...I am not a writer or editor. I am a pilot. I am a retired Captain that has had a wonderful career with thousands of hours flown. I see many issues facing aviation and our new pilots that are not even being addressed. Just having you read the articles and posts to see my errors is okay. Hopefully, the issues that are raised starts conversations and awareness so we can fix things. Thanks for putting up with me! God Bless!
I can't speak for everyone, but when I see someone airing their grievances online on a public forum to people they don't know, it causes me to pause and say, "here we go again". I'm probably not alone in this. And, after reading some of this story it doesn't build a foundation of credibility. The "I see many issues facing aviation" is a statement we can all make, but when it's tied to a personal experience or grievance, it can become all encompassing.
I recall this accident and revisited it since you brought it up. There are several red flags that stand out. Maybe not to you, but to me.
1) Why would a King Air PIC think it is beneficial to allow
a student pilot with less than 5 hours under their belt to log flight time and landings in a King Air, and think it was even permissible to log it as PIC? As best as I can tell, it appears you wrote it in the log book, though you didn't sign it as an instructor like you did the other training flights.
2) Regarding the multiple check ride failures of the accident pilot you state, "This was more to do with how the FAA was manipulating check rides". That's a big claim. And, if your students were accumulating a higher degree of failures than what might be considered the norm, why didn't you find another DPE if you believed the DPE in question wasn't doing their job correctly?
3) You have discounted the witness comments about the aggressive nature of the accident pilots maneuvers, as if it didn't happen. These were skydivers. Thrill seekers. If they, and others, stated he was flying aggressively at times, why discount those observations?
4) When describing the takeoff sequence, you acknowledge the CG was close to AFT. Don't you think it would have been prudent for the pilot to use an initial climb speed that provides additional margins above blue line, rather than simply published Vx or Vy? Why not, for at least the first 60 seconds, use a more conservative climb angle and speed in case their was an engine failure after liftoff? If the answer is, "because it's skydiving and they need to get to jump altitude quickly", please don't say that.
5) You claim the left engine failed. You say that it makes sense because of the condition of the left engine's blade damage compared to the right engine. But, as I've seen so far, that is the only claim you have; that by appearance of the blades, the left engine failed and a VMC roll occurred. Have you totally ruled out that an aggressive pitch at a slow speed with an aft CG in an airplane that was a history of mechanic issues with its wings or stabs and trim issues isn't capable of rolling over in an accelerated stall?
6) The report shows the findings on the engine instrument readings for the left engine. The impact marks.
They show that both engines were producing power. There was only one of the instruments, fuel flow for the right engine, that they couldn't get a reading from. How do you explain this in your left engine failure claim?
And, here is one you will like. It caught my eye.
7) The Hartzell anlysis in the Powerplant Group Chairman's Factual Report for the left engine states there was no evidence of low power or windmilling and in another sentence there was evidence of high power and high rpm at time of impact (page 87). BUT, earlier on page 65 of that same report it states, "
The propeller blades Nos. L1 and L2 were found in the feathered-to-high pitch position and propeller blade No. L3 was found in the feathered position." What is the descrepency here? Did I missread something here? Was it feathered or not? In all the things you've stated, why not mention this?
EVEN IF the engine did fail, there are safety margins to prevent an accident and everything about the history of this operation and the airplane indicates high risk. I would have told the pilot to give back the keys and go find somewhere else to fly.
These are all questions I would ask you if I were meeting with you in person, but since you brought it out in the open for the world to read, it probably belongs here.