benhar77
Pre-Flight
Listening to FISK this morning, sounds like there was an incident at the airport. At 8:08, a medivac was inbound. Hope everyone will be okay!
Was the twin departing 36 perhaps?
Latest is it was a Meridian that crashed, not a twin. Probably the "Malibu" in the LiveATC MP3.
Better yet, people walked off the plane. No word on injuries, but there were apparently 5 on board.
Appears plane ahead of Malibu took its time getting off runway,
Don't know the facts, but so many flight school trained monkeys tend to pull out on the runway, all "lined up and waiting" and then sit there for about 30 seconds setting their DG, re-reading the checklist or whatever before rolling. OSH is not the place for that stuff.
I'd be willing to bet that more people have died from not following a checklist than from taking their time going through a checklist but I agree with you, sitting on the runway is not the place to dilly dally.
Just wish so many would go thru their pre-takeoff checklist before pulling out on the dang runway. Takes about 3 seconds to set your DG and go.
Just wish so many would go thru their pre-takeoff checklist before pulling out on the dang runway. Takes about 3 seconds to set your DG and go.
Piper Malibu base to final, landed on top of an Rv 4. Two fatal, seven people involved. Two walked away
I was just texted with this
Piper Malibu base to final, landed on top of an Rv 4. Two fatal, seven people involved. Two walked away
I was just texted with this
Reason #1 I don't fly into these events. Hopefully everyone is ok.
Just wish so many would go thru their pre-takeoff checklist before pulling out on the dang runway. Takes about 3 seconds to set your DG and go.
I've always done it that way from earliest training. But then, my instructor drilled that into me.
John
Flying into Oshkosh should be on every pilot's bucket list.
Same here. My training was 20+ years ago, but it was always if you're on the runway, you're rolling to go (unless told to taxi to position and hold<-I'm that old )
Why would you be setting a DG on the runway? Do it on the way out to the runway.
Don't know the facts, but so many flight school trained monkeys tend to pull out on the runway, all "lined up and waiting" and then sit there for about 30 seconds setting their DG, re-reading the checklist or whatever before rolling. OSH is not the place for that stuff.
Reason #1 I don't fly into these events. Hopefully everyone is ok.
but yes unless given position and hold one has no business just sitting at the end of an active runway. Most towered airports I've been to will call you out on that, even if the airport is essentially empty.
Sounds like people are quick to blame the pilot that got crashed into. Yes, I agree that sitting on the runway is no place to mess around. You have to be ready when you taxi out. What about the landing plane? Doesn't he have a working set of eyes to see a plane sitting at the end of the runway?
Sounds like people are quick to blame the pilot that got crashed into. Yes, I agree that sitting on the runway is no place to mess around. You have to be ready when you taxi out. What about the landing plane? Doesn't he have a working set of eyes to see a plane sitting at the end of the runway?
I do that. But others teach to set on the runway to verify heading with the actual runway numbers. Remember the Teterboro crash? Worst case, spend 3 seconds doing it on the runway, not 30 seconds going thru your whole checklist.
Sounds like people are quick to blame the pilot that got crashed into.
Also, isn't this a controlled field? Who gave out landing clearance before the runway was clear (or did the aircraft land without clearance)?
I do that. But others teach to set on the runway to verify heading with the actual runway numbers.
From every news report I've read, this accident involved a collision between the Malibu and earth, not the Malibu and another aircraft.