I saw this last night. The CFI who signed him off needs to talk to the FAA. This guy could have killed himself.
I saw this last night. The CFI who signed him off needs to talk to the FAA. This guy could have killed himself.
I have no idea what that clown was thinking. He sure was calm, though.
Appears as though it took him a while to figure out he should close the wide open throttle. Maybe he thought he was in the off-road 4X4 version of the 172?
That attempt near the end to steer to the right with the ailerons (to avoid the hangar), as though he's driving a car, was not only perversely humorous but seems to confirm he really doesn't know what the rudder pedals are for...and that is probably why & how it all started way back on the runway in the first place.
That attempt near the end to steer to the right with the ailerons (to avoid the hangar), as though he's driving a car, was not only perversely humorous but seems to confirm he really doesn't know what the rudder pedals are for...and that is probably why & how it all started way back on the runway in the first place.
I saw this last night. The CFI who signed him off needs to talk to the FAA. This guy could have killed himself.
I think he was trying to land, not take off.Yeah if he had enough energy to get off of the ground, a stall spin was probably happening next
https://fearoflanding.com/accidents/when-not-to-go-around/Where are the pictures of the crash site? I never found any.
I saw this last night. The CFI who signed him off needs to talk to the FAA. This guy could have killed himself.
Same airport. Same flight school. Similar incident. 2 tore up planes. Student pilot and instructor 6 days later.
I would imagine it was a different student pilot as the first was probably still in the hospital.Dang, that blows my theory ... I'd figure he already had his "event" in aviation and should be safe to fly with ...
I saw this last night. The CFI who signed him off needs to talk to the FAA. This guy could have killed himself.
I wonder if he stomped on the left pedal with both feet...But the surprise element made his primal instincts kick in. He completely let go of the throttle and grabbed the yoke with both hands because that is what someone who drives a car would do. When the hangar was coming up fast, his reaction was to turn the yoke right, as if turning a car. He never reached for the throttle.
One of the comments on the YouTube video was hilarious: "Taxi to parking via direct."
This is the first time I'm learning that 'momentum' is what makes planes flyaircraft did not have enough momentum
honestly, you might be right. Plus, it worked for the L1011 in The Langoliers after allwhat if.. he was pressing on the gas
This is the first time I'm learning that 'momentum' is what makes planes fly
honestly, you might be right. Plus, it worked for the L1011 in The Langoliers after all
This is the first time I'm learning that 'momentum' is what makes planes fly
haha thanks, I was speaking in jest given that media reporting on aviation is often 'lacking' - I've heard more than one person say that the plane will take off once it has "enough momentum" - which shows a poor understanding of what momentum is and how planes actually fly. If I'm going off a ski jump, I'll need momentum to get airborne. A plane does not, generally, depend on 'momentum' to fly..Quote from whatever article I lifted it from
thanks! also, is the Airbus upside down in the slide?It’s not what makes airplanes fly but the energy state does matter... sometimes