SixPapaCharlie
May the force be with you
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2013
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Display name:
Sixer
Checked the dfw board and there is more info there
"6 failed approaches into hqz."
Wow:
http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N555SF/history/20141218/2130Z/KELD/KHQZ
If you Google the tail number, he had a world-class panel, Garmin G600. Listening now to the audio archives.
http://archive-server.liveatc.net/kdal/KDAL-App-Dep-North-Dec-18-2014-2300Z.mp3
Listening, it is apparent that the pilot was having some situational awareness problems. Very chilling.
Just looking at the FA track made that obvious.
Folks, if the 2nd approach attempt didn't work, it really is time to go somewhere else. There are way to many 3rd+ attempts that end up looking like this.
Dang this link at 17:30 the controller really lays is out for him
http://archive-server.liveatc.net/kdal/KDAL-App-Dep-North-Dec-18-2014-2330Z.mp3
15:32 "climb and maintain 2000"
15:40 "climb up to 2000"
16:01 "Low alt. alert"
16:26 "Radar contact lost"
I am aware I am doing that thing where you make assumptions without having the full story and I deserve a bit of backlash for doing that but something doesn't seem right.
get-theritis is insidious, you tell yourself it's okay and believe it
dual 430w, G500, GPSS w/KFC 200 - unless something was broken the aircraft could have flown the approach with the pilot just trimming the nose down (and pulling the throttle) to fly the vertical guidance
"something" was really wrong
I haven't listened to the recordings yet, but is it possible it was suicide? Pilot decides to go fly a bunch of approaches and then calls it quits....literally? It has happened before.
how could it be possible that after that flight he has 8 hours of fuel on board??? Something is definitely very wrong...
And I agree with those avionics (provided he knew what to do with them and they were working right, which one can assume they are based on his comms with ATC) there's no reason why this guy should have had to fly all over creation to get down safely...esp with 2200' decks...
Plane looks registered to Charles Jinks and making the assumption that he's the one flying the plane... Appears to definitely have the chops to handle the situation here:
Date of Issue: 4/8/2010
Certificate: COMMERCIAL PILOT
Ratings:
COMMERCIAL PILOT
AIRPLANE SINGLE ENGINE LAND
INSTRUMENT AIRPLANE
PRIVATE PRIVILEGES
AIRPLANE MULTIENGINE LAND
Limits:
ENGLISH PROFICIENT.
Resignation
Everyone has a limit, and at some point, each of us will recognize that we have reached it and resign ourselves to the consequences. We say, "There's nothing more I can do," or "I can't do that." This resignation becomes hazardous when a pilot gives up when faced with difficult situations. Those with a hazardous resignation attitude believe that they have little control over their own destiny-that fate or bad luck is the cause of their misfortune.
Someone is going to come on here and chew everyone's butt for Mondaymorning quarter[]backing[.] [M]ark my words.
But[,] this makes me think a bit about some older folks with high blood pressure where stress could be a issue. Flying a bunch of approaches missed, trying to get home would put a lot of stress on a person. Not saying that's what happened, but something for others to think about.
None the less, this is an important reminder to me that if after making a 2nd missed approach at my primary destination, it's time to determine a better alternative and start working a plan with the controllers.
I am a very low time pilot, so I may be way off here. Why not fly it to the runway? After 5 misses, the avionics in the airplane could take you to the threshold. Could it not? Your chances are better than zero even if you break out at 100 feet. I am not speaking as knowing, I am asking, in an extreme situation, wouldn't you just fly it in?
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His best option was to do what ATC asked and fly to Denton where it was broken at 2200.
I haven't listened to the recordings yet, but is it possible it was suicide? Pilot decides to go fly a bunch of approaches and then calls it quits....literally? It has happened before.
I am a very low time pilot, so I may be way off here. Why not fly it to the runway? After 5 misses, the avionics in the airplane could take you to the threshold. Could it not? Your chances are better than zero even if you break out at 100 feet. I am not speaking as knowing, I am asking, in an extreme situation, wouldn't you just fly it in?
Any chance it was Ice? What were the temps aloft?