Is there a spike up in the accident rate during the holidays? Seem to have seen lots of accidents on the news lately (the most recent being the one in Louisianna today). Winter weather combined with get there idis I suppose.
The one at KLFT in LA was a Piper Cheyenne. Lost one of those super dependable PT-6's.
It happened this morning. You're a little premature on the final report.Link to the NTSB final?
It happened this morning. You're a little premature on the final report.
Well, considering the grandson and D-I-L of the plane's owner died in the crash perhaps your family will see the humor in that?Yes that was the joke.
Well, considering the grandson and D-I-L of the plane's owner died in the crash perhaps your family will see the humor in that?
You’re still missing the point.Well, considering the grandson and D-I-L of the plane's owner died in the crash perhaps your family will see the humor in that?
Or lost fuel to it, which is perhaps as likely.The one at KLFT in LA was a Piper Cheyenne. Lost one of those super dependable PT-6's.
A Cheyenne is a small plane.A Cheyenne is a "small plane" to the aviation dumb media.
It sounds like that crash was an engine loss, right after departure, in low vis. Awful combo.
Most of our little planes hold two or four people, and probably fly with no more than two 90% of the time. Having several planes with five, six, or perhaps a dozen passengers go down will rapidly inflate the fatalities, given how few are killed each year in GA crashes.Not really. We have to track accidents for work and while it is a little blip in multi fatality crashes, over a 12 month period it’s not out of the ordinary unfortunately. I haven’t correlated data but it seems like there were on average 2- 3 fatal crashes per week, and probably another 4 or so serious accidents. In fact accidents tend to go down over the holidays because weather keeps (the wise) GA pilots on the ground more so than the rest of the year. The thing is the 1 or 2 fatalities in a small piston aren’t really big news, but I personally handled 3 this past year that, pardon the pun, flew below the radar. And that was just in my little territory.
Remember, there were weeks with terrible PC-12 losses, King Air losses, helo losses, among the piston losses that garner no attention.
Or lost oil to it. With only 4K to 5K flying hrs with PT-6's, I'm no expert. I once had three incidents of a leaking oil line on consecutive days. Got home the first time, got almost home the second. The third, left it on the deck. Also had a FOD incident. Engine began small surges. Got stronger. Got bad. Got it on the ground OK. Maint found that a small cowl fastener came loose and was "processed" by the engine. Damaged the inlet guide vanes.Or lost fuel to it, which is perhaps as likely.