Briar Rabbit
Line Up and Wait
Friend of mine has a nice cropduster, turbo prop. He had fuel contamination in August and had to put it down. His choices were a Nebraska cornfield that had a 7 foot high crop with ears on the plants or a soybean field that was about 3 feet tall. He felt that the soybeans having more of a vine might wrap up on the conventional gear and flip him so he selected the taller cornfield. Prop was still spinning when he entered the crop canopy and hitting the ears on the plants absolutely destroyed his propellor, could not have done as much damage to it as a gear up landing on a paved runway. I was amazed it did so much damage, totally destroyed it.
Anyone have any personal experience setting down in a soybean field late in the summer? Which field would have been better? Obviously when you are in the middle of a 1 mile square field with 5 feet of elevation over the crop it limits your choices but if he could have made the adjacent soybeans I wonder if he would have had less damage, would they flip a heavy cropduster?
Anyone have any personal experience setting down in a soybean field late in the summer? Which field would have been better? Obviously when you are in the middle of a 1 mile square field with 5 feet of elevation over the crop it limits your choices but if he could have made the adjacent soybeans I wonder if he would have had less damage, would they flip a heavy cropduster?