Checkout_my_Six
Touchdown! Greaser!
Ok....So I'm fat.
The cockpit voice recorder will explain what really happened... There is no way those three didn't utter any words..
Let's not forget, that we are all taught to fly with the stall, warning blaring during slow flight, so we get the feeling we can handle it if we get slow, just hammer the throttle drop the nose and go! Unfortunately jets engines have lag time, plus, this low dropping the nose for enough airspeed gets tough if not impossible. If it pitched up and down repeatedly he may have been pulling up before he achieved enough airspeed causing recurrent stalls.
Reasons for slow flight: geese on runway being removed, plane on down wind while your in the pattern at 3 miles out on final, couple that with a guy who sounds like he's a little shy on the throttle based on the last 2010 accident report and you've got a disaster. Tough to say for sure but the cockpit audio recording should clear it up.
We dont know if there was no call or if it just got stepped on by other calls, but That should get cleared up also.
The KHVN accident was very similar to this one, low and slow is a dangerous point in flight that unfortunately doesn't get enough respect. At KHVN I personally think when ATC got the guys tail number wrong and he had to make that correction call, he was already on overload, put him behind the plane and that was that. Unexpected distractions at a critical point can be deadly. KHVN was 900 ft ceilings and thunderstorms all over the place though, tough day.
As with most accidents it's a pile up of things going bad that gets you.
With this one,
Anyone know what the "weather coming in", in the live atc tapes was about? (Woman telling a plane in the pattern not to leave due to weather coming in) Ntsb states weather not a factor though too.
Got to feel bad for the family though, blaming them for moving there is rediculous, raising three kids is expensive and they probably were able to buy more house close to the airport. No one really expects planes to fall from the sky on their house. You've got a better chance of hitting lotto.
However, Pretty much anytime we go out and strap our azz to a kite with an engine were taking our chances.
You feel bad for everyone but especially the innocents on the ground.
Phenoms don't have a stall warning horn, its a voice saying "stall, stall"
Full dirty, we circle at 120kias, most use that as the slowest speed for any operations other than a straight in landing.
Vref was probably 108-110. Just an FYI.
Engines in these spool pretty fast. A stall warning, even at max gross could be recovered from and a significant climb established in 3-5 seconds at that temp/altitude.
We DO NOT practice slow flight in these. Stalls, and thats it. There is never a training maneuver ouside of stalls that ever has a stall warning, ever! He wasn't doing anything he was trained for if he tried to slow flight a Phenom.
This guy screwed up BIG TIME! We will read about this at recurrent for the next 10 years. Unless the tapes show something, it seems like a clear cut case of doing the wrong thing at the wrong time.
Just some input there. I am an ATP with 1,200 single pilot hours in the Phenom 100. I do contract work for several companies as well, so I get to see most common flying techniques in these.
Got to feel bad for the family though, blaming them for moving there is rediculous, raising three kids is expensive and they probably were able to buy more house close to the airport.
I am not a betting man but if I had to be I would bet against such scenario. It is extremely unlikely. The pilot seems fine 7, 3 miles out and just in the last moment he gets 'incapacitated'. It is a bit like this claim from the Cory Lidle SR20 accident about aircraft controls, they were fine throughout the flight but just when they were in this critical left turn they got 'locked'. I don't buy such coincidences for a nanosecond.I am still guessing a medical issue with the pilot and the passenger had no idea what to do
Gaithersburg is a relatively affluent city in a relatively affluent county (Montgomery) in Maryland.
My search on home prices had prices soaring when I looked at some near another airport (KVKX) a few years ago (1m+), so I don't think the 'this is all they could afford' idea pans out.
Everybody risks their life every day regardless what they do. Living under the extended center lines of runways and getting hit by a plane and killed has Powerball odds.
So...you have even less experience than the crash dude....
4,500 TT, ATP CFI and typed certified in the aircraft.How did you reach that conclusion? He said that he has 1200 single-pilot hours in the Phenom 100. If we know how many hours the accident pilot had in type, I missed it.
With very few exceptions, I would not expect a company executive to have the same type of experience or level of proficiency that is possessed by a professional pilot. That isn't to say that an executive can't operate just as safely as a professional pilot, only that there is perhaps statistically more risk that they would not.
I'm always amazed at the folks in a rush to defend accident pilots. With very few exceptions, accident pilots are all "great pilots" (and in some cases, that may actually be true), but in the end those pilots are almost always found to have some degree of culpability for the accident.
Knowledge does not necessarily indicate wisdom, and experience does not necessarily indicate proficiency. I agree that we shouldn't write the history book without an opportunity to gather all of the facts, but it is not unreasonable to draw conclusions based on what we do know at a given point in time, especially if those conclusions have a solid basis in historical fact.
JKG
I'm guessing in post #205 the poster means 1,200 hours in the Phenom not 1,200 TT.
I'm always amazed at the folks in a rush to defend accident pilots.
JKG
So...you have even less experience than the crash dude....
Gaithersburg is a relatively affluent city in a relatively affluent county (Montgomery) in Maryland.
My search on home prices had prices soaring when I looked at some near another airport (KVKX) a few years ago (1m+), so I don't think the 'this is all they could afford' idea pans out.
Your in denial about the big factor called clutch city. In buffalo, the pilot of the Colgan turbo prop , raised the nose and did not apply FULL throttle when the stick shaker went off! Then.....the copilot dumped the flaps! Between the ears is where most screw ups happen. The pilot in DC who plunged into the Potomac did almost everything wrong,including not believing his instruments and not firewalling it when the co- pilot announced, " we're going down larry" his answer was..." I know" . It's why 80 pilots start cadets, around fourty finish. It's between the ears and how well they do under extremis. Easy in the sim but much tougher in the real world.The stall warning for 20 seconds makes me wonder if the pilot had a medical problem at a very inopportune moment. That's a LONG time. I feel like most pilots react to that sound like a German Shepherd responds to a bump in the night. I hope the CVR will reveal more of what was going on.
Montgomery county is not "just affluent" rather it's the richest county in maryland, home of many many government leeches, lobbyists, defense contractors, etc. loaded with money!
While Montgomery County is indeed relatively affluent (see Bethesda, Rockville, etc.),
the city of Gaithersburg is not where that wealth and influence is located.
Regards,
Tim
KGAI
Excellent school system, etc. northern virgina, same.
ya but....back then the King's had a real farm and the car dealership.Twenty years ago I lived off Goshen Road. I think everybody who comes to the Washington area passes through Gaithersburg, primarily because it's relatively affordable. I'd leave my Cherokee at GAI and fly up to FDK for work.
There was complaining about the airport back then too.
Interesting article. I wonder where the woman in the article got the description, "hobby" from.
The article seems well balanced but also an advocate for aviation, while being sensitive to the current emotion of the event.
The southern part of Rockville also decided to call themselves "North Bethesda". I used to live there. It sounded much better than Rockville. Now I live in Germantown. We don't have any special name.
<< Sent from my mobile device at 0agl >>
Your town is the namesake of my first boat in the Navy. USS Germantown (LSD-42). I spent three years on her based in Sasebo, Japan. Good boat, had a lotta fun.
And today's article in the Washington post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local...0b2-11e4-9f38-95a187e4c1f7_story.html?hpid=z2
Awesome.Interesting article. I wonder where the woman in the article got the description, "hobby" from.