https://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/article231321553.html
Wings were found, not the airplane yet.
Wings were found, not the airplane yet.
I think the FA track says it all. Flight path terminated right near a large thunderstorm cell.
Sad thing is the cells appear to be fairly isolated. Tons of room to negotiate around. I wonder if he was using Nexrad to try to pick his way through?
Probably not. Most of these aircraft have on board radar...see the pod on the right wing....radar pod...
This aircraft was a JetProp conversion...
https://rocketengineering.com/
This picture link didn't load for me...YMMV
http://jetprop.com/sites/default/files/gallery_image/JetPROP_309_N709CH.jpg
There were a lot of pretty serious thunderstorms throughout the whole area yesterday.
I think I've got the correct radar image for the time. Nash County is in the middle of the map. There was a storm in the southern corner of the county, but the news reports say the crash was in Aventon, which is up near Red Oak.
Sourced from https://weather.us/radar-us/nash/reflectivity/KRAX_20190607-184800z.html
View attachment 74730
I was basing my observation on being on the ground at work. It does look like that was well within the capabilities of that plane.I think I've got the correct radar image for the time. Nash County is in the middle of the map. There was a storm in the southern corner of the county, but the news reports say the crash was in Aventon, which is up near Red Oak.
Sourced from https://weather.us/radar-us/nash/reflectivity/KRAX_20190607-184800z.html
View attachment 74730
Don't be late, penetrate
The radar you see shows what's hitting the ground. When you're in the flight levels you're often times above most of it. At FL250 i was above everything and didn't need to deviate. It was pretty much smooth, just heavy rain below. Aircraft type I was in was A319
And flown through dark green and yellow visually, with no rain! It’s a great tool, but it’s just one tool.I am subject to correction here but I do not think the highlighted statement is accurate. I have been 'under' red Nexrad blobs and been in clear air. My understanding is that a radar image is a composite image.
https://www.e-education.psu.edu/files/meteo101/image/Section4/Comp_BaseZ0310.html
https://www.weather.gov/iwx/wsr_88d
I am subject to correction here but I do not think the highlighted statement is accurate. I have been 'under' red Nexrad blobs and been in clear air. My understanding is that a radar image is a composite image.
https://www.e-education.psu.edu/files/meteo101/image/Section4/Comp_BaseZ0310.html
https://www.weather.gov/iwx/wsr_88d
That makes this more concerning then. If not weather ripping off some wings what could could a sudden unusual attitude st that elevation. Usually at that phase of flight the autopilot is on and your just monitoring right?Perhaps you're right. Too many times I've flown and ATC has told me about heavy to extreme precipitation ahead and i'm on top of everything. All I know is i went through the exact same weather system as this PA46 and i was on top of everything by FL250.
Usually at that phase of flight the autopilot is on and your just monitoring right?