Circuit Flyer
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Sep 19, 2014
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Circuit Flyer
Very sorry to hear this news, Bryan.
Out of control? You're not there yet.
In 2001, I started flying ultralights. One day, I stopped in the local airport fbo and got talked into flight lessons by a young CFI who taught there. I bought my Comanche as a 10 hour student pilot and finished in that plane.
Flash forward 12 years...
I sold my boat and my small horse ranch is up for sale - including the horses. I live on my small private airport which I have been setting up for entertaining and public events. I own, by last count, five aircraft of various types and have a project plane stuck away that I'll get back on one of these days. About the only thing I do now that isn't aviation related is ride my motorcycle.
THAT is the definition of obsession. You have a way to go.
If you look at the photos in the link to the news article in 6PC's 2nd post you'll see that the plane is in no way aligned with the runway.
Close personal friend of Walt reports this afternoon on the Comanche board "power loss shortly after takeoff, possible attempt at the impossible turn." No word on cause of engine out.
Close personal friend of Walt reports this afternoon on the Comanche board "power loss shortly after takeoff, possible attempt at the impossible turn." No word on cause of engine out.
Unless there was an eyewitness, then it's just speculation...something I'll avoid getting drawn into.
Warm weather brings out motorcyclists and pilots. With motorcycles, drivers just aren't used to seeing them, with sometimes terrible results.Today, I learned that one of our tenants and a guy I talked to last week died in an auto accident. He was on a motorcycle.
What is with this time of year?
Tomorrow is not promised, so we just have to live life while we can. Rest in peace, Walt and Joe.
Close personal friend of Walt reports this afternoon on the Comanche board "power loss shortly after takeoff, possible attempt at the impossible turn." No word on cause of engine out.
We know that this was a highly experienced flight crew and that the plane almost certainly suffered an engine failure. The point is that so many people are always going on about stupid pilots just not conducting emergency landings properly, that VMC is totally survivable, etc.We don't have any idea why this plane crashed. It may have nothing to do with the crew, or it may be a careless mistake by the crew. We just don't know. My point being, don't second guess your hobby by assuming if experienced guys crashed, that it means you will too.
I'm a little late to the thread, but I wanted to offer my sincere condolences to those of you who were friends of these men, and to the family. I didn't know them, but it sounds like they were good men and I'm sorry the world lost them. If we don't all know someone who has met a similar fate, we surely will at some point, and it's never easy to swallow. What we do is dangerous, period. We do something that man was not built to do, often in machines that are quite a bit older than we are. We do what we can to minimize the risks, but we do it because we love it, and despite these men meeting their end too soon, they went out doing what they clearly loved to do. It's always hard for those loved ones left behind when something like this happens, but it beats the hell out of going out like a vegetable in a hospital bed, or suffering the indignity of dying a slow death in a nursing home. However, it's always better for one to get to live a long and happy life. Tomorrow is not promised, so we just have to live life while we can. Rest in peace, Walt and Joe.
Condolences, Bryan.
He was a damn good pilot and loved everything about aviation.
I attended the memorial celebrating the life of Joe and also the one for Walt today.
I don't ever want to go to another one of these.
I didn't have the privilege of knowing them, but I'd like to assume the best. Perhaps they did check the fuel, but the entire sump was water. Can be hard to tell it's not fuel in a blue-stained fuel strainer.Well, from what we knew and what witnesses told us, we suspected water in the fuel. The NTSB has confirmed this. For those of you that didn't know Walt, we lost two good people that day and both were pilots. The plane had sat out in the rain for some heavy storms. We'll never understand why two pilots chose to skip checking the fuel. Please remember not to take any shortcuts. Losing a good friend is still hard to deal with... knowing it could have easily prevented makes it harder. CEN15FA287
I didn't have the privilege of knowing them, but I'd like to assume the best. Perhaps they did check the fuel, but the entire sump was water. Can be hard to tell it's not fuel in a blue-stained fuel strainer.
Well, from what we knew and what witnesses told us, we suspected water in the fuel. The NTSB has confirmed this. For those of you that didn't know Walt, we lost two good people that day and both were pilots. The plane had sat out in the rain for some heavy storms. We'll never understand why two pilots chose to skip checking the fuel. Please remember not to take any shortcuts. Losing a good friend is still hard to deal with... knowing it could have easily prevented makes it harder. CEN15FA287
Either way, they're gone. Even if you didn't know these guys, you may have read here that they both left behind their newly wed wives. They were going to fuel the plane for Walt and Chellie's honeymoon trip. He would want you to take this example as a reminder to always check your fuel. Even if he did, I see a lot of people who don't.
Thanks for the replies about how difficult it is to check. I hope they checked and just didn't get it all. There was a lot of water collected after the crash. From day one, I had someone who was there tell me he didn't think they checked, so we've suspected this all along.
Either way, they're gone. Even if you didn't know these guys, you may have read here that they both left behind their newly wed wives. They were going to fuel the plane for Walt and Chellie's honeymoon trip. He would want you to take this example as a reminder to always check your fuel. Even if he did, I see a lot of people who don't.
- The Comanche has bladder tanks. While they are not known to be as troublesome as other types with bladder tanks, they CAN retain water in folds.
You're paranoid? My plane is hangared and I sump it before taking it out!Rock the wings. Always rock the wings. Unbelievable to me that a plane that was known to have sat out in heavy rain didn't get a thorough sump check. I guess I have been paranoid of water from any plane that sits on the ramp personally.
You're paranoid? My plane is hangared and I sump it before taking it out!
I didn't have the privilege of knowing them, but I'd like to assume the best. Perhaps they did check the fuel, but the entire sump was water. Can be hard to tell it's not fuel in a blue-stained fuel strainer.
It's also worth noting that there are a number of airplanes that can hide water in various areas of the tanks. There was another crash where the pilot survived after the engine quit at about 200 ft AGL. He did sump the tanks, but they pulled a quart of water out of them afterwards. The water hid in the tanks.