Morning typing. Yikes. I’m surprised I made coffee this am instead of teaThere are no TBDs above the surface of the ocean.
It was a TBM and not the torpedo bomber kind.
Morning typing. Yikes. I’m surprised I made coffee this am instead of tea
Kinda crazy. Not having issues until they had issues. Seems like the plane flew regularly.Seemed to go bad pretty quickly with no indication from the pilot.
https://nypost.com/2020/10/03/radio-transmissions-reveal-moments-before-steve-barnes-plane-crashed/
I was thinking that. So on the radar thing that VAS aviation does. I noticed the label for plane had red radio failure tag- is that generated by ATC labeling them as having trouble or is that come from the plane via squak code for com failure. Or both???Did anyone else have trouble understanding buffalo approach? Had absolutely nothing to do with this just my first observation listening to it. What's weird is to be have a problem then come back on radio and say you're fine. Then gone again.
Can’t help but think Hypoxia. He thought everything was fine but wasn’t. I hate speculating but it’s just so odd to have that communication above 10K and then everything just goes to hell after that.
...
I would imagine, in a free-turbine engine, that it would quickly drop. But so would the plane, and he didn't indicate that the airplane had no power.If the engine quits at FL280, what happens to the pressurization?
At the risk of the ‘Monday Morning QB’ label, I’ve had a thought over the years. This was a relatively short flight, <2 hours, close to 1.5. There is the trade off as one ventures to the higher level ‘O2 required’ levels, with the time of useful consciousness, less. I realize things can happen in any phase of flight, mostly referencing the casual flyer with a pressurized or even a portable O2 system. I’m not advocating flying the 737 at 12,000’.
Basically, doing the risk/reward comparison from the mid to upper teens to the upper 20’s with a flight. Another is that Cirrus flight at FL 250 out of Gaylord, MI, years ago. He may of been drawn by a great tailwind.
One can still have hypoxia issues at 17k, but the edges are much softer. I don’t know the warning systems provided on this plane, or the procedures & methods to monitor during the flight. Of course to early to know for sure the cause of this accident.
I acknowledge higher terrain out West, one can also fly a bit longer to go around much of it.
What, no jokes about ambulance chasers? My faith in the PoA crowd is starting to fade...
I was 40 miles south en route to Boston about an hour before the accident and encountered rapid clear ice accumulation between 7 and 11,000 feet. Being behind the aircraft + an icing encounter (and potentially forgetting the de-ice) was the first thing that came to mind reading the analysis.
Do you know what the update was?
It was released to the public yesterday.Do you know what the update was?
Oh. Just that it was released. Is there a probable cause yet?It was released to the public yesterday.
Nauga,
clicked
Thanks. Yeah, I guess that would have been a better clarifier.It was released to the public yesterday.
Nauga,
clicked
Hey. While I got ya here. Can you go to that Southwest stew broke her back thread and answer my question.Thanks. Yeah, I guess that would have been a better clarifier.
Hey. While I got ya here. Can you go to that Southwest stew broke her back thread and answer my question.
Your wish is my command!Hey. While I got ya here. Can you go to that Southwest stew broke her back thread and answer my question.
Thanks. It was a farther down post I was wondering about though. Larry in Tennessee answered it.Your wish is my command!
Ah, no worries. It was right there on the landing page for the docket if anyone had bothered to lookThanks. Yeah, I guess that would have been a better clarifier.
“Owing to extensive abdominal trauma in aviation disasters (e.g. rupture of the viscera), interpretation of BAC in autopsy specimens from the pilot and crew is highly contentious and great care is needed to reach valid conclusions.”Probably not relevant but interesting - Toxicology report showed he had alcohol in his blood (although a small amount 22mg/dL) which I believe is 0.02 BAC. Since the accident occurred close to noon he was either hammered the night before or drank alcohol that morning right? Again, not saying this had anything to do with the accident just pointing it out.
As someone above posted, everything was good until it wasn't. The aircraft was found in a 15' deep crater and highly fragmented.
From the radar plot analysis contained in the docket:
The airplane appears to be cruising normally at 28,000 ft. and about 190 KCAS until about 11:41:17, when the pitch slowly decreases, over about 30 seconds, to about -10°, and the rate of descent increases to between 4,000 and 5,000 feet/minute. The airplane starts to pitch down and descend about 15 seconds after the pilot acknowledges an ATC instruction to descend and maintain 8,000 ft., and so this initial descent is likely intentional. The airplane stays on track during this descent until about 11:43:31, at which time the altitude has decreased to about 19,300 ft., and the airspeed has increased to about 270 KCAS (the maximum operating speed, per the Pilot’s Operating Handbook (Reference 2)).
At this point, the airplane rolls right suddenly to about 35°, and the pitch angle starts steadily decreasing to about -47° while the roll angle also increases to almost 90°. The airspeed and rate of descent increase accordingly, with the airspeed reaching 350 KCAS and the rate of descent peaking at 28,400 ft./min. at 11:44:13 before decreasing to 6,800 ft./min. at the end of the data. These motions describe a spiral dive; the computed normal load factor increases to about 3.8 G’s at 11:44:17, though the calculations become somewhat unreliable at this point because of the very dynamic situation and the sparse radar points available to define the path of the airplane in the dive. But it seems clear that the load factor is increasing to high levels while the airspeed is increasing far above the maximum operating speed, a combination that can overstress the airplane.
Its only the factual report when the docket is released. The probable cause will be issued with the final report.They didn't put a probable cause on this one