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#1
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Dr. H. is a local physician/pilot whose exploits have made him notorious
in the aviation community. He received his nickname for sawing the bent prop tips off his Mooney after "nearly" landing it gear up. He then flew it home, and the next day flew it to a repair shop. Since then his legend has grown. Dr. H. abhors delays like preflight inspections, which he has repeatedly been observed to skip entirely, sometimes jumping the chocks to begin his flights. He once berated FBO personnel for assuming he had merely forgotten to tie down his 152 and doing it for him. Naturally, within a few days the aircraft was blown on its back in a thunderstorm. It stayed that way on the ramp for a couple days until Dr. H. could be induced to make arrangements for its removal. Immediately after 9/11, Dr. H. wasted no time busting the general TFR and getting his face on tv for getting intercepted by F-16s. The good doctor "built" a super high-performance Lancair IV-P and soon managed to overrun a short runway, tearing off a wing. Now, we learn that our boy has managed to land safely after striking wires in his Mooney during a buzz job. Details are sketchy, but observers have been said to whistle in wonder that the airplane was flyable after the event. Unknown if this accident has been reported. Of course, this sort of thing always brings up the question of what we pilots should do about it, if anything. So far, the natural inclination of pilots not to rat to the FAA and to let natural selection do its work is prevailing. |
#2
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![]() "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... Dr. H. is a local physician/pilot whose exploits have made him notorious some text deleted Unknown if this accident has been reported. Of course, this sort of thing always brings up the question of what we pilots should do about it, if anything. So far, the natural inclination of pilots not to rat to the FAA and to let natural selection do its work is prevailing. Sounds like Darwin isn't always on the mark. I'd rat him out before he kills me or someone else, a complete stranger even. He sure as hell isn't helping the public image of GA. |
#3
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In article , John Ousterhout wrote:
Mooney, C-152, Lancair? No Bonanza? He must not be a real Doctor. I always felt safe flying the club's Bonanza, since I'm not a doctor, it won't kill me. Of course, it was a bit worrying the time I did have a doctor as a passenger... At SPX, we had one pilot who owned a Beech Duke with a very questionable maintenance history and corrosion problems you wouldn't believe. He never even looked at the plane before getting in and flying off - each of the once-per-six-months flights he did. The Duke is boarded by an aft cabin door - we speculated that the right wing could be missing outboard of the right engine, and he wouldn't notice until he rotated for takeoff. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#4
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"Dan Luke" wrote in message
Dr. H/D also likes to make the turnoff at Bravo when landing on rwy 32: http://www.naco.faa.gov/d-tpp/0406/00267AD.PDF Displaced threshold? Bah! Is that a displace threshold at MOB or something else? The airport diagram doesn't appear to mark it as a displaced threshold, so I'm wondering what it is (stopway? taxiway?), how you tell from the airport diagram, and what pavement markings you'd expect to see. Oh, yeah. Turn Dr. D in. I don't learn anything from NTSB reports where the pilot was just an idiot. |
#5
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![]() "Ace Pilot" wrote: Is that a displace threshold at MOB or something else? Mmmm, I think it's something else: an abandoned bit of the old runway, not available for landing or taxiing. what pavement markings you'd expect to see. Besides threshold markings...weeds? Can't remember - I'll have to fly over and do a t-&-g to see. A similar abandoned bit of rwy 36 at BFM has an X on it, but doesn't show on the plate at all: http://www.naco.faa.gov/d-tpp/0406/00268AD.PDF Oh, yeah. Turn Dr. D in. I have seen the physical evidence of the metal- and plastic-bending incidents. Everything else comes from multiple credible eye witnesses. On this basis would you run to the FAA? By the way, how do we know that someone hasn't *already* done so? -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#6
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Dylan Smith wrote in message ...
In article , John Ousterhout wrote: Mooney, C-152, Lancair? No Bonanza? He must not be a real Doctor. I always felt safe flying the club's Bonanza, since I'm not a doctor, it won't kill me. Of course, it was a bit worrying the time I did have a doctor as a passenger... Last week I took my sister on a backcountry flying trip. She's not a pilot, but very interested in GA. Over the years, she's learned how to identify most of the planes we see parked at airports. We were at an Idaho strip on Saturday when a Bonanza landed. She immediately announced the presence of a "forked-tailed doctor killer", but could not remember its real name to save her life. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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