fiveoboy01
Pattern Altitude
RE the issue of very cold water, would carrying a life raft onboard mitigate that? Assuming it fits somewhere and you could get it out of the airplane after ditching..
RE the issue of very cold water, would carrying a life raft onboard mitigate that? Assuming it fits somewhere and you could get it out of the airplane after ditching..
But they couldn't have been in the water long, correct?
I'm just wondering if the raft does anything to keep you out of the cold water so you die more slowly. I'd assume it does but I don't have much survival knowledge..
I'd rather freeze to death or drown than burn to death.I had to google, but it looks like someone can die in an hour if the water temp is as warm as 50 degrees. Obviously it's going to vary.
I'm not sure if I'd cross Lake Michigan or not but after reading up on hypothermia for a few minutes, I don't think I would without a raft.
A friend said that if you don't trust the engine over water, you shouldn't trust it over land, which is a valid point I guess. I'm averse to freezing to death though
Nope. I live on the coast. If I'm not within gliding distance of land, I'm not happy. Had to fly around some clouds going north to SBA a few months ago. Put me a few miles off shore when I typically follow the 101 up. I was NOT happy, even though I was within gliding range of the coastline.
The ocean and I have an agreement. I stay the hell away from it and it leaves me alone. That's the deal.
Okay, let me elaborate on my math here:
...According to the POH, the lowly little Cessna 152 can glide approximately 19 NM with an engine failure at 12,000 feet...
I wasn't going to point it out, but since you brought it up--at 12,000' there's probably a 20 kt headwind westbound. That works out to .67 miles per minute. Say he only loses 500' per minute (wishful thinking), that'll leave him about six miles to swim after splash-down.Lake level isn't zero, not to mention any wind that is not directly blowing to/from your intended course will shorten your glide distance. Even if you give yourself 15 NM, you are still over "non gliding-to-safety" water longer than "gliding-to-safety" water.
That's my feeling, too.Might as well drive at that point.
That't just silly. Draw a line from peoria to mackinac island, it runs right across the middle of the lake and takes ~2:15 in my plane. Now deviate to the east over benton harbor instead of direct, that 2:15 becomes 2:25. To drive it would take all day.That's my feeling, too.
I'm thinking of crossing east to west from the middle of MI into WI (or the opposite direction), and I suspect Ed is too. Of course it makes little difference along the course you mentioned, but from where I used to live in southeast MI, many attractive destinations were a short hop across the water, much further if you insisted on going around.That't just silly. Draw a line from peoria to mackinac island, it runs right across the middle of the lake and takes ~2:15 in my plane. Now deviate to the east over benton harbor instead of direct, that 2:15 becomes 2:25. To drive it would take all day.
Lake level isn't zero, not to mention any wind that is not directly blowing to/from your intended course will shorten your glide distance. Even if you give yourself 15 NM, you are still over "non gliding-to-safety" water longer than "gliding-to-safety" water.
That's the part that gets me about all these tough guy "safety" decisions form people who have obviously had no training whatsoever in water egress.The one I know of, the Cessna 150 flipped on landing in a pond. The pilot got out the broken front window and he barely made it to shore. Try swimming in shoes and clothes. Its exhausting.
That's the part that gets me about all these tough guy "safety" decisions form people who have obviously had no training whatsoever in water egress.
How many of the responders on this thread have tried to swim a 3-5 foot surf in street clothes? It's a whole lot harder than it sounds.
For the record, having a raft in the back of the plane is useless. First rule of egress is that if you aren't wearing it, it's gone.
Once that pilot pulled the chute he was a passenger with time to prepare for the water. A normal airplane ditch will have you occupied right to the end and that may leave you dazed and upside down. Maybe you fly a Cirrus. Most of us don't.
That't just silly. Draw a line from peoria to mackinac island, it runs right across the middle of the lake and takes ~2:15 in my plane. Now deviate to the east over benton harbor instead of direct, that 2:15 becomes 2:25. To drive it would take all day.
That's the part that gets me about all these tough guy "safety" decisions form people who have obviously had no training whatsoever in water egress.
How many of the responders on this thread have tried to swim a 3-5 foot surf in street clothes? It's a whole lot harder than it sounds.
For the record, having a raft in the back of the plane is useless. First rule of egress is that if you aren't wearing it, it's gone.
That's why the pants come off. Rarely is there 3-5 foot surf on lake michigan. Provided the plane doesn't flip, they actually float for enough time to get stuff out. Back seat or front seat would be better. Someone put one down in Lake MIchigan a few years back (fuel exhaustion) and had enough time to get out, stand on the wing and make phone calls before it finally sunk.
Let me get this straight, you're not "clucking" in your own right? ROTFLMAO!
dtuuri
Gee, and to think I got censored for simply pointing out you're a Pinhead.
dtuuri
The airplane doesn't know it's over the water. Do the lakes to Osh all the time,also trips to the Bahamas.
why does the engine always sound rough as soon as I clear the beach, then?
Been over Lakes Michigan and Erie many times in a R182. As long as the Lycoming keeps purring, no fear. I figure that when my time comes I'll just accept it. At least cold water death would be fairly quick.
Ummm no! At least not in the aircraft that I've done it in.
I flew over Lake Michigan once, and once only, in my 20's, while in a C150. I flew to 10,500 feet, and started westbound over Holland, Michigan, heading towards Milwaukee, Wisconsin. I assumed, without doing the math, that at 10,500 feet I would be within gliding distance of shore for most of my flight. After 10 minutes heading west, I started to lose slight of land in all directions, and THEN I did the math: at 10,500 feet, the vast majority of your trip is not within gliding distance (over 50 NM of it, actually), when the lake is 80 NM across.
I flew for waaaaaaay longer than I was comfortable before seeing land, and I've never done that again.
Crossing the great lakes out of glide distance makes little sense in a single engine. Traveling to the Bahamas or even Key West and flying direct is more of a calculated risk than taking a 15 minute shortcut over lake erie or lake michigan.