- Joined
- Mar 2, 2005
- Messages
- 15,263
- Location
- Southeast Tennessee
- Display Name
Display name:
This page intentionally left blank
This is a big black eye for general aviation.
Because he wasn't on their frequency?That's why I was wondering why SEE would call 22g as traffic. SEE tells the helo to follow (a different) Cessna right base to final. I would have expected SEE to make a few calls to 22G asking intentions since 22g had entered SEE airspace.
Sent from my SM-G960U1 using Tapatalk
Pure speculation, but maybe he saw Gillespie coming out of the clouds and then realized that wasn't where he was going and became disoriented going in and out of the clouds.
Not my point. Usually when an aircraft enters a tower's delta the tower controller barks at them a few times - say intentions, etc. - even when the plane is not on frequency. There's none of that on the SEE ATC recording that I heard.Because he wasn't on their frequency?
If someone is displaying obvious signs they're losing control of their aircraft they certainly don't have the bandwidth to look for traffic.
At that point his intentions were avoiding the nearest planet and it wasn't going well.
He was on approach to MYF, not SEE. No doubt socal and MYF were coordinated. I suppose SoCal could have contacted SEE to expect a vectored broken approach from MYF. Who knows. That's why I need to go listen again. I just thought the SEE controller traffic call was odd.Tower would know he was up with Approach and what he was supposed to be doing because Tower and Approach can coordinate.
I fellow who owned the hangar next to the one I am renting had a stroke or heartache just before TO last week. Float plane, plane drifted for over an hour before it beached. RIP Gary and all the folks hurt in this accident.Stroke?
Just goes to show that a First Class Medical is no guarantee...I fellow who owned the hangar next to the one I am renting had a stroke or heartache just before TO last week. Float plane, plane drifted for over an hour before it beached. RIP Gary and all the folks hurt in this accident.
.. his track was laser straight the whole way.. makes me think he was messing with the AP and got behind. He was cavalier with his radio work until he lost the localizer, then things went south. You have to know when you're getting behind, fly level, ask ATC for help, the Socal folks are some of the nicest out there. Asking approach if he was cleared to land was a big clue that he's all out of sorts. What a disgraceThe audio was hideous. He missed a dozen chances from SoCal to right things and failed.
This is the right time for that "he was so far behind the airplane, he'd be late to the crash scene" anecdote to come true, but I suspect he's in the crater along with a few burnt C340A pieces and a brown ballcap.
Rotten airmanship that got innocent people killed. I don't generally like barking at CFIs in a pilot's past, but this time may warrant it. I'm gonna stop complaining about onerous insurance checkout requirements for a little bit too.
It happens, but waaaaaay less often than people hope.Medical issue??
My home base KEMT is a class-D airport near the LAX RWY24 downwind-to-base corner. Many times the large jets are vectored and skim on the top of class-D at 2500 feet, within 5 miles. The tower controller always calls out the traffic and issue a wake turbulence warning for the upwind RWY19 aircraft.I just thought the SEE controller traffic call was odd.
Ted - I'm sure all of that is possible but regarding #3, he has several ATC comms while incapable of climbing/following ATC instructions and he never mentions any issues or seems to have the kind of strain in his voice you would expect if he was fighting the airplane with all his strength. This to me suggests a cognitive vs. physical fight with the airplane where he is mentally struggling with the airplane (which could be reasons #1, 2 or 4 or something else entirely) but still able to handle comms without too much obvious strain.
This is going to sound mean, but how much actual is this guy likely to have experienced? Flying around in the Southwest, maybe not a lot. For all you know this was his first foray into actual IMC. It can be a real eye opener.
It is quite a small plane. Look at its dimensions, only six seats, under 6K gross. Small.I would edit the title if I could, I don't consider a Cessna 340 a small plane, but maybe some in the media do.
A note about San Diego today, the winds are unusually strong and gusty.
