View Full Version : Quite interesting engine out landing video.
POPS
March 25th 11, 11:31 PM
To bad the choices led to a damaged aircraft.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZvSmsIE_Ls&feature=related
Bruce Hoult
March 26th 11, 08:45 AM
On Mar 26, 12:31*pm, POPS > wrote:
> To bad the choices led to a damaged aircraft.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZvSmsIE_Ls&feature=related
While he was cruising along, I decided I would take a particular field
as it looked longer than the rest. He then looked like he was setting
up a circuit into that same field, except far with the base leg far
too close in and he flew over it and seemed to barely make it over a
stone fence into the next one (maybe even touched it?).
glidergeek
March 26th 11, 03:49 PM
On Mar 25, 4:31*pm, POPS > wrote:
> To bad the choices led to a damaged aircraft.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZvSmsIE_Ls&feature=related
>
> --
> POPS
If the propeller is connected to the crankshaft and the engine seized
why was it windmilling all the way to the ground?
Scott[_7_]
March 26th 11, 04:10 PM
On 3-26-2011 15:49, glidergeek wrote:
> On Mar 25, 4:31 pm, > wrote:
>> To bad the choices led to a damaged aircraft.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZvSmsIE_Ls&feature=related
>>
>> --
>> POPS
>
> If the propeller is connected to the crankshaft and the engine seized
> why was it windmilling all the way to the ground?
Broken crank?
Paul Tribe
March 26th 11, 08:18 PM
At 16:10 26 March 2011, Scott wrote:
>On 3-26-2011 15:49, glidergeek wrote:
>> On Mar 25, 4:31 pm, POPS wrote:
>>> To bad the choices led to a damaged
>aircraft.http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=lZvSmsIE_Ls&feature=related
>>>
>>> --
>>> POPS
>>
>> If the propeller is connected to the crankshaft and the engine
seized
>> why was it windmilling all the way to the ground?
>
>Broken crank?
>
>
Can't quite see the relevance to "Bremont" watches:
Is it that you feel calmer in an emergency because you know that
you can look down at your wrist at the exact moment you plough
into a dry stone wall and be reassured that you know the correct
time it happened?
Paul Tribe
March 26th 11, 08:27 PM
At 16:10 26 March 2011, Scott wrote:
>On 3-26-2011 15:49, glidergeek wrote:
>> On Mar 25, 4:31 pm, POPS wrote:
>>> To bad the choices led to a damaged
>aircraft.http://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=lZvSmsIE_Ls&feature=related
>>>
>>> --
>>> POPS
>>
>> If the propeller is connected to the crankshaft and the engine
seized
>> why was it windmilling all the way to the ground?
>
>Broken crank?
>
>
Can't quite see the relevance to "Bremont" watches:
Is it that you feel calmer in an emergency because you know that
you can look down at your wrist at the exact moment you plough
into a dry stone wall and be reassured that you know the correct
time it happened?
Jim Logajan
March 27th 11, 04:54 AM
Paul Tribe > wrote:
> Can't quite see the relevance to "Bremont" watches:
>
> Is it that you feel calmer in an emergency because you know that
> you can look down at your wrist at the exact moment you plough
> into a dry stone wall and be reassured that you know the correct
> time it happened?
Doubt this was their intent, but this comes to mind:
"When asked what the first reaction to an emergency should be, an old
airline captain replied that he would reach up and wind the clock on the
instrument panel. There is a prevailing myth that says that pilots must
have ultra-fast reflexes to survive. The truth is that flying is much more
of a thinking game than a purely reactive one."
From: "Slow hands" By Bruce Landsberg
http://www.aopa.org/asf/asfarticles/sp9406.html
Gary Boggs
March 27th 11, 11:38 PM
Why didn't he put the gear down? Base turn seemed way to low to me,
especially with no power.
Boggs
Gary Evans[_2_]
March 28th 11, 12:07 AM
He may have hit the stone wall. It was very very close.
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