redtail
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Redtail
Wow, I don't think it even took that long for Howard Hughes to get the H-4 off the water, did it?
Wow, I don't think it even took that long for Howard Hughes to get the H-4 off the water, did it?
Two things are notable. If you look closely it looks like the mixture knob is all the way in.
And according to the NTSB report this person is holder of a Commercial Certificate.
from this link: http://www.thejoyofaviation.com/what-are-pilots-afraid-ofShe was somebody else’s girlfriend. She was quite pretty, very intelligent, and well educated. Maybe some of us airport bums would be put off by the done-on-purpose Park Lane accent (from Radcliffe as I remember). But all of us were acting the part of ace-hero-airplane-driver. We pulled in our bellies, puffed out our chests, and tried to look steely-eyed and sharp-chinned through our wrap-around sunglasses. We swapped lies about wild flights, dumb stunts, and hazards endured (or imagined) in self-deprecating tones.
We knew better than to play that sort of game with Debbie, Julie, Mavis, or Rhonda (all flight instructors). But she was somebody else’s girlfriend. And she was playing the equivalent game with us: asking sharp questions and looking intently through her lavender-lensed designer sunglasses. Her friend had just given her her first ride in a small airplane. She enjoyed it. Let it be recorded to his credit that he didn’t do any of the idiotic stunts that scare passengers, that he flew his Cherokee in a completely professional manner.
She was asking sharp questions. It didn’t take her long to go through the usual questions: “How safe is flying?” Pretty safe. “Safer than driving?” Well… safer than motorcycles for sure, “California freeways?” Maybe, depends on what time of day. “Safer than horses?” Hell, Parachutes are safer than horses!
“Have you ever been afraid of anything while flying?” She asked. I think she got that line from The High and the Mighty.
Now, Ace Hero Airmen (like us) are never afraid. Never. Well, hardly ever. Besides, those of us who haven’t read the book have seen the movie. Let’s see now, what’s the authorized answer to that one? Oh, yes: “Sure, all the time.”
She pushed up her lavender sunglasses. “What is it,” she asked, “that pilots are most afraid of?”
Now it happens that I had the answer to that one. But before I tell you, maybe you’d like to take a guess.
Bad weather? Clouds? Thunderstorms? No. Even death and dismemberment don’t make the top ten. Turbulence? Structural failure? Engine failure? No, but engine failure and mid-air collisions make the top ten. Maybe they just barely make the top ten. Controllers? Talking to towers? No, but that’s close.
What is it, then? I’ll tell you what I told her: Extreme embarrassment.
Do you think I’m kidding? Some pilots won’t fly into a tower-controlled field because they are afraid of embarrassing themselves by saying something wrong. Tower-trained pilots are afraid of doing something embarrassing at a non-tower field. If you do something embarrassing at an uncontrolled field (land downwind, for example), the good ol’ boys sitting on the porch (there is always a porch for good ol’ boys to sit on at an uncontrolled field) will talk about it for years.
People have died of embarrassment. I have read reports and heard tapes of pilots that were lost, low on fuel, or over an undercast who finally managed to screw up their courage and face the embarrassment of admitting that they were in trouble. Usually you read the reports when it was too late. You don’t read about the cases where the pilot overcame his embarrassment early enough for the help to be useful.
She pulled down her lavender sunglasses and looked at me through them. “Have you ever been embarrassed, yourself?” she asked.
“Well, sure…”, I didn’t really want to talk about it.
I thought about the time I groundlooped in front of Boeing Tower…
Tower: “Cessna 777, are you experiencing difficulties?”
Me: “No, not now that I’ve got the son-of-a-***** stopped”
Tower: “Cessna 777, taxi to the ramp.”
I thought about the time I landed downwind at an uncontrolled field, and didn’t realize it until I found myself face-to-face with a line of airplanes taxiing out for takeoff. To rub it in, the good ol’ boys in the other airplanes all rolled off the taxiway onto the grass and waited until I had passed.
