Odd that there aren't any broken ropes attached to the aircraft. Or complete ones, if the ground anchors had failed.Plane flipped over at local FBO in 60+ knot Kansas wind a few weeks ago. Written off, and definitely totaled after that "recovery"...
Apparently the tie downs broke from what I heard.
Rope tie downs broke or the attach points broke?Apparently the tie downs broke from what I heard.
Odd that there aren't any broken ropes attached to the aircraft. Or complete ones, if the ground anchors had failed.
Perhaps they untied them prior to recovery.
Ron Wanttaja
Billy -> Hey Bob, what part of the plane isn't already trashed?
Bob -> Billy, it looks like the elevator is ok.
Billy -> Cool, let's flip it over using the elevator as the fulcrum
Bob -> Great idea!
At least it was only a high-wing
-182 Owner
Billy -> Hey Bob, what part of the plane isn't already trashed?
Bob -> Billy, it looks like the elevator is ok.
Billy -> Cool, let's flip it over using the elevator as the fulcrum
Bob -> Great idea!
At least it was only a high-wing
Initially. The conversion to low wing was an ugly one.
Not just everyone can not only land inverted but park inverted....
That.. or they were very loose and the plane was able to flip over forwards. I see a lot of people tie down planes and leave a serious amount of slack...What don't people understand about airspeed and lift? At 60 knots that wing will lift considerably more than the 1600 pound gross weight of a 150. Empty it's around 1100, so those tiedowns failed to hold even a lousy 500 pounds.
usually the biggest indication that you may have had a gear up landingit takes a much higher power setting than normal to taxi back to the ramp
https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/how-not-to-tie-down-your-aircraft.128792/That.. or they were very loose and the plane was able to flip over forwards. I see a lot of people tie down planes and leave a serious amount of slack...
Or... there's no guarantee that these 60 year old pieces of trash airplanes have tie down hooks that can conversely support a 500 lb load
Or... who knows the tensile strength of many of these ropes that sit outside year round for decades getting sun bleached
Not just everyone can not only land inverted but park inverted....
Or... there's no guarantee that these 60 year old pieces of trash airplanes have tie down hooks that can conversely support a 500 lb load
Welcome to Kansas! Where it was 75 degrees on Sunday and snowed 3 inches Monday this week.Before I had a microburst claim that tore a Twin Otter out of the ground(chained down) and onto it’s left wing like a tinker toy, I didn’t believe there was wind outside of a hurricane/nado that could do that.
Yeah I'm sure someone was gonna lovingly restore that ****can before the elevator was damaged on the recovery.
My dad's Cherokee 140 was flipped in a similar way, and the $&^$*(&#^ recovery of the airplane did similar things.
Not that it wasn't totaled before - but the "professional" recovery people certainly delivered the coup de grace.
It made me sick to see it.
What's the point of spending a lot of money to right a totaled airplane?
Sad. And yes, it has to be removed from the airport to the scrap yard somehow.makes it easier to move around?
Probably could still be saved. 150s make a lot of money for flight schools
They’re flying non-stop at the local school. $116-$141 an hour solo depending on equipment.Do you have any numbers or experience to back up that statement?
Genuinely curious. 5 years ago, the school I learned at had a 150 and 3 172s. The 150 was 95/hour wet and the 172s started at 125 and worked up to 170 or so. The expensive one was an early 2000s G1000 equipped model I think. I was the only person who flew the 150, most other students flew the G1000 172 and a few people flew the steam gauges 172s. This isn't a pilot mill either.