brien23
Cleared for Takeoff
A little low car hits plane of plane hits car.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IRiR3cF-cM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IRiR3cF-cM
I cant believe this is back in popularity. With the displaced threshold where it was that aircraft should have been well over 50 feet in the air still.
There is a thread about this. It was started when this happened a few years ago.
Now that a few years have gone by, I would like to know what happened here. I believe the auto was at fault and their insurance should have paid up. But how many policies cover hitting an airplane? The cost of fixing this compared to a car is enormous. Imagine telling someone you hit an airplane in your car. It sounds like some of the stories I have told. Unbelievable. But believe it for it did happen.
FAA faulted the pilot, the driver of the car, and the airport layout. Plenty of blame to go around on this one.
http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2012/11/dramatic-footage-shows-plane-hitting.html
FAA faulted the pilot, the driver of the car, and the airport layout. Plenty of blame to go around on this one.
http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2012/11/dramatic-footage-shows-plane-hitting.html
Thanks for the update.
In my eye's if they have this layout and they do, Its up to the auto traffic to not impede the flow of traffic in a landing pattern. It would be like approaching a 4 way intersection with a two way stop. No different. How I would have argued this. The auto ran the stop sign. Simple. In my eye's. But nothing is simple when government is involved. I still see it as the auto is at fault. Blame who you want. It was a 4 way intersection with a two way stop.
You should read the report. There was no stop sign. The NTSB said the layout and the car not stopping were contributing factors, but the student pilot was the primary cause. I do think there should be a lot more safety margin for training, and maybe that's the CFI's responsibility and not the airport. Hard to tell with a long lens, but it does look like the student was low. Maybe he was trying to land exactly on the numbers. Maybe that's what he was taught to do. If so, that's probably not a good idea there.Thanks for the update.
In my eye's if they have this layout and they do, Its up to the auto traffic to not impede the flow of traffic in a landing pattern. It would be like approaching a 4 way intersection with a two way stop. No different. How I would have argued this. The auto ran the stop sign. Simple. In my eye's. But nothing is simple when government is involved. I still see it as the auto is at fault. Blame who you want. It was a 4 way intersection with a two way stop.
But how many policies cover hitting an airplane?
You should read the report. There was no stop sign.
Pretty much all of them. But the limits might not be enough.
My point. My coverage will cover hitting a Lambo but my limits may not be enough. Why I said the cost to repair an airplane would be the factor. Not that the plan did not cover this. Just not enough of a plan for hitting a airplane.
A little low car hits plane of plane hits car.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IRiR3cF-cM
Sounds like we are in agreement. In my line of work though, when someone asks if something is "covered," the question is whether the policy will pay for that loss at all. We would frame the issue you were apparently asking as whether the loss would be in excess of the policy. So, that's why I misunderstood your question.
I've seen several airports that have signs on nearby roads "watch for low flying planes". Maybe they should have had one here.
I've seen several airports that have signs on nearby roads "watch for low flying planes". Maybe they should have had one here.
I tend to agree with you. Great analogy with the two way stop. The plane should have right of way over the car. The pilot still could have landed a little long and avoided any potential conflict considering the 3500' runway length. Fortunate that no one was seriously hurt.
The plane has the right of way in aviation, of course, because it is the less maneuverable vehicle.
The plane has the right of way in aviation, of course, because it is the less maneuverable vehicle. However, the person driving is likely not familiar with such rules. The pilot should have been looking for obstacles on the runway; deer/cows/birds meandering onto the runway are often reasons for balked landings, this should be no different.
The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident to be: The student pilot's failure to maintain clearance from obstacles on the runway approach path. . . .
. . .
The roadway was marked with a faded "Stop" indication painted on the pavement at each side of the runway. However, there were no signs requiring drivers to stop or advising them of low flying aircraft.
. . .
The displaced threshold for the landing runway was located about 140 feet from the approach end of the runway. The roadway that crossed the extended runway centerline was located about 25 feet from the approach end of the runway pavement, about 165 feet from the displaced threshold.
I don't know where you come up with that. There's no such principle in air regulations. The category preference for right of way only enters into certain converging situations. While the rules have their history in the nautical law (as with much of aviation), they are SUBSTANTIALLY different.
Further, nothing in the rules says anything about airplanes vs. ground vehicles.
The NTSB squarely put the blame on the pilot.
I don't buy your argument anyhow. The aircraft is way more maneuverable than a car in my opinion. It's not constrained to a roadway or even the ground.
Would you like to retract your statement?14 CFR 91.113:
If the converging aircraft are of different categories, the least maneuverable aircraft has right-of-way (e.g., balloon has right-of-way over any other category).
No I do not. Your included snippet is INCORRECT. It is not nor has it ever been in 91.113. 91.113 doesn't say SQUAT about maneuverability. It mentions certain category preferences in certain situation.Would you like to retract your statement?
No I do not. First off, your snippet doesn't contradict what I said. The category preference only appears in a certain case of convergence as your alleged quote says.
Furthermore, your included snippet is INCORRECT. It is not nor has it ever been in 91.113. 91.113 doesn't say SQUAT about maneuverability. It mentions certain category preferences in certain situation.
I dont think there is a rule in the driving laws that states yeid to flying aircraft. If that stop sign is on private roadway then it doesn't really mean anything. Like a stop sign in a parking lot.
I think that's a little presumptuous... STOP or any other warning sign is there for a reason... Someone for some reason posted a warning, in good faith, for either pedestrian or traffic safety... whether on private property or not, a prudent "intelligent" person would take advantage of the warning!
Absolutely. They're clearly wrong. The regs don't say that and only talks about preference for gliders, balloons, and airships. One an argue maneuverability but I can tell you that an airship is in fact MORE maneuverable than many things it is given preference over. An airship can spin around on a dime. I can't do that with my airplane.It's paraphrased. Are you going to say the FAA is incorrect about paraphrasing their own regulations?
And were these two vehicles not converging?