He was running on the beach, the plane is at idle behind him, there are wave noises and possibly the runner had earphones on. I could see it happening. We just had a women run over by a train. She did not hear it coming either according to the women that did survive and was walking right next to her.A guy doesn't notice an airplane headed right at him?
the train was high speed coming up behind two women who were talking and not paying attention. I used to the take the train to work and standing at the station I could watch a train approach and not hear it until it was right upon me. I completely can believe it, I have experienced it.I can see not hearing a plane on the beach a lot easier thanmissing a train near the tracks.
the train was high speed coming up behind two women who were talking and not paying attention. I used to the take the train to work and standing at the station I could watch a train approach and not hear it until it was right upon me. I completely can believe it, I have experienced it.
The plane experienced engine trouble over the water about an hour and a half after leaving Orlando Executive Airport in Florida, bound for Norfolk, Va. The aircraft was flying at about 13,000 feet when air traffic controllers told the pilot to land at Hilton Head Airport.
But before the male pilot and his male passenger reached the island, oil began to leak onto the windshield, blocking their vision, said Joheida Fister, Fire and Rescue Division spokeswoman.
Then, the plane's propeller came off. The men decided to make an emergency landing on the beach, she said.
This thought is always going through my mind when I'm flying along the shoreline, that if the engine quits, do I aim for the beach, or the water just off the beach?I have to wonder if the pilot had put the plane in the water a hundred yards off the beach...
Yeah, but it's turbo-charged. To the uninitiated, turbocharged sounds line turbine powered sounds like turbojet sounds line turbine, and they're all the same.Unusual, feel sorry for the guy on the beach. Glad the pilot and passenger survived.
Looking up the registration, it says it's had its airworthiness certificate since January 2009 and it has a TSIO-550 in it, so it's not turbine-powered. Funny that the media found the Lancair website but not the N-number registry.
Not to nitpick or cast stones, but I wonder if he tried to (fwd) slip it, or if that would've helped... injuring folks on the beach aside, I'd just be trying very hard to see what was in front of me.
With less than 100 SF of wing, I imagine they already had a pretty impressive rate of descent, so slipping probably wasn't on the pilot's mind.
Trapper John
05:58PM 32.08 -80.69 15° North 222 255 0.38 12,400 -1,980Jacksonville Center
05:59PM 32.14 -80.67 333° Northwest 222 255 0.38 9,300 -3,300Jacksonville Center
06:00PM 32.19 -80.70 193° South 174 200 0.30 5,900 -3,360Jacksonville Center
06:01PM 32.16 -80.71 257° West 61 70 0.10 2,600 -2,340Jacksonville Center
06:02PM 32.15 -80.74 200° South 67 77 0.11 1,300 -840Jacksonville Center
Yeah, but it's turbo-charged. To the uninitiated, turbocharged sounds line turbine powered sounds like turbojet sounds line turbine, and they're all the same.
With less than 100 SF of wing, I imagine they already had a pretty impressive rate of descent, so slipping probably wasn't on the pilot's mind.
While I have never flown a IV-P, I have spoken with one of the guys who does the Lancair approved training for them. According to him, he's seen bricks with better glide ratios.
Interestingly, the Lancair 320 I flew in actually seemed to do pretty well for glide, but I could be remembering incorrectly.
I would expect the ratio to be pretty good since it is a reasonably clean airplane. But the rate of descent might be a touch on the high side - at least compared to what some of us are used to.
From what the instructor I talked to said, both were bad.
As I said, never flew one. Would like to.
While I have never flown a IV-P, I have spoken with one of the guys who does the Lancair approved training for them. According to him, he's seen bricks with better glide ratios.
Interestingly, the Lancair 320 I flew in actually seemed to do pretty well for glide, but I could be remembering incorrectly.
Is that the one you flew at the FlyBQ?
Ed Smith and his wife spent years putting that plane together. He's a former AF guy. I visited him at Hampton Rhodes a few years ago while he was doing fiberglass work. He is a real craftsman.
Tragic.
Glad he's O.K.
Best,
Dave
Even with oil smeared on the windshield, Schiavo, the former NTSB official, said Smith should have been able to see through a small window on the side of the plane and possibly yell out to anyone below. Still, there may have been little time to try to avoid hitting the jogger, she said.
She said Smith made the right choice in landing on the beach rather than the water. The aircraft likely wasn't carrying flotation equipment.
"Planes like this sink like a rock," she said.
Seriously?
Seriously?
Yes, it's silly. Even without the iPod, I'd imagine the surf and maybe even the wind would overpower the sound of a plane arriving with the engine shut down.Make note to add to emergency POH checklist:
When engine out due to lost prop and oil on the windscreen. Shortly before beach touchdown: OPEN SMALL PILOT SIDE WINDOW AND YELL WARNING TO POSSIBLE PEDESTRIANS WITH I-POD!!!!
Best,
DAve
This thought is always going through my mind when I'm flying along the shoreline, that if the engine quits, do I aim for the beach, or the water just off the beach?
-harry
Dan: Do you have a source for that statement? I'd like to send it to someone, but not without the cite.
Thanks,
Dave