Other reports on the PurpleBoard.
Father, two daughters 19 and 20, and one of the boyfriends.
Return to colllege, possible scud running, VFR pilot with 1200ft OVC, icing in the clouds.
This particular flying club is reported to have had 3 accidents in the last 4 yrs.
I was in lake zurich / mundeline today (10 to 15 miles away). I don't see why a local vfr pilot would have gone up. Clouds have been very low and visibility poor (rain or fog all day).
Very sad......
Parachute was deployed. Interesting it hit nose down, hard.
The Cirrus probably reacts negatively to ice faster than any plane I have ever flown. I dont know if this SR-20 had the TKS or not, but fully loaded and with less power than a SR-22 this could have gotten chute worthy in a hurry.
An SR22 turbo with FIKI TKS is on my list of aircraft that I wouldn't want to take into icing conditions, period.
I was in lake zurich / mundeline today (10 to 15 miles away). I don't see why a local vfr pilot would have gone up. Clouds have been very low and visibility poor (rain or fog all day).
http://www.aopa.org/asf/psa/178seconds.html
I don't understand the mindset of those who will do vfr into imc.
I've got about 300 hours in this aircraft in icing conditions
I'm just the opposite. I've got about 300 hours in this aircraft in icing conditions and it works extremely well. In fact, so well, I think some owners think they can fly in icing conditions for longer than they should.
Why?
I don't know much about them, I'm just asking.
But I am curious what makes you believe that the aircraft was in the clouds at or above the freezing level?
Why?
I don't know much about them, I'm just asking.
I can point you to plenty of other miracle pilots. It works quite well.
I can point you to plenty of other miracle pilots. It works quite well until it breaks.
300 hours in icing conditions and all in a Cirrus?
Sure, if the pilot fails to use the system properly, that's bad...true of any aircraft with an IPS, not just a Cirrus. If used properly, it works great and keeps the wing very clean on the leading edges and well behind those protected surfaces.
Who dictates the "Cirrus" mentality? All of the Cirrus owners that I've come to know don't have that mentality. In fact, it is just the opposite. If you run into a Cirrus pilot that has this mentality, please send them to http://cirruspilots.org to join.
Icing accidents in the Cirrus are similar in frequency to most other aircraft given the size of the fleet and hours flown.
There are pilots that fly a Cirrus and I teach them - has nothing to do with philosophy. It happens to have a TKS system and I'm comfortable with that. I am well aware of the advantages and disadvantages of the system. Part of the challenge is teaching a pilot to have an out when the system fails. I have no experience with failures in this aircraft because it has worked like a champ every single time. We've grounded an airplane once or twice because the preflight system checks failed, but that's about it.
I agree, which is why I choose the aircraft I fly carefully.When it fails...we use our planned out which is a constant discussion and changes as the environment changes around us. If that out isn't available, we look at plan B and we ultimately will use the other safety tool (the BRS) when all else fails or there's no time to react. Failures happen, but you shouldn't have to die when it does.
Someone has to teach and get pilots educated before they kill themselves.
And it won't be too long before somebody on this forum wonders why the population at large thinks we're all idiots and that flying in a small plane is a death wish. Doh, here's one more reason.
Maybe instead of telling new PPL's they now have "a license to learn" we should instead tell them "now it's legal to go do something stupid and kill yourself and most of your family, since that's what you'll probably do anyway."
Cause of crash that killed 4 a mystery
Experienced pilot had logged more than 100 hours in plane
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-crystal-lake-plane-crash-20111128,0,2259345.story
So if I read correctly, this means you don't have experience with icing up the plane. You have experience with everything working properly.
The reason why I don't want to take a Cirrus into icing has nothing to do with how well the TKS works, it has to do with what happens when it doesn't work. Bruce's Seneca, Dave's P-Baron, my Aztec, the 310, the Navajo,you don't want to fly into ice without being appropriately equipped, but handle it a lot better when the system fails.
I agree, which is why I choose the aircraft I fly carefully.
That's exactly my goal with my instruction.
100 hours! The guy was practically Waldo Pepper.
Ray Harris had been flying for several years and in the last two years had logged more than 100 hours piloting the Cirrus-SR20, said Ronnie Carmin, the secretary-treasurer of the Marion Pilots Club, a group of 10 pilots who together own the plane.
Read the article:
My speculation is that this is a typical VFR into IMC, which is too bad. If you're flying an SR-20 50+ hours a year you should get the IR or at least figure out how to work the A/P.
Sure, if the pilot fails to use the system properly, that's bad...true of any aircraft with an IPS, not just a Cirrus. If used properly, it works great and keeps the wing very clean on the leading edges and well behind those protected surfaces.
Who dictates the "Cirrus" mentality? All of the Cirrus owners that I've come to know don't have that mentality. In fact, it is just the opposite. If you run into a Cirrus pilot that has this mentality, please send them to http://cirruspilots.org to join.
Icing accidents in the Cirrus are similar in frequency to most other aircraft given the size of the fleet and hours flown.
I have seen the "cirrus mentality" as well.
Its the "if i get into trouble i will pull the chute" mentality.
Its also the idea that they are a superior pilot because they have a shiny plane. They walk into the FBO like the just landed a G5.
Its also the idea that they are a superior pilot because they have a shiny plane. They walk into the FBO like the just landed a G5.