have been in contact with approach by then for class B clearance?
Nah, Class B floor at Franktown where he crashed is 9000', drops to 8000' over KAPA. No need to get a Class B clearance when approaching from Franktown.
Oh, a night flight was it. I have never flown in the mountains, but isn't it pretty ballsy to fly single engine 180 hp in the mountains at night? Doesn't sound like the terrain contributed in this case, but seems like a bad idea from a flat-lander perspective. Only about a 2.5 hr flight. surely he didn't set out on a trek through the Rockies with less than 25 gallons or so?
Oh, a night flight was it. I have never flown in the mountains, but isn't it pretty ballsy to fly single engine 180 hp in the mountains at night? Doesn't sound like the terrain contributed in this case, but seems like a bad idea from a flat-lander perspective. Only about a 2.5 hr flight. surely he didn't set out on a trek through the Rockies with less than 25 gallons or so?
Oh, a night flight was it. I have never flown in the mountains, but isn't it pretty ballsy to fly single engine 180 hp in the mountains at night? Doesn't sound like the terrain contributed in this case, but seems like a bad idea from a flat-lander perspective. Only about a 2.5 hr flight. surely he didn't set out on a trek through the Rockies with less than 25 gallons or so?
If it was the PA28-140, it wasn't a 180 hp engine, probably the 150 hp and it's more than 3 hr flight. Very strange on FlightAware. Lists the aircraft as PIPER PA-28-140 but with the O-360 engine. Doesn't make sense to me.
CO poisoning? Just conjecture. No evidence. Insidious at night though, out near Franktown. Fairly dark getting to that area.
Just trying to think of reasons he'd be in the Franktown area anyway... no need to come that Far East to get to KAPA.
Maybe he wasn't really flying it...
FlightAware lists an O-320 and 180 hp. Error in database or an STC'd re-engine.
If he "arrived" at 8:30 then he would have been out of the mountains about dark if he took one of the passes. Not an impossible flight for a light Cherokee with full fuel leaving the ABQ area. There were showers around Saturday afternoon and clouds over the mountains. I wouldn't have flown in the hills Saturday but that doesn't mean that it couldn't be done. All that comentary is pointless since he made it to the Denver area.
Even if the engine quit (for whatever reason), there was no need to set it down hard. The powerlines in the area of the crash may have scared him. Their presence doesn't change the procedure for a night forced landing. Maybe he got disoriented...it happens, particularly inadvertent VFR into IMC at night.
CO poisoning? Just conjecture. No evidence. Insidious at night though, out near Franktown. Fairly dark getting to that area.
Just trying to think of reasons he'd be in the Franktown area anyway... no need to come that Far East to get to KAPA.
Maybe he wasn't really flying it...
Since you brought it up...[shameless plug follows]
The Colorado Pilots Assoc is once again (actually twice again) presenting the High Altitude Airport/Mountain course on Sat June 8 and again on Sat Aug 24.
Details at:
www.coloradopilots.org/mtnfly_class.asp?menuID=92~92
Warning - this is NOT backcountry mountain flying. For that, head to one of the many specialty schools such as McCall's.
The plane was last heard from Saturday night when radar pinged it around 8:40 p.m. and when a neighbor called police saying that she heard a plane stalling overhead.
Given the evidence at hand, my suspicion is also fuel...
For the record, it's being reported locally that the accident flight departed from Sandia Airpark (1N1) a 4800' strip at 6600' MSL, on the other side of the mountains from ABQ. I wonder what his payload was, and if he felt compelled to leave fuel behind.
Given the evidence at hand, my suspicion is also fuel...
For the record, it's being reported locally that the accident flight departed from Sandia Airpark (1N1) a 4800' strip at 6600' MSL, on the other side of the mountains from ABQ. I wonder what his payload was, and if he felt compelled to leave fuel behind.
Interested to know what that means--does a plane make noise when it stalls, or was she talking about an engine sputter?
I think the general population things that a stalling airplane is like the sound of a stalling or sputtering motor. They can only relate to the sound their car engine make when it isn't running right.
FAA registry lists it as an O-320.Very strange on FlightAware. Lists the aircraft as PIPER PA-28-140 but with the O-360 engine. Doesn't make sense to me.
Everyone who goes through this life builds a story. I didn't know Jason, and this is hardly his full story (or even the most significant part of it), but he had the distinction of sending the last command from the Mission Control Center to the Space Shuttle on the last flight of the program.
That's pretty cool.
Steeley Eyed Missile Man.
Wish I had lived through those years