Quite the ride!
Yikes... I assumed that the latch may have not been latched properly... that should never happen.Apparently this is a "known" thing with Mooney
I thought his wife kept her head. A keeper for that reason, and a few others.I bet he double checks the latches everytime since then.
Kept his head, did what needed to be done to get on the ground, landed and all safe.
And plenty of port-a-potties near....
Bad design
Seems a safety wire to keep it attached would be a simple and possibly life saving addition.
I can confirm... usually more than once too.@Ryanb has ridden with me a number of times and can verify that I check that it is locked before every flight.
Kind of what I was thinking. As serious as this was <or is> did it really warrant the need to land off airport? Seemed like he was able to maintain aircraft control after the initial blow to the horizontal stab. I think if it was me, I would’ve tried to get to the nearest airport, but I hate to armchair quarterback it.Did they land on a grass runway or was that some random field? Would you have continued to the nearest airfield or performed an emergency landing?
Kind of what I was thinking. As serious as this was <or is> did it really warrant the need to land off airport? Seemed like he was able to maintain aircraft control after the initial blow to the horizontal stab. I think if it was me, I would’ve tried to get to the nearest airport, but I hate to armchair quarterback it.
Steven Le Van, 28, and his wife were embarking on their second flight of the day when only after 15 minutes into their journey between Charlton Park and Fairoaks, the baggage hatch of the plane dramatically broke free from it's hinges leaving a wide open hole in the plane as it soared 2,100 ft above the ground. To make matters worse for the frightened couple, the loose metal managed to wedge itself between the elevator fork and the main surface restricting free movement of Steven's flight controls. Managing to regain control of the plane, and the situation, Steven used his experience in order to declare a "Mayday" as he decided to emergency land the Mooney M20K plane onto an old grass strip in Membury.
But then your paying to fix the airplane.
Now the insurance is paying to fix it and you get a free overhaul and prop!
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There is some indication that the elevator was partially jammed and he could not maintain altitude. I'm guessing that's why he landed so hot (couldn't get the nose up any higher). He held off on the gear until just before touchdown. After he touched down, I was thinking it might have been better to keep the gear in the wells. I think I might choose to take guaranteed belly damage and guaranteed engine rebuild over the possibility of hitting trees at speed if I can't get it stopped in time.Did they land on a grass runway or was that some random field? Would you have continued to the nearest airfield or performed an emergency landing?
If you have 1800 hours on a 2K hour engine and prang the prop, should the insurance company be on the hook for giving you a zero hour engine?I thought I’ve read otherwise regarding whether or not the insurance company would pay for an overhaul, etc. I’m trying to think of the specifics but I believe there are situations where they won’t pay for certain things.
It’s good to know our coverage limits and when the ins company will give us hell. Paying 1.8 AMU’s a year to insure a 35-40 AMU plane is less enticing when we read/hear of anecdotes of where they won’t pay for certain things.
I believe that is known as 'betterment' and they usually won't pay for it. They'll pay to open it and inspect it and R&R anything found to be damaged by the incident only. If the top end is worn but otherwise undamaged, they won't pay for a new one.If you have 1800 hours on a 2K hour engine and prang the prop, should the insurance company be on the hook for giving you a zero hour engine?
Yep, that's the word.I believe that is known as 'betterment' and they usually won't pay for it. They'll pay to open it and inspect it and R&R anything found to be damaged by the incident only. If the top end is worn but otherwise undamaged, they won't pay for a new one.
A fair point.Just because it's under control immediately after the incident, when you have no way to really assess the nature and extent of the damage best to get it on the ground. You have no way of telling if something else is going to fail once there's been damage like that. The idea that one should try to "save the plane" is what kills people.
Planes are just dumb machines, easily replaceable.
The pilot posted this up on Mooneyspace. The door half wrecked the airplane, I'll be surprised if it's fixable. The fuselage was twisted from the force of the one-sided drag on the empennage. The pilot said the aircraft was barely controllable, and when I saw the photos of the damage I couldn't argue. He's an amazing stick to put in down in one piece with no one hurt.Kind of what I was thinking. As serious as this was <or is> did it really warrant the need to land off airport? Seemed like he was able to maintain aircraft control after the initial blow to the horizontal stab. I think if it was me, I would’ve tried to get to the nearest airport, but I hate to armchair quarterback it.
The pilot posted this up on Mooneyspace.
Do you have a link to the thread?
Took him an awful long time to slow down, and that 45 degree steep turn seemed unnecessary and unwise, but I wasn't flying the plane, so not a criticism, just an observation from safe ground.
Maybe, maybe not. It also could have caused more damage and ripped something further off. I still would have slowed down immediately, but what he did kept them alive, so good job!He said he kept 100kts until short final, so yes, very hot. But, that makes sense to me. You have a damaged horizontal stab and reduced elevator movement and/or effectiveness. At what airspeed does the damaged tailplane stall? Only the shadow knows, but keeping speed up was a wise move in my opinion.
Do you have a link to the thread?
The pilot posted this up on Mooneyspace. The door half wrecked the airplane, I'll be surprised if it's fixable. The fuselage was twisted from the force of the one-sided drag on the empennage. The pilot said the aircraft was barely controllable, and when I saw the photos of the damage I couldn't argue. He's an amazing stick to put in down in one piece with no one hurt.
Yeah, Mooneys are built stout. A few years ago a Navy pilot got his J into a departure stall, crashed into a house. He, his wife and daughter all emerged with little more than scratches. Someone did roughly the same thing in a Bo a year or two later, everyone died. If you can keep your Mooney under control odds are you'll survive the crash, unless you crash into the face of a mountain.The fact the door didn't completely destroy the horizontal stab on the one side shows once again the strength of the Mooney airframe, and it's incredible track record of virtually no recorded in-flight breakups (I think to date there is still only the one instance tangling with a thunderstorm?).
Yeah, Mooneys are built stout. A few years ago a Navy pilot got his J into a departure stall, crashed into a house. He, his wife and daughter all emerged with little more than scratches. Someone did roughly the same thing in a Bo a year or two later, everyone died. If you can keep your Mooney under control odds are you'll survive the crash, unless you crash into the face of a mountain.