Pnwannabe2
Pre-Flight
You can always go around...
Survival may have been attributable to the soft field.Nothing about that is attributable to soft field.
Take a dead blow hammer and bend the prop back straight and it's ready to fly again.Hmmmm.... He will have to get that engine checked since the prop hit the ground....
"Controlled" is more charitable than I would be.What the heck was that? Looks more like a controlled crash landing than anything else.
That's what I was thinking too - but I didn't see any sudden increase in descent rate. He just didn't have the plane under control and failed to flare on top of it. That should have been a no-brainer for an automatic go-around. Very strange.Hard to know what happened...
Back side of the power curve with no energy left to stop the descent?
Sudden downdraft or wind shear right at the end of the approach?
I like the guy in the red hat that starts running for the plane but makes sure to get a selfie first.
That's what I saw. But we have to be wrong, right?
You can see the flash
It's not a selfie, he lifts the flag line up and then points at something in the other direction. The flash looks to be the strobe on the wing. I wouldn't put it past someone to take a selfie during something like this though.You can see the flash
According to ASN:
"The aircraft experienced a loss of adequate pilot skills during a cross-controlled landing attempt at Mc Kinnon Airpark (OG29), Sandy, Oregon. The airplane sustained substantial damage and two of the four occupants onboard received minor injuries. Two of the occupants onboard the aircraft were not injured."
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=196834
If there is little or no wind, why would one be attempting a cross-controlled landing?
Might've set up the approach too high and he was slipping to get down.If there is little or no wind, why would one be attempting a cross-controlled landing?
Likely.Forward slip gone bad?
That's what it looks like to me...psyched out by the obstacles and misjudged the slip.Forward slip gone bad?
umm, slipping it down on final is one way to lose altitude without gaining airspeed.If there is little or no wind, why would one be attempting a cross-controlled landing?