Sounds like a bad year at Oshkosh.
I don't see the T-6 crash as an "Oshkosh" event. They were flying out over a lake and crashed due to factors that don't seem to have been Oshkosh related other than proximity…..
/thread drift…… another one had closed recently….
/thread drift…
I work with a guy who started at that other school and it was an s-show of am operation; literally let the insurance lapse while the owners were on a short AFRES TDY. He moved to TAA to finish up his cert and then they shut down and now this.
There’s a flight school trying to open a second location at BAZ, but I don’t know if it’ll happen or not yet. I cam let you know if I hear something on my end if you like.
The midair will be interesting. The ultralight field is not controlled, so a midair is 100% on one of the pilots. However, I’ve been saying for years that they need to enforce the pattern. When I camped in Vintage near their runway, they flew right over my airplane/tent over and over. In this midair, one of them landed on a Mooney. We’ll find out if they were flying where they were supposed to.
The NOTAM for Ultralights is a bit confusing.The ULs are the only ones EAA allows to fly over campers. If you watch them, you’ll slowly start to get more and more terrified until you, like me yesterday an hour before the incident, tell someone that the UL field traffic is going to result in an accident. We’re lucky the gated area had already mostly cleared out and we’re lucky that collateral damage was only a Mooney.
I was there when the DC3 ended up in the ditch right in front of me! I've searched for any information about what happened but have not found any.There are long-range plans to move the UL operations across Knapp street (primarily as part of the "nobody turned away by 2024" edict). ted I suspect this will have to be accellerated or we will see more restrictions put in place by the FAA like happened when the DC-3 lost control twenty-some years ago.
We are not talking here aerobatic stuns but just regular demo flight operations - if these are considered too dangerous to allow overflights then we should ask ourselves why are we promoting such “dangerous” activities (GA aviation) in the first place and just do away with the whole thing …Even before the new parking area (which we call the "gated community"), the flight path is right up next to vintage camping. It doesn't take much overshoot to put you over a campsite. The first year I camped there I was right off the end of the runway looked up every morning at the UL pattern. The Mooney owner has posted comments on r/flying on reddit and MooneySpace.
I was working the Vintage operations building when the call went seconds after it happened. I was dialing 911 and at the same time shouting for volunteers to get on the two six-man golf carts we had and get down there to keep the crowds back. Lots of people like aggie06 were there, the helicopter essentially came down at the terminal tram stop. We got traumatized people (both bystanders and volunteers) back at our building. Fortunately, we got some rapid advice and assistance from Cam Martin and other CIRP-trained buys from the Fergus Chapel (my wife knew Cam from her days at the Smithsonian).
I've seen fatals at Oshkosh before, but this is the first to drop into the crowd area (Jack Roush came very close to hitting one of our volunteers, there's a photo of him running from the crash).
There are long-range plans to move the UL operations across Knapp street (primarily as part of the "nobody turned away by 2024" edict). ted I suspect this will have to be accellerated or we will see more restrictions put in place by the FAA like happened when the DC-3 lost control twenty-some years ago.
We are not talking here aerobatic stuns but just regular demo flight operations - if these are considered too dangerous to allow overflights then we should ask ourselves why are we promoting such “dangerous” activities (GA aviation) in the first place and just do away with the whole thing …
Having had PTSD events, repeatedly, I encourage you to reach out for assistance dealing with that. I wish I had 20 years sooner. I hope you can find peace. Best wishes.Except that’s right over the new vintage aircraft parking area on the west side of the road. That new parking area is not depicted. That’s where the incident happened. I was in that area when it happened. Rotor blades departed and flew over my head with the helicopter landing a few yards from me, close enough that I saw details on the way down that I am still having trouble with.
I didn't say it was. But the the DC-3 excursion wasn't an acro act either, and it didn't even come close to the crowd line, but the FAA still moved the crowd line back losing significant real estate in the warbird, homebuilt, and vintage areas.We are not talking here aerobatic stuns but just regular demo flight operations - if these are considered too dangerous to allow overflights then we should ask ourselves why are we promoting such “dangerous” activities (GA aviation) in the first place and just do away with the whole thing …
Maybe not technically aerobatic, but I watched them all week. At times they would get to buzzing around the field real quick and some of the things they do over there is very close to wingovers and steep turns in that tiny area with others around.We are not talking here aerobatic stuns but just regular demo flight operations - if these are considered too dangerous to allow overflights then we should ask ourselves why are we promoting such “dangerous” activities (GA aviation) in the first place and just do away with the whole thing …
Maybe not technically aerobatic, but I watched them all week. At times they would get to buzzing around the field real quick and some of the things they do over there is very close to wingovers and steep turns in that tiny area with others around.