Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
But, as they say, C's earn degrees!
2.0 and go..!!!
But, as they say, C's earn degrees!
Regulatory wise, what is the difference between an annual and a 100 hr?
One is accomplished annually, the other every 100 hours. But then you know that.
You forgot without maintenance issues.I remember reading years ago that there has never been a C172 structural failure when flown within airspeed and G limits. I'm not sure if this is true or just an urban legend.
Don’t think that would cause an inflight break up.Total speculation: the student was climbing to an assigned altitude, possibly in a turn, and inadvertently stalled, panicked and wouldn’t release the controls.
That’s about the only scenario where I could see this happening outside of a control system failure or suicide.
What’s the plausibility on that? It’s late and I’m bored. I really hope to see the case study on this. OP is right, it’s a strange one. A 172 will fight to keep you alive. This is .... bizarre.
pre-existing structural damage?True. But how did they get into a situation to pull the wings off a 172? Yikes
That's my biggest fear as a renter. That I will be given a broken plane that I have no shot to get back on the ground safely. At times, it has made me question my participation in this hobby.As renters, how do we know that the airplanes we are flying are not compromised by corrosion, prior Va violations, etc? These failures may be discovered during annual inspections, but this may be too long. Can they be caught during the 100-hour inspection?
If it shed the outer wing panels first, assembly wasn't the issue. That's overstressing.It would be interesting to know if the airplane had its wings removed for any reason in the past, like say, an off field landing. May be it wasn't put back together properly.
Wait, explain this shaking the wings in a cub. Never seen this done.Stuff happens to airplanes.
Sometimes it's bad stuff.
Sometimes you get lucky and find the bad stuff before you get off the ground.
Sometimes you don't find the bad stuff until it's too late.
Two weeks ago on July 19, I was out doing stalls and spins in one of the Cubs.
Two other guys flew it in the intervening time after I did and didn't report any problems.
On Monday, July 30, I grabbed the left wing to give it a shake (to test the bungee cords on the landing gear) and the wing went "POP"!
Pure, unadulterated luck because I ALWAYS grab the right wing as I go past to put my gear inside.
It appears a bunch of wood parts in the left wing came unglued. It's 77 years old, so It shouldn't be a surprise.
Stuff happens to airplanes.
Sometimes it's bad stuff.
Sometimes you get lucky and find the bad stuff before you get off the ground.
Sometimes you don't find the bad stuff until it's too late.
Regulatory wise, what is the difference between an annual and a 100 hr?
One of the "issues" with the J3 is the landing gear. It's got metal hinge\attach points on the fuselage, and bungees cords as shock absorbers.Wait, explain this shaking the wings in a cub. Never seen this done.
Pure, unadulterated luck because I ALWAYS grab the right wing as I go past to put my gear inside.
It appears a bunch of wood parts in the left wing came unglued. It's 77 years old, so It shouldn't be a surprise.
I had read that somewhere as well. I also saw a YouTube video of Rod Machado talking about it as well. I am not sure how to validate it without a bunch of research. It will be interesting to see the outcome from this accident.I remember reading years ago that there has never been a C172 structural failure when flown within airspeed and G limits. I'm not sure if this is true or just an urban legend.
As mentioned before, you have to include maintenance issues. There has been at least one 172 wing fall off due to the loss of a strut bolt.I had read that somewhere as well. I also saw a YouTube video of Rod Machado talking about it as well. I am not sure how to validate it without a bunch of research. It will be interesting to see the outcome from this accident.
Does this sound familiar?
http://www.aopa.org/asf//ntsb/narrative.cfm?ackey=1&evid=20030325X00386
Once again I find it amazing that this stuff happens with a CFI on board not to mention a seasoned one it seems. I look back at the CFI’s I’ve had over the years and can’t imagine one of them suggesting or wanting to do something like this. Shocking really In my experience.
You make it sound like it was the CFI's responsibility. When I was actively instructing, I would look forward to students who liked doing spins. It was all perfectly legal. Now I wonder if that was a smart thing. Despite being in the utility category, and at a safe altitude, I had no idea of the damage history on the airframe or how it had been flown before.
Report finding were overstress fractures without mention of corrision or wear and tear. Diving planes to the point of ripping a wing off started off as plan but didn’t end the way they wanted it to. Without “being there” we all will never know what really happened.
