Seanaldinho
Pattern Altitude
Wow, Ive just spent the last two hours reading up on this. Terrible.
Kudos for the cirrus pilot to pull at <994 AGL. He didn't have much time to make that decision; it was the right one
Where does this 994 figure come from?
Controller told the SR-22 to remain at 1300 (recording). KFDK is 306' MSL (AF/D)
No she didn't. Please review the recording again.
She told a different helicopter to remain at 1000 due to traffic in the downwind. The accident helicopter was not on the audio at all. She told the cirrus to report downwind. Then she told the cirrus to "maintain current altitude until base". At no time did she assign an altitude to either accident aircraft. There is no audio that reflects what altitude either aircraft was at in the accident sequence.
No way are they running helicopter patterns same side same altitude. If they are it is still the cirrus pilots fault, overtaken aircraft always has ROW.
Overtaken aircraft always have the ROW, I think we can all agree downwind speed in a cirrus is greater then a R44. Student pilots can be so cute.Once again, you are completely making things up with facts not in evidence. Not a single thing you said has any validity or factual basis. You know absolutely nothing about who was where and when or what they were doing. The very limited amount of known evidence suggests the opposite of what you keep babbling. But none of it is enough to draw any firm conclusion of anything.
But lets not let facts and reality get in the way of your personal opinions...
No way are they running helicopter patterns same side same altitude. If they are it is still the cirrus pilots fault, overtaken aircraft always has ROW.
You have no evidence whatsoever that either party failed to give right of way. You cannot fail to give right of way to someone you do not see. You also have no evidence whatsoever that either aircraft was overtaking the other. In fact, you have no evidence of anything at all. Nor do you care to have any, since your mind was made up before accident even happened.Overtaken aircraft always have the ROW, I think we can all agree downwind speed in a cirrus is greater then a R44. Student pilots can be so cute.
I urge you to read his tag line for which I take pride in providing.You have no evidence whatsoever that either party failed to give right of way. You cannot fail to give right of way to someone you do not see. You also have no evidence whatsoever that either aircraft was overtaking the other. In fact, you have no evidence of anything at all. Nor do you care to have any, since your mind was made up before accident even happened.
Overtaken aircraft always have the ROW, I think we can all agree downwind speed in a cirrus is greater then a R44. Student pilots can be so cute.
Not to make light of a tragedy, but...
Here lies the body of Michael O'Day,
Who died defending his right-of-way.
He was right, dead right, as he sailed along,
But he's just as dead as if he were wrong.
Perhaps only by the Grace of Klapmeiers are the Cirrus pilots still among the living.
The very definition of a "righteous pull"!
The AFD entry for FDK doesnt list a helo TPA. Just single & light wins at 1304 and heavy twins at 1504. Unless they issue a specific altitude to each helo, relying on a customary altitude for separation has its limits.
Exactly the situation the chute was designed for. Once again, the chute proves it's value. Eventually, the chute will be excepted by all just like airbags are in cars.
Very timely post.Not to make light of a tragedy, but...
Here lies the body of Michael O'Day,
Who died defending his right-of-way.
He was right, dead right, as he sailed along,
But he's just as dead as if he were wrong.
Perhaps only by the Grace of Klapmeiers are the Cirrus pilots still among the living.
The very definition of a "righteous pull"!
What happened here was not a RoW issue though. RoW and steering rules do not exist until a risk of collision has been determined. Neither craft saw each other so no risk of collision could be determined.
This was not a failure in RoW, this was a failure in See and Avoid for which both parties are equally responsible for.
At our airport the choppers do right traffic and fixed wing does left. I always thought that was standard sop.
What advantage does FDK see in mixing the traffic and separating by altitude?
I've gotten right base entries to 30 from the east.....several times.:wink2:In hindsight, I wish she had given the Cirrus right downwind for 30 but that is usually only given when inbound from the north and then it's usually a right base to 30 unless there is good reason to establish on downwind, like other traffic in the pattern.
Interesting, this is what is on Garmin Pilot:
But you are correct, I see nothing in the AFD.
You can't do it deliberately, but you can certainly do it. The ROW rules don't say you have to give ROW to "aircraft you see" that have the right of way. It's your responsibility to see them and to yield. Based on your description of the incident, I can only come up with two possibilities:You cannot fail to give right of way to someone you do not see.
200' of separation IMO is ridiculous. Particularly where there are students involved. It should be more like 500' at least. Personally, I think "stacking" traffic is kind of dumb. I am certain there will be new pattern rules soon.
That is a no brainer.....
At our airport the choppers do right traffic and fixed wing does left. I always thought that was standard sop.
What advantage does FDK see in mixing the traffic and separating by altitude?
Since eyewitness reports are rarely accurate, we won't know what actually happened for a while. It's possible that nothing that we've been told is true and the helicopter started out somewhere else entirely.
No we don't. Once again, the helicopter the tower was talking to on the LiveATC recording was NOT the accident helicopter.We do know where the helo started out...
No we don't. Once again, the helicopter the tower was talking to on the LiveATC recording was NOT the accident helicopter.
What we can generally establish is that there is no verbal specific altitude restriction given to the accident helicopter or the cirrus. There is a loosely established general practice for the helos to remain a few hundred below TPA, but doesn't appear to be anything official.
If the towers would QUIT using the phrase " at your own risk" it would free up ALOT of radio transmission time... They do it out here too and you would figure all RW pilots would have that phrase drilled into their heads and not need to be reminded of it EVERY damn time...... Geez...
Rant off..
Twr 4:05 - 4:11: S122ES report 3 miles west for left downwind runway 30.
Twr 7:03 - 7:10: 2ES report midfield left downwind for runway 30 have three helicopters below you in the ah traffic pattern.
2ES 7:11 - 7:15: I will report midfield downwind and I have two of them in sight [..?]
Twr 7:16 - 7:22: Alright 2ES I have you in sight runway 30 maintain your altitude to until turning base, cleared to land.
7:24: [Open mike sounds of collision aftermath.]
Twr 7:16 - 7:22: Alright 2ES I have you in sight runway 30 maintain your altitude to until turning base, cleared to land