SixPapaCharlie
May the force be with you
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Not sure if this has been addressed here yet but I don't see it. If so, please feel free to delete this post.
So dr. Stephen hatch crashes a plane in 2003 killing his wife and 2 of his 3 kids.
"A 2005 federal report on the 2003 crash found that inaccurate preflight planning resulted in the plane not having enough fuel. The NTSB determined that other contributing factors included the plane hitting a utility pole during its forced landing, a low ceiling and dark conditions."
Then he crashes into a garage after not following procedures killing himself and his wife:
Hatch's failure to follow that protocol contributed to the June 24, 2011, crash of his Beechcraft Bonanza that killed Hatch, his wife, Kim, and seriously injured Hatch's 16-year-old son, Austin. pilots are instructed to climb to 3,000 feet and hold if they miss an approach. "Instead, he maneuvered the airplane in the vicinity of the airport at a low altitude," Friday's report said.
After Hatch's aircraft missed its instrument landing approach at the Charlevoix airport, he turned around and attempted a second landing on the runway from the opposite direction before crashing into a garage in a neighborhood near the airport, according to witness statements collected by the NTSB.
http://www.mlive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/04/report_outlines_what_caused_sm.html
Hindsight is 20/20 but after the first 3 people I killed due to lack of preperation, I would probably never get in a plane again and if I did, I certainly hope I would dot every i, cross every t and play by the rules.
This is horrible.
So dr. Stephen hatch crashes a plane in 2003 killing his wife and 2 of his 3 kids.
"A 2005 federal report on the 2003 crash found that inaccurate preflight planning resulted in the plane not having enough fuel. The NTSB determined that other contributing factors included the plane hitting a utility pole during its forced landing, a low ceiling and dark conditions."
Then he crashes into a garage after not following procedures killing himself and his wife:
Hatch's failure to follow that protocol contributed to the June 24, 2011, crash of his Beechcraft Bonanza that killed Hatch, his wife, Kim, and seriously injured Hatch's 16-year-old son, Austin. pilots are instructed to climb to 3,000 feet and hold if they miss an approach. "Instead, he maneuvered the airplane in the vicinity of the airport at a low altitude," Friday's report said.
After Hatch's aircraft missed its instrument landing approach at the Charlevoix airport, he turned around and attempted a second landing on the runway from the opposite direction before crashing into a garage in a neighborhood near the airport, according to witness statements collected by the NTSB.
http://www.mlive.com/news/index.ssf/2012/04/report_outlines_what_caused_sm.html
Hindsight is 20/20 but after the first 3 people I killed due to lack of preperation, I would probably never get in a plane again and if I did, I certainly hope I would dot every i, cross every t and play by the rules.
This is horrible.