Ah ----t. That's absolutely heartbreaking. He had posted late last year that he had moved to AZ, presumably upon his wife's retirement. That just hits me hard. Work all your life and don't get to enjoy the leisure of retired life.
Part of why I live with a "carpe diem" attitude is that my dad's best friend died of a heart attack at 64 - Just before retirement. I was actually the last one in my family to see him - He dropped his wife off at the airport and I saw him there... Then he died of a massive heart attack in his sleep.
But, that sort of thing is why I started flying relatively young. I had worked as a lineman in college and over and over again, I heard pilots saying they wished they'd learned to fly earlier. Not once did I hear anyone say they wished they'd waited.
Huge condolences. This is the first crash I can recall of an active POA member.
That’s what I had thought earlier. I’m sure there have been many over the years that we haven’t heard about, but this is the first fatal accident that I can think of in my 11yrs on POA.
Sadly, there have been several.
Vic Steelhammer was the first back in 2006.
John Lancaster in 2007.
Dwight van Zanen in 2012.
Walt Meziere in 2015.
And now, Gary. RIP.
The comments in Kathryn’s Report (linked above) mention observed low performance on take off in the FlightAware data. I have not verified that personally.
I followed the ADS-B Exchange link. It's a bit confusing because of the way they color it, and it has his landing as well as the takeoff. However, it looks like he used full length for takeoff on runway 14 at KHII at 18:08 local. For reference, KHII is at 783 MSL.
After the last ping on the ground (on the taxiway), the first ping airborne is maybe 1700 feet down the runway but has no altitude or speed data other than that. The next one is 4400 feet down the runway, at 1000 feet baro altitude/700 geometric, vertical speed never exceeded 192 ft/min but was showing as 64 ft/min over the runway.
The baro altitude never went above 1000. Groundspeed never got above 65. A little over 6000 feet down the runway, speed dropped from 65 to 56 in 3 seconds with no corresponding increase in altitude, suggesting something happened there... But speed stayed there so it wasn't a total power loss or anything. About 900 feet from the end of the runway, geometric altitude went up 50 feet and a turn of about 45º to the right occurred.
So, maybe a mechanical issue, disguised by the high DA causing bad performance too, mechanical issue got worse partway down the runway but there was still power, just not enough to go? Who knows. We'll find out in a year. I hope there are some answers then.