Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
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- Feb 23, 2005
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Tom-D
it operates in part 91 down here, he was departing, no minimums here for departure.Apparently going missed wasn't a good idea?
He was taking off.Apparently going missed wasn't a good idea?
Yes he was departing in 1/4 mile vis with freezing rain and snow. stalled upon rotation then hit hard on the nose and slide down the runway to a stop pilot had minor injuries. could have been much worse.He was taking off.
Freezing rain at the surface is not conducive to a safe departure.
it operates in part 91 down here, he was departing, no minimums here for departure.
It was snowing with a 1/4 mile vis. premise is, it iced up at the hold short. then stalled at rotation.
Freezing rain at the surface is not conducive to a safe departure.
Same here. Definitely outside my risk acceptance threshold.Freezing rain is one weather condition that will stop me before I open the hangar door.
it operates in part 91 down here, he was departing, no minimums here for departure.
It was snowing with a 1/4 mile vis. premise is, it iced up at the hold short. then stalled at rotation.
Unfortunately it hasn't stopped everyone.Freezing rain will shut everyone down. (At least it should)
Freezing rain will shut everyone down. (At least it should)
From the guy (pilot) of the A/C that was right behind him In the hold short. Watched it all happen from a front seat view.We're are you getting these facts from?
Didn't this just happen, so no NTSB, so unless you personally saw all this happen and knew how the plane was being flown, or there is a statement to the above from the pilot, I'm not sure where you got the details from.
Hey James, why don't you ask Tom in a friendlier manner instead of implying he's full of shet.
From the guy (pilot) of the A/C that was right behind him In the hold short. Watched it all happen from a front seat view.
James, ask your self how would a privately owned Canadian aircraft operate in the US?You've been quite sensitive lately, I didn't really anything mean, just asked where he got those facts from, being mean would have been to say he's full of shet, which I didn't do. Just wanted to know how he knew what flight rules the plane was operating under, how it was "iced up" at the hold short line, etc.
I wouldn't spread that around, it's not something you actually saw, or from the mouth of the guy who advanced the throttles, nor the findings of any respectable investigation.
The NTSB was on scene less than 30 minutes talked to the pilot. that tells us some thing..I wouldn't spread that around, it's not something you actually saw, or from the mouth of the guy who advanced the throttles, nor the findings of any respectable investigation.
If he doesn't I doSee what I mean James?
If he doesn't I do
It's just James with his attitude showing.
Someone piled up a nice plane, overall had a pretty crappy day, and here comes the speculation crowd, "oh well I heard", there but for the grace of god go I, I know y'all probably wouldnt want people spouting off left and right things they heard second hand if you were in that poor guys shoes.
Doesn't change what you wrote about Tom though does it.
let it go.I didn't WRITE anything ABOUT Tom, I ASKED where he got those facts from.
Waiting to make a back taxi on 16 to the rampwhat the heck was someone doing at the hold short line? Practicing their low-vis taxiing technique with no intention of taking off into that weather?
OBTW boy's and girls, my bad, it was a TBM 700 if that makes a difference ?
I am not certain but I believe the TBM is approved for flight in known icing. Was the anti-icing working on the plane? Was it turned on?
Oh Well, so what's the difference?The TBM900 is still on the TBM700 type certificate. They are all TBM700s.
Oh Well, so what's the difference?