I think I saw this in an old Columbo episode. The one with Johnny Cash called "Swan Song." so they relabeled some rocker switch on the panel instead.
This is a local story here, and there seems to be a lot of background being left out, but basically a "despondent" student went missing, then was last seen renting this plane. Plane was found out of gas, with the autopilot still in the "on" position, and no tracks leading away from crash. That area where it crashed is a Lake Superior snow belt, and still had several feet of snow on the ground at the time of the crash.How the hell can you get the doors of a 172 open enough in flight to bail out?
Sounds to me like he ran out of fuel, landed out, and fresh snow obscured the tracks.
How do they know the autopilot was on? With the KAP140 I've used, I don't think there would be any way to tell after a crash.This is a local story here, and there seems to be a lot of background being left out, but basically a "despondent" student went missing, then was last seen renting this plane. Plane was found out of gas, with the autopilot still in the "on" position, and no tracks leading away from crash. That area where it crashed is a Lake Superior snow belt, and still had several feet of snow on the ground at the time of the crash.
I guess. It just seems incredible to me that the electrical system and autopilot panel would have survived the crash, and someone responding was either able to tell that the autopilot was on or took a picture of the panel within the 30-40 minutes it would have taken for the battery to die. Also I think most autopilots would have kicked off when the engine quit and the plane couldn't hold altitude.As long as you got there before the battery went dead, why not.
I guess. It just seems incredible to me that the electrical system and autopilot panel would have survived the crash, and someone responding was either able to tell that the autopilot was on or took a picture of the panel within the 30-40 minutes it would have taken for the battery to die. Also I think most autopilots would have kicked off when the engine quit and the plane couldn't hold altitude.
How the hell can you get the doors of a 172 open enough in flight to bail out?
Sounds to me like he ran out of fuel, landed out, and fresh snow obscured the tracks.
I've jumped both Aeronca Champs and C-170 with the doors on.
How do you hold a slip and jump out at the same time?I would think a slip would help take some pressure off the door. Was this done when you did it?
You can't maintain 55 knots airspeed in a 172 hands off, at least not clean. It will naturally trim to 65 or faster.I think you can get the doors open on the 172. Just fly very slowly. Look at the initial ground speeds in Don's post. 55 knots or so. Picked up some better TAS and likely tailwinds as it climbed after the fat guy got out.
The authorities claim that the autopilot was found engaged. I still find it curious that the electrical system and autopilot panel survived the crash, the autopilot didn't kick off, and the responders checked for it or took a picture of the panel before the battery died.Well he could have still pitched it down to a slower speed even if it was trimmed faster. Once he was out it would have worked its way up to the higher speed.
Who said anyhing about an autopilot? Once he's out and the door is back in trail the plane will fly straight (barring misrigging) and the airspeed and pitch attitude will settle down eventually.
How do you hold a slip and jump out at the same time?
I guess. It just seems incredible to me that the electrical system and autopilot panel would have survived the crash, and someone responding was either able to tell that the autopilot was on or took a picture of the panel within the 30-40 minutes it would have taken for the battery to die. Also I think most autopilots would have kicked off when the engine quit and the plane couldn't hold altitude.
Interesting. Is that what you might call an analog autopilot?I obviously have no idea what kind of autopilot was in there, but if it happened to be a Tactair unit like in my C182, you pull a knob to turn it on. I doubt the knob would come out to the "on" position without a human pulling it even in a crash, though it is possible. It's a vacuum operated 3 axis autopilot.
How the hell can you get the doors of a 172 open enough in flight to bail out?
Sounds to me like he ran out of fuel, landed out, and fresh snow obscured the tracks.
Interesting. Is that what you might call an analog autopilot?
I'm guessing the accident plane was one of these 172's:
https://michiganflyers.org/aircraft/
Every jump plane I've ever seen has either had a vertically opening door, or no door at all.Skydivers do it.