Dave Anderson
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2021
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SkyDreams
That's upsetting. If that can happen to him, what chance do I have? Is it all just luck?
That's upsetting. If that can happen to him, what chance do I have? Is it all just luck?
That's upsetting. If that can happen to him, what chance do I have? Is it all just luck?
"The Impossible Turn" kills a lot of pilots.
There are times and places where terrain doesn't give you many options. It'll be interesting to see what was ahead of them."The Impossible Turn" kills a lot of pilots.
It doesn't look like there were a ton of good options assuming 32 was the departure runway. A picture shows it in the trees with some pretty good terrain. Trees hurt. Terrain sucks. And a tight subdivision in all of that.I met him several times being a KHGR, was introduced to him by TR Proven really nice guy and very approachable. One of the best people at AOPA. Sad to see this was a turn-back to the airport.
He was right seat so the question may be “who decided to go for the turn”."The Impossible Turn" kills a lot of pilots.
Very sad. RIP. My prayers are with his family.Just saw this from AOPA Very sad
A pilot I worked with just a bit had an engine out at night and they hit pine trees… if they’re tall, the drop can kill you every bit as much as a stall spin can. It was pretty rough to see the pics of the aftermath. The seat I had sat in a year before was completely ripped into.I was driving up in that area today looking at the leaves. Truly a stunning day. I spoke to one of the bush pilots up there a decade or so ago and mentioned there wasn’t much in the way of options in case of something like this. He said if it happened to him he’d put it in pine trees.
It’s really hard to believe this happened to him of all people. Truly sad.
Very little new is ever learned from the NTSB reports. Short of some new mechanical failure the cause of accidents have been the same for decades. You may learn what happened in this particular crash by reading the report but it is unlikely you will learn anything new that hasn’t already happened to dozens of pilots before. Flying is risky. There is no way around that. You do what you can to minimize that risk but the risk is never zero.When your number’s up, it’s up. Let’s look at the factual data, prelim and factual reports to see if there’s anything to learn.
The cause of this accident hasn’t been determined and your fate is determined if you have an emergency?That's upsetting. If that can happen to him, what chance do I have? Is it all just luck?
And some airports there are zero outs for a se airplane.There are some airports where you absolutely need to GoogleEarth a plan before you take the runway and even with that, there ends up being few options. If I see the photo posted above, it looks like a ridge line 50 feet above the site.
Certainly luck plays into it. There's luck in having the engine quit within gliding range of a good field, there's luck in dodging a dust devil that hits you on takeoff, there's luck in having the field stay VFR long enough for you to land.That's upsetting. If that can happen to him, what chance do I have? Is it all just luck?
That's kind of my point. Mr Mcspadden lived and breathed that ethos. His soothing voice introduced the AOPA "there I was" podcast with essentially those words. If there was one person in the world that I didn't think would die in a turnback it was him.One thing I'd like to emphasize is to look at EVERY accident as something that could happen to you. Don't automatically dismiss them with, "Well, I'll never be THAT stupid." LOOK at the mistakes the pilot made, imagine what you might do to salvage the same situation.
This was a guy who’d been flying up there for 50 years, and that was his opinion. I’ve always remembered it.A pilot I worked with just a bit had an engine out at night and they hit pine trees… if they’re tall, the drop can kill you every bit as much as a stall spin can. It was pretty rough to see the pics of the aftermath. The seat I had sat in a year before was completely ripped into.
I'm not so sure this was an 'impossible turn'. More details to come, but it is sounding like they were up in the Cardinal to do a photo shoot with the AOPA Bonanza (N4GA)."The Impossible Turn" kills a lot of pilots.
Great information on Richard. Thank you. What high school was this?....Richard managed to get to fly a fighter jet to our 10th high school reunion...