Because we all know that talking to controllers makes you more safe. Why they can just reach right thru that radio and FLY for you if you get into trouble...Two days after the accident, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered small, fixed-wing planes not to fly over the East River unless the pilot is in contact with air traffic controllers.
Small planes could previously fly below 1,100 feet along the river without filing flight plans or checking in with air traffic control. The FAA said the rule change -- a temporary one -- was made for safety reasons.
~2000 feetDave Krall CFII said:1300 feet?
How wide is the corridor there?
The public will feel better that it wasn't pilot error, it was the wind?SkyHog said:The other thing too, is that is makes non-pilots feel better because hey, this could have been a deliberate attack. It did, afterall, cause massive loss of life and damage to property, right?
Sometimes I wish everyone was a pilot.
mikea said:The public will feel better that it wasn't pilot error, it was the wind?
So if they just ban flying when there's a wind ....
Ron asked the NYC controllers if the new requirement was hard on them.SkyHog said:No, I'm sorry, confusion on my sentence. I meant that is why is "made sense" to close the corridor without permission. Means people can't slip in without permission. Sigh.
Caused what? the engine to stall? I guess it did stall when it hit....AirBaker said:I think the correction caused it, not the wind.
greglansing said:I'm trying to understand how it can make the engine stall?
greglansing said:The prevailing winds would have forced the plane to drift 400 feet toward the building as it made a 180-degree turn...
RotaryWingBob said:The NTSB report makes a whole lot more sense then you guys do quoting CNN etc.:
http://www.ntsb.gov/pressrel/2006/061103.htm
SkyHog said:The wind was so strong that it actually stopped the propeller. Propellers can only chop though so much wind.
NTSB Report said:On October 11, 2006, about 2:42 PM eastern daylight time, a Cirrus SR-20, N929CD, crashed into an apartment building in New York City. Both people on board the airplane were killed and the airplane was destroyed by impact forces and post crash fire. No fatalities occurred on the ground. Substantial damage occurred to several of the residences in the building. The pilot and owner was New York Yankee player Cory Lidle, and a California based flight instructor was with him. The flight was operating under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. The flight had taken off from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey and appeared to be sightseeing around Manhattan.
TMetzinger said:It's a shame they didn't have better judgement, as my experiments in a sim showed that a climbing turn would have missed the buildings, even though it might have busted the airspace. But when I'm scared the last thing I'm thinking of is a bust - skin, tin, ticket is the proper priority.
In the midst of all the speculation, somebody finally found the report. Look at the graphic plot from the radar.FlyNE said:http://www.ntsb.gov/Pressrel/2006/061103.htm
A wind of 13 knots is to blame for their inability to keep their airplane from hitting the building.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/baseball/mlb/05/01/lidle.crash.ap/index.html?cnn=yesNew York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle's plane crashed in New York because the pilot misjudged a narrow U-turn before veering into a Manhattan high-rise, federal investigators said Tuesday. In presenting their findings, National Transportation Safety Board investigators said they still don't know whether Lidle or his flight instructor was piloting the plane at the time of the Oct. 11, 2006, crash.
The NTSB has released some preliminary documents, identifying Lidle as the pilot and Stanger the passenger, but the papers provide no proof of who was at the controls of Lidle's Cirrus SR-20 when it crashed.
No big revelation there.
http://www.ntsb.gov/Pressrel/2006/061103.htm
A wind of 13 knots is to blame for their inability to keep their airplane from hitting the building.
and to think, some people dont find the value in Ground Reference manuevers...sigh
Or performance maneuvers like the Chandelle or slow flight?and to think, some people don't find the value in Ground Reference manuevers...sigh
To say that we should teach primary students how to avoid EVERY situation that might come up? That's not good, would add hundreds of hours to the PP. Some things need to be taught at the pilot's request.
Also no big revelation, but we wonder why airplanes and insurnace cost so much:
"The Lidle and Stanger families have filed suit against the manufacturers of the plane and certain components."
Steep turns, ground reference, etc.
PTS should say:
1) Taxi safely
2) takeoff safely
3) navigate safely
4) safely deal with emergency
5) land safely (short field a necessity, soft field an option)
6) Park and shut down safely
And that's about it. If you can do the above, you're good enough to be a pilot in my book. Certainly not commercial quality, but a pilot nonetheless. You would be able to get your license in about 20-25 hours minimum that way. People would probably still take longer, but no where near the FAA's average 59 hours.