https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/03/us/unclaimed-lottery-ticket-14-6-million-trnd/index.htmlCNN could F up a winning lottery ticket...
https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/03/us/unclaimed-lottery-ticket-14-6-million-trnd/index.htmlCNN could F up a winning lottery ticket...
I love how the knock on CNN post got a bunch of likes but yours got ignored. Too funny!Unless they support our opinion. Then they are the gospel truth.
Nauga,
and a strong BS filter
Though you''d look cooler in a Duke.
That would certainly do it. But ... they got off the ground, and rotation would likely have a higher tailplane AoA, I'd think. Or, even worse, it was marginal on takeoff, and the pilot thought he had it made.Given what has been said about the height of the T-tail and the lack of deicing at the airport, I'm guessing tailplane stall....not engine related in any way.
Bob
Yes it does look like it hit under power. 2 of the 4 blades are bent, and that is a solid metal prop. It will stop the engine when it hits something hard.
View attachment 80519
Like this Meridian that flew into the ground short of the runway under power in low IFR conditions with 3 bent and one perfect blade. These solid metal Hartzell paddle props are nearly indestructible.
View attachment 80521
Given what has been said about the height of the T-tail and the lack of deicing at the airport, I'm guessing tailplane stall....not engine related in any way.
Bob
Does this look like a prop that was turning at impact to you guys?
sure doesn’t to me.
FWIW: Considering the blades are not feathered and the engine was ejected during the accident sequence the only way to confirm whether it was operating or not is by the internal turbine/compressor blade damage. Once the fire goes out in a turbine engine it loses all it's torque especially on very light-weight prop blades. Seeing how the blades are bent and offset clock-wise I would think the engine was producing power at impact. The key to this with be the attitude of the aircraft during impact and how the energy was directed/dissipated.no. Not even a little bit. Also doesn’t look to be feathered, Just at the pitch stops.
Can you share the pictures?I saw photos of the aircraft today, the day of departure. A lot of ice/snow on the wings. They were attempting to clean off the wings, but did they have a 12 foot ladder for the tail? And did they get the wings completely clear with the rubbing alcohol? Who knows...
Unfortunately they weren't sent to me, just showed to me. One of my friends/customers had a connection with the airport in Chamberlain.Can you share the pictures?
I love how the knock on CNN post got a bunch of likes but yours got ignored. Too funny!
From another board with a fair number of PC-12 pilots, it sounds like that airplane would have needed at least 90% of the available runway to takeoff in those conditions leaving virtually no room for error.
Unless they support our opinion. Then they are the gospel truth.
Nauga,
and a strong BS filter
I noticed too haha.. it seemed to even out now. Granted, CNN is comically bad at "news" - they're borderline tabloid status. Even if they said something that supported my opinion I'd be embarrassed to admit it came from CNN...I love how the knock on CNN post got a bunch of likes but yours got ignored. Too funny!
It's the difference in:
"Man contracts salmonella after not microwaving frozen turkey dinner long enough"
VS
"Is the meat lobby trying to murder your family? What did Black and Decker know? You could be NEXT! Find out how a frozen turkey dinner sent one man to the hospital!"
This would be, if a true statement by the deceased, a personal interpretation of the Church doctrine. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints has no such formal doctrine. People are quite free to interpret how they honor the Sabbath day, with only very loose guidelines. They may have wished to be back in time for Church, and may have had responsibilities that they felt they needed to honor. But no restriction on flying or traveling. Very sad event, and a very generous and charitable family devastated.
Again, the number of people is telling.Barring any crazy mechanical issue, which is hard to imagine on a pc12 that’s flown a lot,
This would rank as one most easily avoidable accidents given the loss of life. Befuddling. Seems like they flew this area a lot. Should have know about ice contamination. How can you walk out to the plane and see the wings and say “damn it we aren’t going anywhere” then pack 11 more ppl in the plane and a crap ton of hunting gear.
To some, perhaps, but I was referring to the 'factual' side of things - we ridicule 'The Media' when they get facts wrong, but when similar harebrained 'facts' are posted that support our opinions, they are posted as corroboration with no apparent consideration for the possibility that they may not be, in fact, factual. There's an example of the former in this thread, the latter in other threads."Opinion" though is kind of the dangerous part of the media.. vs new.
To some, perhaps, but I was referring to the 'factual' side of things - we ridicule 'The Media' when they get facts wrong, but when similar harebrained 'facts' are posted that support our opinions, they are posted as corroboration with no apparent consideration for the possibility that they may not be, in fact, factual. There's an example of the former in this thread, the latter in other threads.
Nauga,
who knows Jack
When you chose to operate an airplane with more people on board than seat belts, what other rules do you disregard....
This is what I just do not get. How many of us being GA pilots have said "No I don't like the weather?" Sorry you weigh to much with my fuel load, the CG is not good.
Such a tragedy for so many folks. My prayers are with the family and friends. A senseless waste of life, because no one in the group of 12 said, "lets wait to deice and let the weather clear"
Prelim https://www.ntsb.gov/news/press-releases/Pages/NR20191217.aspx
Shaker activated immediately after takeoff and pusher activated shortly after.
the accident takeoff began from runway 31 about 1231:58. The airplane lifted off 30 seconds later
It is helpful that some of these planes have black box like stuff to help aid in figuring this stuff out.Prelim https://www.ntsb.gov/news/press-releases/Pages/NR20191217.aspx
Shaker activated immediately after takeoff and pusher activated shortly after.
That sounds like a pretty long takeoff roll.
"Bowed rotor". Some new jet engines have a little motor that is there just to rotate things as they cool.I thought rotation of the TPE331 after shutdown was to prevent warping of the engine shaft that occurs with uneven cooling, which can cause interference contact between the turbine and the case.
Sounds like that points to aerodynamic rather than strictly and solely a mechanical issue. A rotation below the new stall speed of a snow contaminated wing? Or pitot/static system iced over?
What is absolutely amazing about that report, is that the NTSB is essentially saying that all the abysmal ADM aside (gethomeitis, manually de-icing the airplane with alcohol from Walmart, not removing any contamination from the tail, overloading the airplane and out of CG, ignoring the airport manager's warnings and taking off into crap conditions on a runway that wasn't clear...etc), in the end the airplane could have actually flown away if the pilot had just been a better stick.
Flight recorder data revealed that the accident pilot tended to rotate more rapidly and to a higher pitch angle during takeoff than a second pilot who flew the airplane regularly. Piloted simulations suggested that the accident pilot’s rotation technique, which involved a relatively abrupt and heavy pull on the control column, when combined with the extreme aft CG, heavy weight, and early rotation on the accident takeoff, contributed to the airplane’s high angle-of attack immediately after rotation, the triggering of the stick shaker and stick pusher, and the pilot’s pitch control difficulties after liftoff. The resulting pitch oscillations eventually resulted in a deep penetration into the aerodynamic stall region and subsequent loss of control.