Kenny Phillips
Final Approach
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Kenny Phillips
On FlightRadar24, although the information is blocked, you can see it started losing altitude from 03:38 UTC because the color trail turning green. It's possibly losing an engine or some sort. Very sad...
The flight radar shows a descent from long before that. I’m not sure why, but I’ve gotten different results from the playback. Sometimes the loop continues past where you’ve shown it. It looks like they do a procedure turn or hold, then continue inbound. They were about 130 kts, 1600 ft when the loop ended very close to the airport.
Their reputation has been earned but in the hands of a capable pilot who understands how to fly the plane
I think the problem is that most pilots that fly these planes think they are capable. How does one know when they aren't capable? I think the MU2 has proven itself to bite more than many others, and even with a type rating equivalent requirement, is still ending up in the news. I know of 2 former MU2 pilots that were active on the aviation boards that said the same things. The plane was maligned, docile, with training there are no problems, so on, and they are dead.
Proper training and good decision making. That’s how we maintain capabilities in aircraft. How is the MU-2 any different than any other high performance turbine airplane? Treat it like a big Aztec… you’ll probably screw up real quick. Treat it like a Lear 20 series… you’ll probably be ok. But if you’re scared of it I would recommend not buying one.I think the problem is that most pilots that fly these planes think they are capable. How does one know when they aren't capable? I think the MU2 has proven itself to bite more than many others, and even with a type rating equivalent requirement, is still ending up in the news. I know of 2 former MU2 pilots that were active on the aviation boards that said the same things. The plane was maligned, docile, with training there are no problems, so on, and they are dead.
I’m not sure why the MU-2 is such an outlier that requires special training. I’m not saying it shouldn’t, but what is it about the design that requires it, or better yet makes it necessary?
Is it the spoilers instead of ailerons??
I am curious.
I have a wee bit of time flying the MU-2 many years before the training rule, but none as *acting* PIC. Never been formally trained in the type.
Thank you for taking the time to explain. I actually found it interesting.Essentially there are three design aspects that cause the flight handling characteristics (and bite) of the MU-2 to be different from conventional aircraft (I'm going from memory on numbers so I may be off a bit, but you'll get the idea):
1) Spoilers instead of ailerons
2) Full span fowler flaps
3) Very high wing loading for a propeller aircraft <12,500 lbs. The F model I flew was 55 lbs/sqft, which for reference is about the same as a Lear 23)
You start off with the very high wing loading because the MU-2 has the wing area of a 172 with a plane that grosses at 10k+ lbs. The spoilers instead of ailerons make low speed handling (turns specifically) interesting. In some cases I observed proverse yaw (as opposed to adverse yaw) with the MU-2. Since you're killing lift on the wing with a spoiler, at low speeds you can inadvertently stall a wing if you use the spoiler, and so some procedures are different from a normal aircraft because of this.
The full span fowler flaps add about 50% more wing area when fully extended. This causes a massive difference in both stall speed and Vmc with them up vs. down. As I recall, stall speed clean on the F model was 101 KIAS, and dirty was 77.
Because of this, some emergency procedures are different. A flaps up landing for example has you coming down final at 140 KIAS and crossing the numbers at 110-125 KIAS depending on weight (as opposed to something like 96-104 for a standard Flaps 20 landing). An engine out procedure doesn't follow the typical "mixture props throttle flaps gear identify verify feather" mantra that we all learned in our multi engine training in a piston (obviously the mixture wouldn't be part of it anyway). The gear comes up immediately if it is down, you do advance the engines to full, but the flaps need to come up on a schedule. As I recall flaps go from 20 to 5 at 130, and 5 to 0 at 140. This was an area that killed a number of pilots.
There's more to it, but compared to a King Air, Cheyenne, or Conquest (even a C441) which fly more or less like piston twins that burn funny smelling fuel, the MU-2 is said to fly more like a jet, in that you need to follow the procedures closely. Of course it is still a turboprop and not a jet, but what's meant by that is that you need to follow the procedures closely and it's less forgiving if you don't.
Oh, and the landings are... well they take some practice to get smooth.
Happy to answer any questions on the plane that I can dig out of the memory banks.
What is Vmc like with flaps up vs. down in the MU-2?The full span fowler flaps add about 50% more wing area when fully extended. This causes a massive difference in both stall speed and Vmc with them up vs. down. As I recall, stall speed clean on the F model was 101 KIAS, and dirty was 77.
What is Vmc like with flaps up vs. down in the MU-2?
Wow. A very compact scene.
Have a link?? Looking on their website and don’t see it yet??Any thoughts on the preliminary NTSB report?
NTSB said:An associate of the pilot reported that the pilot owned a MU-2F model before he acquired the B model.