Shawn
En-Route
Home airport…sad incident and hoping it was not my hangar!
https://pajaronian.com/three-dead-after-planes-collide/
https://pajaronian.com/three-dead-after-planes-collide/
what am i looking at here
Gave me a sick feeling listening to the 152. RIP.wow just listened to the ATC audio. based on the track log, what the hell was the twin thinking doing 180+ kts over the ground straight in on short final? anybody who flies one of these have some insight?
starts around 24:00 for when the twin is making his first calls
https://archive.liveatc.net/kwvi/KWVI2-Aug-18-2022-2130Z.mp3
Based on the news report, the accident happened just before 2200Z, so it looks like the weather this time was clear, with wind at 210 at 9 kts. (It's common for the marine later to evaporate in the afternoon.)Glancing at the history of that C340, it looks like every time it flew into WVI it was a straight in approach to that runway. Don’t know the weather each time, nor if it mattered.
Make the first call three miles out on final?? What the heck!!
He actually said a little earlier on that he was descending from somewhere 10 miles out and was going to make the straight-in from there.Make the first call three miles out on final?? What the heck!!
What do BMW drivers and twin pilots have in common? No regard for rules or common procedures. Twin pilots (and cirrus) all too often have no regard for traffic patterns in my experience. It seems like this time someone's blatant disregard backfired and unfortunately took out an innocent pilot who couldn't even get out of the way fast enough...
RIP
The rules say that the lower traffic has the right-of-way, but "shall not take advantage of this rule to cut in front of another which is on final approach to land...." Unfortunately, the FAA has muddied the waters with some of their non-regulatory guidance. The safest thing in this situation, in addition to what others have said, is to not assume that the other pilot will yield, even when you think you have the right-of-way.What do BMW drivers and twin pilots have in common? No regard for rules or common procedures. Twin pilots (and cirrus) all too often have no regard for traffic patterns in my experience. It seems like this time someone's blatant disregard backfired and unfortunately took out an innocent pilot who couldn't even get out of the way fast enough...
RIP
The corporate big iron that comes around at times have more common sense and communication at our place. This guy wasn’t communicating he was merely announcing. Sad
This unfortunately is commonplace at KWVI especially IFR traffic on VMC days which has an opposite approach of typical VFR pattern. Tool that was barging straight in had zero situational awareness of the traffic in the pattern and should have broke off and done a proper pattern entry which is easy peasy at KWVI. There is no IFR approach from that end so it both pilots were VFR.
I am blaming both pilots.
This is terrible. Gotta feel for the guy in the 152. Doing pattern work and some clown decides to do a straight-in with several planes in the pattern. He tells you how fast the twin was moving in how quickly he went from 3 miles out to just 1
That’s what sucks. We operate on the honor system. We get trained on the rules and regulations to get the ratings but once we’re up there on our own, it’s up to each pilot to self govern how they fly. Some make the choice the not follow recommended procedures and nothing really comes of it unless an accident occurs or airspace gets busted.We get transient Cirrus aircraft doing this on a weekly basis at my field. We generally have 1-5 students in the pattern, and sky diving south of the field. We've talked to them on the ground after landing as they a cause complete cluster fudge, especially if the CFIs are not on board (am surprised no one has had an incident). Every single time, the Cirrus pilots couldn't give two poops and often state that they had the right of way according to the FARs
How I feel. Wow. Even if you are on IFR plan. Its VFR man and the pattern is full. Slow down and dont cut in line. I have told flights on long straight ins to get in line. The 152 Pilot was so polite just trying to do his training. RIP. Its such a basic violation of our code…. to save five mins at the expense of others. Tsk Tsk. Having a plane that has a pattern speed of 130 does not get you a first in line. On the other hand how do you fly a full pattern that fast? The Saratoga I fly is in the pattern at 100 and its a bit fast also for all the guys training in the pattern in their C162s at 60kts. For the guys flying fast planes into slow busy uncontrolled airports how do you do it?Wow just wow.
Equally?
Curious why you'd fault the 152 driver. He tried to GTFO when he figured out it wasn't gonna work out. Got plowed for his troubles by a 180kt straight-in twin.
i think the 152 could have easily avoided this by waiting to turn behind the obviously faster airplane but i don't know that any "blame" goes his way
Glancing at the history of that C340, it looks like every time it flew into WVI it was a straight in approach to that runway. Don’t know the weather each time, nor if it mattered.
Equally?
Curious why you'd fault the 152 driver. He tried to GTFO when he figured out it wasn't gonna work out. Got plowed for his troubles by a 180kt straight-in twin.