Tom-D
Taxi to Parking
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- Feb 23, 2005
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Tom-D
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This guy is lucky. I had two friends die trying to pull off the same maneuver. If you ever hear that awful noise, close the throttles and ride it to a stop.
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Watched a Rocwell Comander do this at my home airport. He didn't hit the belly but the prop did take a hit. He climbed out and came back to land safely. I talked to the guy a few days later and asked him why. He said no insurance and didn't want to destroy the plane. So many things I wanted to say but with his answer I knew I couldn't reason with him.
Well technically since the engines did not stop, there is no teardown required. Pretty sure a set of channel locks will straighten up the prop tips
3 dead at TTF in a Malibu a few years ago. Spun into in a park with soccer games going on.This guy is lucky. I had two friends die trying to pull off the same maneuver. If you ever hear that awful noise, close the throttles and ride it to a stop.
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He's thinking "Maybe no one noticed."
Speaking of Aerostars, at OSH in 2009 I saw one stall about 10 ft up while in a slight turn for landing. Looked like an F-18 landing on a carrier. Everyone in the audience around just gasped. No one could believe that his gear didn't collapse. Strong plane.
Let me guess, he was trying to land on the orange dot?
I watched a Mooney do that a few years ago. The FAA Inspector sitting at the next table in the airport restaurant wrote up the pilot for 91.13 careless/reckless and 91.7 (failing to discontinue the flight). The Inspector's argument was that once the plane was damaged that way, it was not safe to fly, and the pilot should have just let it skid to a stop. You might have an argument that if it just barely touched, it was safer to go around and then land on the wheels, but definitely don't fly anywhere else.He already screwed up the props and slid on the belly, why bother going around at that point other than to get to a more "convenient" repair location?
I watched a Mooney do that a few years ago. The FAA Inspector sitting at the next table in the airport restaurant wrote up the pilot for 91.13 careless/reckless and 91.7 (failing to discontinue the flight). The Inspector's argument was that once the plane was damaged that way, it was not safe to fly, and the pilot should have just let it skid to a stop. You might have an argument that if it just barely touched, it was safer to go around and then land on the wheels, but definitely don't fly anywhere else.
He told me. Perhaps he was talking out of school?Just curious, how did you know what regulations the Inspector used in the EIR against the Mooney pilot? Were you a party to the EIR?
He told me. Perhaps he was talking out of school?
This guy is lucky. I had two friends die trying to pull off the same maneuver. If you ever hear that awful noise, close the throttles and ride it to a stop.
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I'll tell him next time I see him.Yep, big time.
Probably more of a reflexive action than deliberate but not a good decision.
I'll tell him next time I see him.
Looks like the video plane is for sale now.
http://www.trade-a-plane.com/detail/aircraft/Multi+Engine+Piston/1970/Aerostar/601/2076612.html
"Needs props"