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Velocity173
Lucky…
From Airnav:Those wires look way above any normal glideslope to the marked threshold.
IFR runways are generally cleared at 40:1. VFR generally 20:1.RWY 14 APCH RATIO 15:1 TO DSPLCD THR DUE TO 60 FT UNMKD PWR LN.
Yikes. "THE PILOT REPORTED BEING BELOW THE VASI GLIDESLOPE WHILE ON FINAL." Yep.Wire strike a while back at my home field. Yes, landed successfully.
View attachment 117070
Ron Wanttaja
Pilot went on to get their commercial, aircraft was repaired and put back into service.Yikes. "THE PILOT REPORTED BEING BELOW THE VASI GLIDESLOPE WHILE ON FINAL." Yep.
powerlines are very difficult to see from the air. Yes the towers 1/4 mile apart are pretty easy to spot.A low pass to clear the deer might have improved his day. Displaced thresholds are for important reasons, good to take a look first, then return to land.
A careful scan of the airport environment on his down wind leg could have made a difference, too. Too many pilots flying the pattern are primarily looking for other planes, and do not do the proper assessment of the airport itself.
powerlines are very difficult to see from the air. Yes the towers 1/4 mile apart are pretty easy to spot.
My first CFI was a crusty retired Nam F4 Phantom jock. Taught me the high approach as well. He preached having altitude/airspeed as long as possible in case of engine failure or any number of things on final. It does make for a more challenging landing IMHO. But anything else feels like I’m dragging it in. Like everything in aviation. It’s a trade off. As a Skylanner, seeing that breaks my heart. Very happy the pilot will be okay. Stay safe my brothers and sisters! Stay safe.Some people are critical of steep approaches. I love them, that's what I learned first, in an aircraft that was a bit prone to carb icing. I still like them, because it gives me more energy and more options. That I don't have to worry at all about wires that aren't really close the to airport? Yet another bonus. Flying along the treetops like I'm trying to avoid SAMs on final never made sense to me.
Wire strike a while back at my home field. Yes, landed successfully.
View attachment 117070
Ron Wanttaja
I've had friends working for NYS's public service administration. Some power companies are OK, but some are terrible. I love a competitive market, but monopolies are a different animal. If they had the choice of putting balls on, or burying the line, I know which they'd pick. Underground/submarine high voltage lines are possible, but they are not cheap.
Are they really possible? Consider the ****storm that a proposal to install underwater high voltage conductors across a lake or river would produce. The protests and lawsuits would go on for years. It's the world we live in.
I can see protests, but that didn't slow down high pressure gas pipelines running straight through NY state a few years ago.
Compare a few years ago to the new reality. Opposition to a pipeline in New York on which several hundred million had already been spent caused the firm building it to abandon the project in February 2020.
Williams Cos Inc said on Monday it canceled the proposed Constitution natural gas pipeline from Pennsylvania to New York following years of opposition from politicians and environmental groups in New York.
"Williams ... has halted investment in the proposed Constitution project," the company said in a statement, noting "The underlying risk adjusted return for this greenfield pipeline project has diminished in such a way that further development is no longer supported."
That decision followed Williams' announcement last week that its fourth quarter and full year 2019 earnings were negatively impacted by a $354 million impairment of the Constitution project.
Constitution and other gas pipelines in the U.S. Northeast have been stuck in a battle between energy companies supported by U.S. President Donald Trump, who wants more pipelines and other energy infrastructure built, and environmental groups and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who favor investment in more energy efficiency and renewables projects.
https://pgjonline.com/news/2020/02-february/williams-cancels-ny-constitution-pipeline
Just five days ago, New York passed a law which bans natural gas piping installations and natural gas appliances from being installed in new buildings.
May 3 (Reuters) - New York has become the first U.S. state to pass legislation banning the use of natural gas for heating and cooking in some new buildings, a plan designed to reduce carbon emissions but opposed by industry groups as excessive and costly.
Both the Democratic-led Assembly and Senate late on Tuesday approved the provisions, which are included the state's $229 billion budget. Governor Kathy Hochul and lawmakers agreed to the outlines of the spending package last week.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/new-york-state-bans-natural-gas-some-new-construction-2023-05-03/
In just five or ten years, highly populated states will experience routine blackouts due to insufficient baseload electrical power generation capacity and the forced adoption of electric vehicles and all electric homes. The resultant price increases will cripple the poor and elderly.
A similar situation will occur when extreme winters place demands on natural gas and heating oil supplies that can't be met, and greatly increased prices will decimate the economy of those areas.
Very impressive--landed on its feet.Lucky…
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Just five days ago, New York passed a law which bans natural gas piping installations and natural gas appliances from being installed in new buildings.
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A similar situation will occur when extreme winters place demands on natural gas and heating oil supplies that can't be met, and greatly increased prices will decimate the economy of those areas.
Yeah, maybe a tangent topic, but all electric houses are a horrible idea in the north. It's a fraction of the efficiency of natural gas or oil, and it puts people at risk of dependence on the electrical grid, which absolutely routinely fails in parts of the north in the winter.
Electrical house are more efficient if they use heat pumps.Yeah, maybe a tangent topic, but all electric houses are a horrible idea in the north. It's a fraction of the efficiency of natural gas or oil, and it puts people at risk of dependence on the electrical grid, which absolutely routinely fails in parts of the north in the winter. What we really need is a plan for people who want to be environmentally friendly to move themselves off grid. I don't like government incentives for alternative power, but if we're going to do them, do them at the micro level, not the macro level. Not to tilt at windmills, so to speak, but this isn't about doing what's right for the environment, it's all economic based, to put it nicely.
If NY wanted to fix the CO2 problem, they wouldn't have pushed to shut down Indian Point. Plenty of cooling water in the Hudson for another plant, and they're way less of a blight on the landscape than wind turbines. They produce a pretty good amount of power, too.
Right up to the point where the heat pump doesn’t generate enough heat.Electrical house are more efficient if they use heat pumps.
Back in helo trainining, we were instructed to deal with an engine failure over a forested areas to pull the nose up and descend into the trees tail first. 40 feet of aft fuselage to act as a crumple zone. I knew a retired USAF pilot who survived two of these in Alaska without a scratch. One was an H-21 "flying Banana" and the other a Sikorsky H-34. A big radial that is now above the pilots head would give me concern. Motor mounts can handle a slow motion crumple.Geez Didn’t know the 182C came with rear crumple zones. Absorbing all that energy slowly saved these guys
The Army "Nap of the Earth" training program teaches this. I had an OEI experience that required an approach to a landing in a confined area. Approach was over a highway with power lines. No go around considered. PIC (Navy Reserve Captain) and I (Flying pilot) discussed this and I lined up the power pole and the planned touchdown spot and it was a done deal.The local ultralight guys say "cross the lines OVER the towers"... They are easier to see.
Back in helo trainining, we were instructed to deal with an engine failure over a forested areas to pull the nose up and descend into the trees tail first. 40 feet of aft fuselage to act as a crumple zone. I knew a retired USAF pilot who survived two of these in Alaska without a scratch. One was an H-21 "flying Banana" and the other a Sikorsky H-34. A big radial that is now above the pilots head would give me concern. Motor mounts can handle a slow motion crumple.
Older Naval aircraft were designed to arrange seats facing aft for better survivability in a crash.