kkoran
Pattern Altitude
Pilot reportedly suffered non-life threatening injuries.
Like the jackwagons on the Roy Halladay icon a5 crashAmazing that the camera man didn't throw down the camera and go to help the guy that just crashed his plane ...
On foot? What is that going to do? The tower controller can call emergency services.Amazing that the camera man didn't throw down the camera and go to help the guy that just crashed his plane ...
Touch-and-go practice? And is that left rudder too?The "short" runway there is 5,700 feet. Took off with the flaps down?
On foot? What is that going to do? The tower controller can call emergency services.
What would I do? Anything I could. From that perspective I’d beat emergency services there by minutes.On foot? What is that going to do? The tower controller can call emergency services.
What would I do? Anything I could. From that perspective I’d beat emergency services there by minutes.
What would I do? Anything I could. From that perspective I’d beat emergency services there by minutes.
Okay, then let's agree to disagree. To me there's clear change in elevator position between first and subsequent images.To me, the image quality is not high enough to draw any conclusion about control surfaces other than that the flaps are not retracted. I don't see left rudder applied either, that's called p-factor/torque.
Okay, then let's agree to disagree. To me there's clear change in elevator position between first and subsequent images.
In the last image, the rudder is in silhouette and it seems pretty clear to me that it's left rudder being applied there.
That's the likely culprit. Too much image compression applied to the airframe during preflight.The compression artifacts/interpolated pixels are larger than the control surfaces. I suppose you also think the right wingtip suddenly bent backward in flight as well?
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You know what? Never mind. I try to do something helpful and be respectful to others. All I get are snarky replies. Happens way too often on this web site. I've got better things to do.The compression artifacts/interpolated pixels are larger than the control surfaces. I suppose you also think the right wingtip suddenly bent backward in flight as well?
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Welcome to POAYou know what? Never mind. I try to do something helpful and be respectful to others. All I get are snarky replies. Happens way too often on this web site. I've got better things to do.
“Strong here is the snark in some.” Yoda. I agree with your thesis. I saw the rudder deflection as well. Appreciate your efforts.You know what? Never mind. I try to do something helpful and be respectful to others. All I get are snarky replies. Happens way too often on this web site. I've got better things to do.
I honestly don't see elevator movement, no matter how hard I try, and if down elevator was being employed as he suddenly began nose diving close to the ground, that might be the first time in history that was done. It's not instinctual to try to dive when the plane is already diving and you're already rushing toward the ground.Okay, then let's agree to disagree. To me there's clear change in elevator position between first and subsequent images.
In the last image, the rudder is in silhouette and it seems pretty clear to me that it's left rudder being applied there.
Wait... You wouldn't have had reaction to bees pollinating flowers? Id say youre making progress.might as well have been videoing bees pollinating flowers. no reaction at all.
Aware no left rudder needs to be applied. It just looks like it might have been. Most have seen the student pilot fail a landing and have the airplane turn into a three wheeled off-road machine while cranking on the yolk. So it wouldn't surprise me if in an imminent stall/crash scenario that a low time pilot gets crossed up.No left rudder is necessary to explain the events in the video. Some of you have not had enough stall or spin-awareness training.
I suspect the camera person was Canadian.Amazing that the camera man didn't throw down the camera and go to help the guy that just crashed his plane ...
If this supposed to be a joke?Yeah but left wing drop in a stall with the rudder still pushed left is very poor incipient spin recovery technique, or stall recovery technique for that matter.