I just think if there is a CFI on board there is an extra added veil of safety. Am I wrong??? Someone saying “we shouldnt be doing this..” Just like the recent Las Vegas Cherokee 6 going down. CFI and DPE midair in Fl. It sucks.
Additionally, with a CFI on board, one is more likely to push the limits and let it spin a little bit longer.
Pre-flighting a military aero club airplane long ago, I found multiple rivets missing on a flap attachment bracket. Just popped out. . .gonna happen, sometimes.That's my biggest fear as a renter. That I will be given a broken plane that I have no shot to get back on the ground safely. At times, it has made me question my participation in this hobby.
And what's worse is that the school may not even know that a previous renter did something dumb to stress the plane to its limits or whatever. Not sure some people would volunteer that info to be held financially responsible for repair costs.
They have similar scope. An annual must be performed by an IA, whereas the 100 hr can be performed by a non-IA A&P.Regulatory wise, what is the difference between an annual and a 100 hr?
People have been debating for a long time whether spin training is doing more harm than good. During the recovery, the airframe will get stressed. There is no way around it. The question is whether it is getting over-stressed. The assumption is, if you are below Va, then all is good. But we rarely account for weight, or the time delay in the pitot sensor. Repeated excursions beyond Va even for a couple of seconds could lead to cumulative airframe stresses. Additionally, with a CFI on board, one is more likely to push the limits and let it spin a little bit longer. I am not saying I know what happened here, but it seems to me that catastrophic mechanical failures are more likely to occur when you push the airplane to its limits, which happens more during a training flight than during a routine trip.
My first few plane rides were in gliders, my brother in law flew them back in Canada, and I remember he always shook the wings hard before climbing in. I thought it was comical at the time, but learned that since the wings are detachable it's a good last minute check to ensure the wing is on right, etc. I still do this on any plane I fly. Granted on the Cirrus it will flex a bit, but it's good peace of mind for me at least if nothing elseGrab the wing tip and yank it up and down.
So my brother went to Embry Riddle. Didn't fly, but became an engineer later working for Pratt, etc. Anyway, he went up with a friend on an instruction flight (he was backseat) and vowed never again after that. He's not a wuss by any stretch of the term, but his recollection of the events (this was many years ago, he's my senior by a good margin) was that they slowed, the nose was high, a beeping went off, and then the wing dropped straight down, then the nose, and the next thing he knew they were starting at the ground spinning round and round for what felt like an eternity. All the time his buddy sat frozen on the left seat and the instructor didn't say much.. so it sounds like at least in that example the instructor let the 172 develop pretty heavily into a spin before recoveringWhat instructor would spin a plane, or allow the maneuver with a first flight trainee in the left seat? That makes little sense.
So my brother went to Embry Riddle. Didn't fly, but became an engineer later working for Pratt, etc. Anyway, he went up with a friend on an instruction flight (he was backseat) and vowed never again after that. He's not a wuss by any stretch of the term, but his recollection of the events (this was many years ago, he's my senior by a good margin) was that they slowed, the nose was high, a beeping went off, and then the wing dropped straight down, then the nose, and the next thing he knew they were starting at the ground spinning round and round for what felt like an eternity. All the time his buddy sat frozen on the left seat and the instructor didn't say much.. so it sounds like at least in that example the instructor let the 172 develop pretty heavily into a spin before recovering
What instructor would spin a plane, or allow the maneuver with a first flight trainee in the left seat? That makes little sense.
I do know that a 172 will gain speed rapidly coming out of a spin, at a rate much greater than simply pushing on the yoke (of course, I never shoved the yoke so hard as to hit minus two g's or anything like that.)
I do know that a 172 will gain speed rapidly coming out of a spin, at a rate much greater than simply pushing on the yoke (of course, I never shoved the yoke so hard as to hit minus two g's or anything like that.)
Maybe with a JATO STC.172s can gain speed rapidly?
I almost quit flying after my instructor let me get a C150 into a spin (unintentionally on my end) on my second ever flight. Scared the hell out of me as I didn't know any better. Instead I ended up switching schools, instructors, and into PA28's.I'm more considering the possible jitters of a first training flight. Many first timers don't even like to experience a stall let alone a spin. Just food for thought.
A fully developed spin is a stalled maneuver. There’s really not much stress during the spin itself and nothing about making it two, three, or twenty turns adds any additional stress.