Same title right?I was going to post the exact same thing!
The pilot needs to chip off some of that into a glass and top it off with some nice Scotch.....a whole bunch of it. Wow!!
Lower than what they landed at.Now let the guessing begin as to what the stall speed was.
In my event it was full throttle just to maintain GS on the ILS. In the landing phase the plane just stopped flying at ~3-4 feet in the round out at 80ish knots indicated with no warning or buffet. I did not take the time to do the math and determine how much the critical aoa was reduced but it was dang sure not flying like a normal 172.Damn! Also, this also demonstrates, which is potentially a bad side effect of posting something like this, that when they tell you that even a sandpaper thick layer of ice or frost can affect the airfoil, at least planes like the SkyHawk with forgiving wings tend to be quite tolerant to even large amounts of ice
Ice freaks me out. Even with FIKI
No. Thank. You.
Was the airplane really flying, or left on the ramp in a recent storm?
It has the curling like effect that you see in the ice accumulation vids. It looks pretty real to me. That kind can pack on fast in the right conditions.Was the airplane really flying, or left on the ramp in a recent storm?
Yeah, hopefully nobody here will be saying "Frost? I've seen (pictures of) worse. Let's launch!".Also, this also demonstrates, which is potentially a bad side effect of posting something like this, that when they tell you that even a sandpaper thick layer of ice or frost can affect the airfoil, at least planes like the SkyHawk with forgiving wings tend to be quite tolerant to even large amounts of ice
Yep. I would've landed, kissed the ground, and gone straight to the bar.Rookie move, along with putting picture on the internet bragging about it.
Slower than what he landed at...I can't imagine what stall speed would have been.
what the heck approach speed would you fly to the runway? Fast? or Faster!!
Test pilot territory.Full power and take everything you can get! I know some of the old freight dogs around here talk about flying with tons of ice, and getting into situations that required full power just to clear the fence. The guys that used to fly night freight in the Twin Beeches and DC-3s in the upper midwest decades ago were a different type.
When I hear “fog”, I think something that’s too low to spend 10 minutes in...it’d be interesting to see the METARs & TAFs.People on reddit are being pretty harsh, but hey, it's the internet. Reports - the guy flew 25 miles in freezing fog, about 10 minutes. yes, he is lucky to be alive.
I'm curious what they would do if they realized they're stuck with freezing fog over the area and knowing you need to land. Thinking I would been calling flight services to find out where the temps were the highest. But under stress, I don't know that any of us can know how we're going to react unless we've been there. An hour of flying time give or take, ice all around. You're landing somewhere soon.