jd21476
Line Up and Wait
I just got a call saying a plane just crashed just short of Gillespie Field about 10 min ago. Anyone have any info?
Looks more like a classic base to final stall, IMO. Same thing happened to a Lear at Teterboro about four years ago. Unfortunately, the Lear can be very unforgiving in this situation, so much so that the FAA came out with a circular about tight base turns in the Lear.Mistook city streets for the runway?
Yeah, it looks like he was maybe setup for the North-South runway when he cancelled IFR, maybe figured he would be landing straight in? Completely guessing...but from the track, it could be stall/spin as he was trying to turn to make 27R. From the start of his turn, that looks pretty tight/close to me for a plane that size.
Controller said left traffic to 27R, which I take as a VFR clearance, and pretty sure I heard him cancel his IFR.
A Lear can’t land in 4500’?
There is also some terrain that they could have run into.
So, I’m guessing the turn was tightened at the last few moments and there was an accelerated stall.
From the ADS-B tracks it appears the turn from downwind to base pointed it right at that hill which was at or slightly above the jet’s current altitude. If it had continued its present turn radius it would have overshot the final and could have hit the hill. It crashed before the hill. So, I’m guessing the turn was tightened at the last few moments and there was an accelerated stall.
If it wasn't VMC, it's already illegal to cancel IFR.There is a reason many operations prohibit circle to land unless it’s VMC.
I'm not sure it was "controlled" when it hit the terrain.Yet another crewed jet succumbing to a CFIT accident while trying to circle to land. Unacceptable.
Well, technically there is no 27 approach. The localizer approach aligned with 27 is a circling approach (the final approach angle due to terrain to the east is nearly seven degrees).Why would he not stay IFR and request vectors for the 27 instrument approach?
An extra 15 minutes of flying. I would like to think getting the instrument approach is what I would have done, but if you're tired and the boss man is going to yell about total time, I might have been tempted.Why would he not stay IFR and request vectors for the 27 instrument approach?
Well, technically there is no 27 approach. The localizer approach aligned with 27 is a circling approach (the final approach angle due to terrain to the east is nearly seven degrees).
Yep, if you look at the plane for the LOC-D you pretty much see why its a bad idea. Nasty terrain out there, but I'm not convinced that's what did these guys in. Looks like they were in a pretty steep descent before they got near the ground.Also, the LOC-D approach says circling runway 27R is not allowed at night. The GPS 17, which he was on before he canceled, also says circling to 27R is not allowed at night.
I resemble that remark.I recall hearing some many years ago that when a pilot says the "S" word it means he realized he screwed up while uttering the "F" word means something on the aircraft broke.
note that Circling at night is not authorized for 27R...
It's a regulatory violation that can result in a certificate action, and of course, is significant evidence of your fault for tort liability.Does that have any teeth or more of a warning? I’ve done the GPS 17 circle to land left downwind 27 at night more than once. Or I guess I should say I know a guy who has.
The owner of the plane is Med Jet LLC. I don't know what they do, but if it's air ambulance there is always the chance that a general sense of medical urgency made them want to save the 15 minutes.An extra 15 minutes of flying. I would like to think getting the instrument approach is what I would have done, but if you're tired and the boss man is going to yell about total time, I might have been tempted.
That's my impression. Turning to land on 27, they see the hill and panic. Who knows if they had any escape routes at that point. Maybe it was pull and hope not to stall, as opposed to guaranteed CFIT.From the ADS-B tracks it appears the turn from downwind to base pointed it right at that hill which was at or slightly above the jet’s current altitude. If it had continued its present turn radius it would have overshot the final and could have hit the hill. It crashed before the hill. So, I’m guessing the turn was tightened at the last few moments and there was an accelerated stall.
That's my impression. Turning to land on 27, they see the hill and panic. Who knows if they had any escape routes at that point. Maybe it was pull and hope not to stall, as opposed to guaranteed CFIT.