I can't recall bob Hoover being upside down that low. I do remember he had some trouble with the Feds with his medical as he grew older.
You need to inform yourself a bit better about what happened to Bob Hoovers medical.
I can't recall bob Hoover being upside down that low. I do remember he had some trouble with the Feds with his medical as he grew older.
Nice response there by the emergency crews. Poor guy probably burned to death after surviving the initial crash.
I can say that the reaction was telling. The Air Force shut the show down and kicked everybody out. Do think there will be another show there?
Nice response there by the emergency crews. Poor guy probably burned to death after surviving the initial crash.
You need to inform yourself a bit better about what happened to Bob Hoovers medical.
Low level inverted flight is just risky any way you break it down, and unfortunately it just got the better of him yesterday.
With no report on the cause,a lot of posting is about age.
What you may not realize is that Eddie was one of the hardest working people out there. This is not someone who would retire quietly on the golf course. He was still working building foundations and roads doing hard labor instead of hitting golfballs or on a cruise ship. Just the other day, i saw him driving something that looked like this down highway 1. You are not talking about your average senior here. You have to take that into context. We can only be so lucky at that age!
Actually I did. That's why I said "a few". 48 is still a long way from 77.
He was an excellent operator particularly on a grader. Did a big job for me south of Half Moon Bay and was a terrific guy to work with. Was honest, fair and a lot of fun. I'll never get that ride in the Yak he promised me. I'll miss visiting him at his hangar.
It might be cold but it's factual.
There's a reason there are no athletes still competing at the top level past 40 years-old or so...even in baseball which isn't very demanding. Hell, even golfers are lucky to remain competitive after 50.
I just think it's really dumb that guys who are pushing 80 are competing &. performing in airplanes that are almost as old as they are.
Fortunately no one else was killed this time.
May Eddie rest in peace.
What is the average for airshows? One or two fatal accidents a year? Seems plenty for such a small community. Not suggesting any rules or limitations and I have no problem with folks taking risk.The fact that airshow accidents are incredibly rare and as such make 'big' news when they do occur
Out of respect for Eddie, his family, and all of those who actually knew and flew with him it would be nice to keep the baseless recriminations and speculation under control until at least some facts are known.
'Gimp
Eddie's Super Stearman had an enclosed cockpit that appeared fully intact once the plane came to rest.Maybe I'm seeing it wrong, but the images I've seen look like most of the aircraft is intact, except for the top wing. The fuselage looks like it's resting quite near the ground, which would NOT be survivable in an open cockpit.
Not one or two fatals per year, but the last year was tough.What is the average for airshows? One or two fatal accidents a year? Seems plenty for such a small community. Not suggesting any rules or limitations and I have no problem with folks taking risk.
As to your second point you might want to step away from the internet cause those things are what the internet does. Pretty much all it does.
What you may not realize is that Eddie was one of the hardest working people out there. This is not someone who would retire quietly on the golf course. He was still working building foundations and roads doing hard labor instead of hitting golfballs or on a cruise ship. Just the other day, i saw him driving something that looked like this down highway 1. You are not talking about your average senior here. You have to take that into context. We can only be so lucky at that age!
Maybe I'm seeing it wrong, but the images I've seen look like most of the aircraft is intact, except for the top wing. The fuselage looks like it's resting quite near the ground, which would NOT be survivable.
Did you see the video with the prop still turning after the aircraft came to a rest? The top wing braces were still intact for the most part. Initially, the top of the rudder was gone, but enough of the vertical stabilizer remained that I believe the windscreen would have still been intact. If so, his harness (assuming it was locked and did not fail) should gave kept him in place enough to survive the impact.
For the pilot's sake I hope that something in the harness or seat failed and he didn't die waiting for the crash crews to wake up.
Disturbing video indeed. As an old paramedic, how would a person be able to extricate the poor gentleman from the wreckage in a timely fashion?
Sad, sad, sad.
Disturbing video indeed. As an old paramedic, how would a person be able to extricate the poor gentleman from the wreckage in a timely fashion?
Sad, sad, sad.
I didn't see this video posted here yet. It appears around the two minute mark that the tail gets lifted up a bit then comes crashing back down as the fire intensifies near the cockpit.
Rest In Peace Eddie.
http://youtu.be/nYnWR8cprgA
Nope. Long slow deaths suck. But dieing because you screwed up, or something broke at work/play is not something to celebrate.He cashed in doing what he loved, beats cancer or something