One of mags could have been replaced with a SureFly. Also, some Grummans have an electrically controlled prop (but probably not this one since I don't see a MP gauge).Electrical failure doesn't affect the Magnetos. The engine keeps running just fine. Go around!
Damn autocorrect….Zero.So far, 79 comments on YT condemning the actions....and one video posting friend saying pilot is a hero lol.
Does the I-pad generation know what makes the propeller turn?A total WTF. Allegedly had electrical failure. Lands right behind a Cessna. Full send. Crashes into the Cessna on the runway. Passenger who took the video commends the pilot for doing a great job.
The magenta line makes it turn.Does the I-pad generation know what makes the propeller turn?
Market crash called for desperate times...but I believe that's his last name.Guessing this pilot is, like the vast majority of GA, a boomer.
Aircraft is registered to a "Norman". Not a lot of young Normans around, if it was him flying.
View attachment 136207
Also - who on earth named their daughter "Norman" in 1929
Sorry my guy, but this pilot (if we can call him that) - based on his sartorial choices, voice, and panel - is 100% a boomer. Not that it matters. Bad ADM is bad ADM.Does the I-pad generation know what makes the propeller turn?
Agree. I was simply responding to a couple of posts above who saw this as an opportunity to call out the "iPad generation." How that could possibly have anything to do with recognizing that an electrical failure in VMC isn't an emergency is beyond me. Whether he was 18 or 80, all he would have had to do was go around and we wouldn't even be talking right now.I am though, trying to figure out what the pilot’s age has to do with it.
I was referring to both.Agree. I was simply responding to a couple of posts above who saw this as an opportunity to call out the "iPad generation."
Easy mistake for a student pilot to make if they only have familiarity with car engines, regardless of whether they are 20 or 60. That's why learning about magnetos is part of the PPL curriculum.I did, btw, have a student who was convinced the prop would stop if we lost electric. So I shut off the master. He actually started sweating.
Because the pax was a spectator?Hopefully no real injuries, but good lord is that the worst ADM I have seen all year.
Bruh has a plane that's still running, plus he has like a football field width sized patch of grass on both the left AND right of the runway AND a taxiway, and he chooses to land 100 feet behind a Cessna and then ram it instead?
Was this all for the insurance money or something? Why was the pax recording the whole thing like a fkn spectator!?
Haha, fair.Because the pax was a spectator?
Because the pax was a spectator?
11,752 views Dec 13, 2024
On Dec 11, 2024 was flying with a couple friends from Galveston to Pearland Regional Airport. I was in the right seat recording. Our plane, a 1973 Grumman, experienced electrical issues. First the headsets went out, then the radio, then the avionics (navigation). We knew we had to get down quickly and made an emergency landing behind another plane with no working instruments. Fortunately our skilled pilot was able to set us down. However with no way to communicate, the pilot ahead was unaware of our presence and stopped fast to make a left turn on the tarmac. With our flaps not operational, we couldn’t slow fast enough and plowed into his plane as he turned. The prop tore a hole in the left side of his fuselage and destroyed the side of his aircraft. Thankfully he had no passenger on the backseat or it would have been fatal. In our aircraft, the impact was devastating with aluminum crumpling and glass exploding everywhere. My shoulder pushed through the window and I sustained slight external injuries. But thankfully everyone was ok. The planes not so much, both are likely totaled. This video captures the moment.
Sort of. According to the video description he is a co-owner of the plane. Which I’m gonna assume makes him a pilot, most likely. At any point he could have made any number of suggestions, like “land on the grass to the right”, or “land on the grass to the left”, or “WTF ARE YOU DOING YOU DUMB F#*%??!!??”
With our flaps not operational, we couldn’t slow fast enough
Even Jerry thinks this guy's an idiot.Reddit has been absolutely brutal to this guy. The comments are hilarious. The best comment: "How do you expect him to fly a plane in that condition? Left with only a running engine, a working airspeed indicator, HSI, VSI, magnetic compass, altimeter, fuel gage, oil temperature and pressure gauge, primary flight controls, attitude indicator and being caught in VFR with unlimited visibility, his only choice was to send that puppy into the ground NOW, doesn’t matter if it was straight into another plane."
When I flight instructed in the early 80's we started the students a PA-11, no electrical system or starter. That's what they flew until they soloed and had 15-20 hours.I think we have lost something by not including flight in gliders and older aircraft with no electrics, as the first thing in ab initio training.
SMH ??SMH, that was NOT an emergency that warranted a Grumman enema.
"Shaking My Head"SMH ??