RIP.
Was this a Robinson?
"Captain Max" Schumacher of KMPC-710, Los Angeles, was the pioneer of aerial news/traffic reporting. He died in a collision with a police helicopter over a crime scene near Dodger Stadium in the mid-1960s. His successor at KMPC, Jim Hicklin, was murdered by a deranged stalker a few years later on board a cruise ship.Memories of the two news choppers that collided over Phoenix years ago is still fresh in a lot of memories.
The page 2 to this story clarifies a few things. He radioed the tower that he was low on fuel, i.e., the low level lite was illuminated. The fuel indicator was actually recalibrated to spec due to having a +30 quantity reading. And given they were in full brick mode when they hit nose 1st, there wasn't enough RPM to make any minute maneuvers. Same with the OP accident and the claims he avoided the traffic. We all want people to do the right thing in these cases but unfortunately basic physics tends to get in the way.The Bell 206 Ranger apparently ran out of fuel due to an uncalibrated recently-installed fuel gauge.
Maybe. Its my understanding prior to the maintenance when indicating 0 gal there still was useable fuel onboard. After when reading 0 there was only un-useable on board. Whether he didn't read the logbook book, forgot about it, or pushed his luck since the airport was in sight. I don't think anyone really knows. The fact he called the tower to say he was low on fuel kind of puts it in pushing the luck side. Regardless, the overwhelming conclusion was it should have been a non-event in a B model, engine out/auto to a large flat field, but the wreckage tells a different story. He was a low time rotor pilot but dont know if that played into the equation.Expectation bias?