Moose stall???
"A Moose! Let's get a closer look."
Low, slow and distracted.
It was a pipeline patrol airplane, with a young lady named Cinnamon on board starting a new job. She was from south of Indy. "Somebody" said they were seen landing at Marlin and it went wrong, but that's about as heresay as it gets. I knew her, she was so excited to be starting off with her wet Commercial ticket getting a new job and on her way in aviation. That was a bit of a jolt to read about her death 16 hours after I'd just interacted with her...as always, I feel for the family the most.
No, it was perfect weather. We were nearby soon enough afterwards to still hear the ELT going off, but we had been doing aerial photography in the Dallas area earlier.Wasn’t the weather bad? Seems like scud running may of become fatal??
Hopefully you don’t build many memories like that but if you stick around this business I’m sure it won’t be the last. Unfortunately.It was a pipeline patrol airplane, with a young lady named Cinnamon on board starting a new job. She was from south of Indy. "Somebody" said they were seen landing at Marlin and it went wrong, but that's about as heresay as it gets. I knew her, she was so excited to be starting off with her wet Commercial ticket getting a new job and on her way in aviation. That was a bit of a jolt to read about her death 16 hours after I'd just interacted with her...as always, I feel for the family the most.
Moose stall???
Hopefully you don’t build many memories like that but if you stick around this business I’m sure it won’t be the last. Unfortunately.
I know.@FlightofTwo is one of the most badass/experienced pilots on this board
is one of the most badass/experienced pilots on this board
Hopefully you don’t build many memories like that but if you stick around this business I’m sure it won’t be the last. Unfortunately.
Hopefully you don’t build many memories like that but if you stick around this business I’m sure it won’t be the last. Unfortunately.
Gosh, I don't know about that, but thanks...@FlightofTwo is one of the most badass/experienced pilots on this board
I know.
Relevance? How does anyones experience change what I said.
Sadly a lot of truth here. Some will be folks no one ever expected to get in a situation similar to this one.
I just hope it was not a ''Look at what this plane can do'' type accident.
Moose are notoriously bad pilots. They especially suck at ground reference maneuvers.Moose stall???
I don't know who else was in the plane or what their roles were on that flight, but Cinna wasn't a show-off kind of pilot. She was always very conscientious, still young enough as a pilot to be eager to learn, eager to get started in her professional flying career, not eager to be a yahoo, or to think she was bulletproof, yet...
"If you laugh, you think, and you cry, that's a full day. That's a heck of a day. You do that seven days a week, you're going to have something special." -- James "Jimmy V" Valvano
NTSB hasn't determined what happened, they haven't even said who was flying yet, but our aviation version of Alex Jones, the one and only Dan Gryder has solved the case. She stalled and spun it in on a go-around or a touch-n-go. It was certainly her piloting the plane and her lack of experience that caused this. Dan has spoken... so let it be written, so let it be done. Case closed.
Yep.I've never watched any of his videos based on info posted around here ... isn't he the same guy that crashed a 152 into a corn field?
Nope. It’s a distracted turning stall at low altitude. As you see a moose and do a tight turn to keep it in view at low airspeed.Usually a Trim Stall on a Go around. After the Moose walked across the runway as you were about the land.
Brian
He has been correct quite a few times, we're all pretty good at guessing in this type of accident. It's just the way he states as a fact who was flying and what they did wrong.DG could be correct. I can see the probability for a stalled aircraft with nose trimmed up to land, an aircraft with heavier controls and more power than the small framed pilot is used to. Maybe even a rapid change of flap configuration from full to zero.
I’m not sure why they even chose to land in Marlin. There are no services, no restroom, and the lake clientele is quite sketchy. I’ve had a few picnics there and wished I was packing heat.
The 182 can be a handful on the go due to trimming so much to land. Stationair has to be even more work I’d imagine.DG could be correct. I can see the probability for a stalled aircraft with nose trimmed up to land, an aircraft with heavier controls and more power than the small framed pilot is used to. Maybe even a rapid change of flap configuration from full to zero.
I’m not sure why they even chose to land in Marlin. There are no services, no restroom, and the lake clientele is quite sketchy. I’ve had a few picnics there and wished I was packing heat.
Yep.
(Removing the rest of my comment. I don't want this thread to get locked since I'm sure there will be further updates when an actual cause is determined.)
I'm torn on DG. The Shamblin stuff was just bazaar and I'm not sure why he went so deep in the paint on that one and some of his stuff is just rude. But tbh I don't mind channels like blancolirio and DG, there's so much speculation out there and often times the NTSB's findings take years, and the probable cause is something akin to "pilot's failure to fly the airplane" without any real deep diveIt's just the way he states as a fact who was flying and what they did wrong.