The one picture being posted shows a steam gauge panel, as well. To me, at least, a nice piece of glass displaying the horizon is better to reconcile attitude. Two or three makes it even better.He had about 900 hours in the plane in 2019 apparently, and flew it regularly. I would doubt it was his first time in actual IMC. However, supposedly it was a fairly thin layer. It is certainly possible that it had a disorienting effect on him that he hadn't dealt with before. A lot of times the smaller wispy clouds that leave a lot of VMC exposed can be more disorienting than pure hard IMC. It's happened to me - I remember one flight in the MU-2 at FL200 when I got the leans hard (and hadn't gotten them in years at all) because the way the clouds were right there made it look like I was banked over 90 degrees. Obviously I didn't crash the plane, I didn't even have any issues controlling it. But I did get the leans.
1) He'd not set up/slowed down properly far in advance (340s are significantly slicker than the 414/421 so this is sometimes an issue) which snowballed things
2) He had an autopilot or other instrument failure in IMC that he then had issues recovering from
3) An aircraft control surface mechanical issue
4) A medical issue
Good analysis, and hits close to home.
Just wild speculation, but I think it is a combo of the first three. Got behind the aircraft. Got confused by the CTL instruction, and put his head down and started pushing buttons which caused him to completely lose SA. Started fighting the autopilot and broke the airplane when he figured it out.
Isn't the west coast known for almost year-round coastal stratus in the mornings?One wonders how much actual you get between Yuma and San Diego even if he flew it weekly.
We don't get the same IFR conditions that places in the northeast might experience but there's a near daily layer.. tops typically 2K-3K with bases anywhere from 500 to 1,500One wonders how much actual you get between Yuma and San Diego even if he flew it weekly.
I used to commute into MYF in a Bonanza. You'd get a few windy/woolly days, and yesterday seemed like it was one of those -- but man the clouds were only a few thou thick as others mentioned, it's nowhere NEAR "hard IFR"
The only situation where a 340 can't climb when asked to over the span of **3-5 minutes** is heavy and ignored ice, and the doorbell cameras showed us it was a thin and broken layer.
I honestly hope this is found to be a medical issue so I can eat my angry words.
The Cessna 340 qualifies for BasicMed. While it's probably the largest plane that makes the cutoff, I think it's fair to call a plane that qualifies for BasicMed "small." Especially when reporting in the media, to an audience who already think that a regional jet is "small" and would really panic if they heard that a "medium" airplane had crashed into a neighborhood.It is quite a small plane. Look at its dimensions, only six seats, under 6K gross. Small.
First impression from the audio is that a likely scenario is that the AP might have been misconfigured, resulting in the aircraft not capturing the localizer. Regardless of the cause of the error in capturing the localizer, the ensuing control chaos is more difficult to understand. Did the pilot continue fighting with the unexpected response of the navigation box and/or autopilot? Did he disconnect the tech and hand-fly? And was the pilot current and competent enough to hand-fly the aircraft? Technically, it shouldn't have been too difficult to disconnect the AP and initiate a climb to a safe altitude as per ATC instructions, and sort out the issues once the immediate terrain conflicts are resolved. Medical incapacitation, or a physical control failure is possible, although less likely. Those latter issues might have been expected to manifest in some form earlier than the approach phase of the flight. But we will likely never know what happened.
Crashes like this always make me think: "What are the possible causes and what am I doing to mitigate those risks in my own flying?"
The original Cessna Nav-o-Matic autopilots were awesome in 1975. If that's what he had, it could have picked that day to have a pitch control or other problem
Isn't the west coast known for almost year-round coastal stratus in the mornings?
Because it’s nice to know what triggered the pilot error, so we don’t make the same error(s).I find it interesting that so many here are looking for the "reason", ie, bad AH, AP, pilot incapacitation or another item. Why do we always look for the excuse, and not just recognize the common root cause of 80% of the accidents are simply pilot error.