Mtns2Skies
Final Approach
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Mtns2Skies
That was my understanding that they passed away at the hospital. Is that not the case?Are you suggesting that the Gyro pilot is now decreased?
That was my understanding that they passed away at the hospital. Is that not the case?Are you suggesting that the Gyro pilot is now decreased?
I'm not following you here. What value is there in a wrecked gyro? Who said anything about "tacking things on?"I agree every circumstance is different. From what I can tell that was a 100k gyro so I'd have to imagine there is enough money there to cover the gap in insurance coverage. I am not against him going after that money. It's the people that tack on "emotional damages" in an attempt to capitalize on an accident that bug me.
Treated and released. The NTSB Prelim lists only fatalities as the helicopter occupants.That was my understanding that they passed away at the hospital. Is that not the case?
idk I'm not an insurance agent. Point is if you can afford a 100k toy you probably aren't living paycheck to paycheck so there should be money somewhere to supplement the Mooney's insurance gap.I'm not following you here. What value is there in a wrecked gyro? Who said anything about "tacking things on?"
The only mistake the Mooney guy made was to underinsure his plane, but he was free to do that.
That's not how America works.you can afford a 100k toy you probably aren't living paycheck to paycheck
My gyro insurance was just under $8K for $85K hull (underinsured) and 1M liability. I forget the specifics and am too lazy to look them up. My Columbia is about 1/3 of that for much higher hull and the same liability.I have both a Piper Warrior and a Magni M-16 gyro. Both are insured for $80K, $1M, $100K/pax. The Warrior was $758 this year for all of that (I can’t see a breakdown of hull vs liability). The gyro was $5,441, of which $3,928 is hull and $1,513 is liability. Just the liability for the gyro is twice the total cost for the Warrior.
Oh - and my deductibles for the gyro are $2,500/$1,000 in/not in motion. Zero for both for the Warrior.
I have about 2,500 hours TT including 300 in Magni gyros and a Commercial Gyro rating. I’m 66.
Gyro insurance isn’t cheap, even for liability. Personal opinion: although a lot of the hull cost is high because it’s hard to “partially break” a gyro, the liability is up there because of the Pilot community’s culture. Hard to believe a 2-place gyro with a 17 gal gas tank can cause more liability claims than a Warrior but the market says that’s true.
Well then I hope he gets sued and losses everything for being financially irresponsible. hahaThat's not how America works.
They need to move the ultralight field, and I'd heard they were going to do it. These guys fly right over the campsites and this proves it when they said they fell almost straight down, and hit a parked Mooney. It's intimidating camping there. They don't follow the rules and they get away with it, flying over planes again and again. We'll see if they really take action.If you go to the docket, there are some pretty damning statements from a witness as to some gyro pilots’ conduct. It reads like there are some guys totally lacking awareness of where they are and the hazards they cause by doing whatever they want - 360s with following traffic, approaching, slowing to land and suddenly popping back up. It reads like that field is the wild west.
The final report notes that EAA implemented a one-strike rule for the cowboys. Hopefully that will keep the bozos away, and encourage everyone to stay on script.
Even though he can't remember the accident, the report will inform him that his cavalier violation of the pattern management rules resulted in the deaths of two innocent people. One hopes that fact upends his life.Final is out. Blame squarely placed on the gyrocopter pilot.
NTSB Docket - Docket Management System
data.ntsb.gov
As a gyro pilot, I couldn’t agree more with you. It was shameful to see people on the rotaryforum try to rationalize this guy’s actions.Even though he can't remember the accident, the report will inform him that his cavalier violation of the pattern management rules resulted in the deaths of two innocent people. One hopes that fact upends his life.
And in no uncertain terms:Even though he can't remember the accident, the report will inform him that his cavalier violation of the pattern management rules resulted in the deaths of two innocent people. One hopes that fact upends his life.
One hopes that fact upends his life.
The guy will probably declare bankruptcy, and nobody will be made whole.
...given the uninsured, blood-meet-turnip condition of the offender.
...he's not likely to sue independently given the low ROI when confronted with 2024-priced legal costs,
show just how unaffordable this whole shtick (post-CARESII/PPP/PSP/2021refi USA) has become. The entire veneer of that hokey pilgrimage is built upon the mythology of pilot solidarity across income points. Start asking for full fare to display and you'll uncover this thing's a bigger Potemkin village than Florida's condo owner demographic in present day.
*frog sip tea meme here*
I'm *so* looking forward to buying you a beer someday.
The problem is proving it to the level of a criminal conviction. First off, the NTSB conclusions aren't evidence and even much of the data they collected is barred from being used. Of course, if the Winnebago DA wanted to pursue it he could reinterview the witnesses, etc...Criminal liability? My guess is probably not, but I'm just an internet lawyer.