MarkZ
En-Route
I prefer Tom Costello on NBC for aviation reporting. He did a great job reporting DAL1086.
And from the AvWeb article:From the last line in the article:
"72-year-old Ford is a longtime aviator -- piloting planes and helicopters -- and has crashed multiple times in the past." [emphasis added]
I wonder why he's had so many crashes?
One can cannot dispute that Mr. Ford has experience crashing aircraft, and experience does develop proficiency.The incident prompted world-wide reaction and EAA Chairman Jack Pelton suggested the unplanned but relatively successful arrival on the golf course was the result of some good airmanship. "His flying experience and proficiency served him well today," Pelton said in a statement.
...I wonder why he's had so many crashes?
And from the AvWeb article:
One can cannot dispute that Mr. Ford has experience crashing aircraft, and experience does develop proficiency.
...The Ryan stalls at 65MPH clean, ...
From the last line in the article:
"72-year-old Ford is a longtime aviator -- piloting planes and helicopters -- and has crashed multiple times in the past." [emphasis added]
I wonder why he's had so many crashes?
One training in a helicopter, which is inherently dangerous since the wings move faster than the fuselage.
One reported as wind shear on a cross wind landing.
Now one due to an 70 year old engine dying.
Doesn't seem to be very related. Did I miss one?
Meh, it's all the same pilot.
E X C E L L E N T!!!!!!When people ask me if I feel safe flying a 1946 Luscombe I tell them it has never killed anyone in 70 years of use. That seems like a pretty good record. If it has any "tendency" I'd say it overwhelmingly tends to keep on flying and have nothing go wrong.
Looks like he came up just short of runway 3, and according to one report he had 3000 altitude when **** started going down (not sure how trustworthy that cite is.) I'm sort of curious why he didn't try to put it down on one of the larger greens that were probably running parallel to his flight path. Seems like he could've landed completely unscathed.
You can see exactly where he landed, here, and compare that to Google maps:
http://www.tmz.com/2015/03/05/harri...d=maing-grid7|main5|dl1|sec1_lnk3&pLid=623520
My guess is he really wanted to get back to the airport and by the time he realized that wasn't gonna happen those fairways were behind him. Watching the video of that thing taking off I find it very hard to believe he was at 3000' within 2 minutes of takeoff clearance. SMO is damn close to sea level. I have to go to the coast and do a pretty wide 270 to get up to 3500 for the LAX SFRA in my mooney. Dont think he was airborne long enough for that.
Well in the helo incident he was with an instructor and probably wasn't PIC.
If one wants to pin them all on Harrison Ford and assume he's some kind of bad pilot, that person will likely do so in spite of details. Whatevs.
From the last line in the article:
"72-year-old Ford is a longtime aviator -- piloting planes and helicopters -- and has crashed multiple times in the past." [emphasis added]
I wonder why he's had so many crashes?
I'm glad he's okay as well.
We can't afford to lose two sci-fi legends in one week.
He flies single pilot GA a lot, **** happens.
I'm sure that's true but with no engine power and suddenly having to put it right on a spot with all the stress that comes with that, it'd be a challenge. Golf courses aren't flat and are full of obstacles. Not saying I couldn't do it. I'm just saying he did a good job.
I'm sort of curious why he didn't try to put it down on one of the larger greens that were probably running parallel to his flight path. http://www.tmz.com/2015/03/05/harri...d=maing-grid7|main5|dl1|sec1_lnk3&pLid=623520
see the weather thread.
You think this line of thinking is confined to this area? Pretty sure all the NIMBYs that move in next to airports then want them shut down share this mentality regardless of locale.
Anybody listening to this idiot on CNN? News people... GEEZE!
He's fine...
Stupidest comment I have heard from the media so far about this accident: "airplanes with engines this old have a tendency to fail"
Tendency?! I don't think so. They may fail, but they don't have a tendency to fail.
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Because greens are around 50 meters in diameter
Yeah...if he didn't have 18 of 'em to choose from I might agree with you!
No way is that enough of an inducement.
Fine. Don't move here. We're happy without you.
Because greens are around 50 meters in diameter surrounded by things like sand traps and water hazards. Fairways are generally heavier grass, somewhat straight, and a hell of a lot longer.
Pity that he hit a tree before he got to the fairway.
Jim
Kinda proves my point, thanks.