Hold my beerCouldn't do that with a low wing.
Well he DID have that rope on his belt loop with the crappy knot
You're right. Actual research in a 65 hp Champ shows that the prop will not stop until stalled. Further, it will not start rotating again until IAS reaches 105 MPH.Yup- total set up.
pretty sure an a65 or even a big ol c85 would have stayed windmilling had they just ran it dry...they brought her to edge of stall and did their YouTube stunt...
Didn’t Scholl climb out onto the wing of his Chipmunk for a pass or two?The GADO approved his airshow waiver but not with him leaving the cockpit in flight. How much damage can an unmanned 750 pound J-3 (with prop stopped) do anyway? Bob died in 1986 doing a Memorial Day airshow. He was well past 60 at the time.
You're right. Actual research in a 65 hp Champ shows that the prop will not stop until stalled. Further, it will not start rotating again until IAS reaches 105 MPH.
Of course it would. And now everyone has a copy of the vid.No one got hurt and it looks like they were over fairly rural area.. Peter and Wagner upset me more.. I think these guys knew they were being somewhat silly. Those two above? Not so much
However, could this violate FAR 91.13 about flying in an unsafe or reckless manner and got these guys in trouble?
Well he DID have that rope on his belt loop with the crappy knot
Why would the engine have stopped, such that handpropping would get it going again? If that engine stopped mid flight, most likely no amount of hand propping is going to save you. You might as well fart into the wind to get going. No gas is no gas. A blown engine is a blown engine.Taking the video at face value, those two demonstrated that sometimes one must conquer fear and do what is necessary (hand-prop J3 with a stopped prop and no starter over rough terrain) and not necessarily what is "safest."
Why would the engine have stopped, such that handpropping would get it going again? If that engine stopped mid flight, most likely no amount of hand propping is going to save you. You might as well fart into the wind to get going. No gas is no gas. A blown engine is a blown engine.
might have missed my point.Why would the engine have stopped, such that handpropping would get it going again? If that engine stopped mid flight, most likely no amount of hand propping is going to save you. You might as well fart into the wind to get going. No gas is no gas. A blown engine is a blown engine.
I used to scuba dive. It was drilled into students to never dive without a buddy; it was too dangerous, what if the unthinkable happened? I drank that kool aide for a long time. Until someone mentioned to me that having a 'buddy' only fostered an inability to solve problems for oneself and to rely on someone else to save your bacon.