I used to think of the airplane as my last ditch euthanasia type thing but nope, not anymore cause if I crash you'll cut me up and do a full fledged autopsy, slice open my veins and look for plaque, CAT scan my brain even though I'm no longer around to pay for it, toxology tests....probably even check the size of my balls. If I were to die violently in a crash I think it better to just be a "motorist" than a pilot, won't end up on the ten o'clock news. Dale is probably glad the whole mess got burned up and there's no evidence for anyone to pick over.
So how many here actually ever heard of this guy before he crashed? I'll start off by admitting I hadn't. But now our YouTube ques are filled with lots of stuff about Snort and the Marchetti SM1019 and the F-14 and if you watch his talk at the Smithsonian institute you'll find out his favorite airplane in the Navy was the A4. Must be some wisdom in that "Top Gun" movie after all. Anyway, he comes across as a regular guy, not some stiff shirt Captain and what I mean by "regular guy" is a pilot. Just like us guys. Bit of a hotshot too.
Analysis: I don't know. I'm leaning towards seat malfunction of some sort or control jam at an unexpected fulcrum point. I just can't imagine this guy getting to the runway without doing the 720, double Christopher, bicycle leg-pump thing. Who in the world EVER takes off without doing that? Okay, I know, it's definitely been missed by someone but him? nah... If you watch the video that is linked in post #45 and freeze it at around 0:58 then look at it frame by frame, it's really hard to tell but it looks like his head is down and he's almost sitting on the floor or tilted way back. Like I said, low quality image and inconclusive evidence but that's kinda what I'm seeing.
I'm dismayed by the hate comments about the stunned bystanders, caught on camera, who didn't just immediately sprint out there onto an active runway where there was a crashed airplane starting on fire to save what was pretty obvious to me a dead body. One guy actually thought they should be executed. Probably one of those folks who think that if you didn't vote for the same guy as me you're a traitor. Anyway, I pointed out that of all the people who have been asphyxiated in a confined space, half of them are someone who went in there to rescue the the original victim. With drownings it's even worse, about two to one. Not to mention the fact that the controller in the tower had to muster the sense to warn the first responders and fire rescue to watch out for adrenaline pumped people running across the field.
So if a plane crashes in front of you and slowly bursts into flames or if your best friend passes out in a cave. Well....think about it first. I think in this case all of the witnesses did the right thing.
RIP Captain Snodgrass