Sure, I’ve been embarrassed, but I don’t want to talk about it to the girl in the lavender sunglasses.
(c) copyright 1990 Roger Kuykendall
I think going into the trees upright and more or less in control really helped them (that, and not hitting a tree head-on, LOL).
I'm glad everyone is okay and I don't want anyone to think I have no compassion.
That said, I wonder if all those pilots injuries were from the crash or if his passengers beat the crap out of him before filming him laying on the ground.
I probably would have found a rock to put that idiot's head on.
I would have found a rock to put on that idiot's head. Preferably a nice big heavy one...
uh oh, video made it to the evening news! coming up on CBS in a few
Sorry but that pilot is a complete idiot and was lucky nobody was killed. Alllllll the time in the world to discover things didn't look right and abort.
Great. Way to make us look good in the public eye.
Yeah, I thought this was old news. I was surprised when they showed a preview of it and said.. story/video coming up.
If you look at 6:14, he hits a tree head-on. The prob chopped right through it.
Those pine/spruce trees looked dead. So that helped out a lot by giving way while absorbing some of the forward energy.
I was thinking the same thing. So very much wrong, even to a novice, in the minutes leading up to the crash. I have no doubt the pilot knew he was in trouble from the start. I think he didn't want to admit it in front of the younger guys he was flying. But to get up to the seconds before he knew "this is it" and not give a single word of warning to the guys looking at the pretty trees outside the window is beyond poor ADM. That's borderline criminal.The creepiest thing about that video was the lack of any talking.
I don't even have a cert yet, so I can't be very judgemental...but when I see/hear about stories like this I just can't understand how ANY pilot would think it is okay to try something like this. I enjoy living way too much.
Also gave a little more info about the pilot. He flew choppers in nam.
In my EAA chapter is an RV builder that flew Cobra gunships for the Army. He told me that while he has tons of rotory time, he only has about 250hrs of fixed-wing time. He also said it's a totally different type of flying, and it took him some time to get it all down and he still feels like he's learning.
I don't know about ya'll, but I hear "chopper pilot in 'nam" and usually think he must be a hell of a pilot in anything, but clearly that's not always the case.
In my EAA chapter is an RV builder that flew Cobra gunships for the Army. He told me that while he has tons of rotory time, he only has about 250hrs of fixed-wing time. He also said it's a totally different type of flying, and it took him some time to get it all down and he still feels like he's learning.
I don't know about ya'll, but I hear "chopper pilot in 'nam" and usually think he must be a hell of a pilot in anything, but clearly that's not always the case.
Wow! His son and another hiker spoke. They made the pilot sound like a hero that saved the day! They said it wasn't his fault. The news only showed the final few seconds before impact, not the entire ground roll.
The video did have audio and you could hear the pilot asking was everyone OK. They also said he served in Vietnam.
Glad they all survived!
Those pine/spruce trees looked dead. So that helped out a lot by giving way while absorbing some of the forward energy.
The lack of talking can be partly explained by the fact they were using GoPro cameras. The case muffles the sound and you can tell when he hits it or moves it by the thumping sound. You can hear some talking during the takeoff and right before impact. But its hard to make it out or even hear it for that matter.
Its worse than that. It was on the evening news AND on GMA this morning. They had the pilot and all four pax. The interviewer say that the pilot did a great job landing the plane! REALLY? They also shot up a blurb from the initial NTSB report that read that a down draft pushed the plane down. Et Tu NTSB?
I didn't see GoPros, I saw the guys in the back with hand held cameras.
I don't even have a cert yet, so I can't be very judgemental...but when I see/hear about stories like this I just can't understand how ANY pilot would think it is okay to try something like this. I enjoy living way too much.
If he only would have filed a flight plan.......
Typical mountain flying crash. Out flying the altitude performance of the airplane as the terrain rises.
Glad they survived.