![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mike
NTSB accident report. See another MU2 went in 25 March near Pittsfield, MA under strange circumstances. As I said prior, if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long. Big John |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Big John" wrote in message
... [...] As I said prior, if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long. What do you fly? Is it still in production? If not, how is it not true for that type of aircraft that "if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long"? Even the Cessna 152 has a finite number in the fleet, and they continue to be involved in accidents now and then. Eventually they will all be gone too. What's your point? How is the MU2 any different from any other aircraft not still in production? Pete |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Strange indeed. At the current rate, all the MU-2s will be gone around the
year 2305 or about 150yrs after there is no petroleum to fuel them anyway :-). Mike MU-2 "Big John" wrote in message ... Mike NTSB accident report. See another MU2 went in 25 March near Pittsfield, MA under strange circumstances. As I said prior, if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long. Big John |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Big John
I sent you an email regarding the T-33. Did you get it? Thx, VL |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article .net,
Mike Rapoport wrote: Strange indeed. At the current rate, all the MU-2s will be gone around the year 2305 or about 150yrs after there is no petroleum to fuel them anyway By that time the MU-2 will be the Cub of aviation. People will be dredging lakes just to get the data plate from an MU-2 and then building one from scratch... Their buddies back at the hangar will still be harassing them the whole time about what a dangerous airplane it is... -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() VL No. Probably to my throw away address? Try jhncal at hal-pc.org John On 04 Apr 2004 00:02:12 GMT, (MLenoch) wrote: Big John I sent you an email regarding the T-33. Did you get it? Thx, VL |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pete
MU2 had a relatively limited production run not like the 150/152 which has been built for ever and in the thousands. MU2 is a relatively high performance turbo prop and not normally seen as plane of the average GA pilot. You will find them in commercial service of some kind. Some general specs. 580 built (1963-1986) That's about 25 a year average during production life. About 500 on books in 2000. 300 mph normal cruise 7 passenger two pilot pressurized. (Some with big fuselage could carry 11 passengers) Listed on market today for about $300,000.+/- Accident in question, pilot had routine communication with ATC and 9 minutes later came out of clouds in flat spin and hit ground with no forward movement. There was some icing in clouds but may or may not have been at his cruising altitude? Pitot and Stall heat were on. Rest of 'heat' switches were off. All of airframe was at crash site. I posted as a jab at Mike (MU2) who stands up for the bird even with these 'strange' type of accidents. Flying one, he may have some feed back on this accident? Hate to see these accidents both for crew and A/C ![]() Big John `````````````````````````````````````````````````` `````````````````````````````````````````````` On Sat, 3 Apr 2004 13:26:33 -0800, "Peter Duniho" wrote: "Big John" wrote in message .. . [...] As I said prior, if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long. What do you fly? Is it still in production? If not, how is it not true for that type of aircraft that "if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long"? Even the Cessna 152 has a finite number in the fleet, and they continue to be involved in accidents now and then. Eventually they will all be gone too. What's your point? How is the MU2 any different from any other aircraft not still in production? Pete |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mike
See my answer to Pete on msc. Any feed back through MU2 channels on what may have happened? Wing iced up and stalled and bird spun in???? Fly safe and stay lucky. Big John `````````````````````````````````````````````````` `````````````````````````````````````` On Sat, 03 Apr 2004 23:50:48 GMT, "Mike Rapoport" wrote: Strange indeed. At the current rate, all the MU-2s will be gone around the year 2305 or about 150yrs after there is no petroleum to fuel them anyway :-). Mike MU-2 "Big John" wrote in message .. . Mike NTSB accident report. See another MU2 went in 25 March near Pittsfield, MA under strange circumstances. As I said prior, if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long. Big John |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Big John" wrote in message
... MU2 had a relatively limited production run not like the 150/152 which has been built for ever and in the thousands. So? The 152 still has a finite supply. Keep crashing them, they will eventually disappear from the fleet. [...] I posted as a jab at Mike (MU2) who stands up for the bird even with these 'strange' type of accidents. Flying one, he may have some feed back on this accident? Why would you post a jab at Mike? Why shouldn't he stand up "for the bird"? There are many types of aircraft that require specialized training and careful handling. I've heard nothing about the MU2 that suggests it's anything other than a high-performance airplane that requires close attention. The same things could be said of the P-51, but I don't see you posting jabs at the folks who fly them. Not all airplanes are as docile as a Cessna. That doesn't make them bad airplanes, nor does it justify crowing about accidents that occur in them. Hate to see these accidents both for crew and A/C ![]() I hate to see any kind of accident. But when a type crashes that is the same as that flown by someone I know of, I don't go poking them in the face about it. Pete |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I live near Pittsfield. The article I saw mentioned that he was hauling
screws, I think. I was thinking that possibly some of the load shifted in flight and went aft. One witness said he looked like he was coming down backwards. Another said he was in a flat spin. Figure screws are a pretty dense cargo. If they somehow shifted back, do you think it could make him tail heavy enough to get him in trouble even at cruise speed? He had fuel as the wreckage was burning. Said last contact was at 17K feet and radar showed him losing 12k feet in 60 seconds. mike regish "Big John" wrote in message ... Pete MU2 had a relatively limited production run not like the 150/152 which has been built for ever and in the thousands. MU2 is a relatively high performance turbo prop and not normally seen as plane of the average GA pilot. You will find them in commercial service of some kind. Some general specs. 580 built (1963-1986) That's about 25 a year average during production life. About 500 on books in 2000. 300 mph normal cruise 7 passenger two pilot pressurized. (Some with big fuselage could carry 11 passengers) Listed on market today for about $300,000.+/- Accident in question, pilot had routine communication with ATC and 9 minutes later came out of clouds in flat spin and hit ground with no forward movement. There was some icing in clouds but may or may not have been at his cruising altitude? Pitot and Stall heat were on. Rest of 'heat' switches were off. All of airframe was at crash site. I posted as a jab at Mike (MU2) who stands up for the bird even with these 'strange' type of accidents. Flying one, he may have some feed back on this accident? Hate to see these accidents both for crew and A/C ![]() Big John `````````````````````````````````````````````````` `````````````````````````` ```````````````````` On Sat, 3 Apr 2004 13:26:33 -0800, "Peter Duniho" wrote: "Big John" wrote in message .. . [...] As I said prior, if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long. What do you fly? Is it still in production? If not, how is it not true for that type of aircraft that "if you keep breaking they will be all gone before long"? Even the Cessna 152 has a finite number in the fleet, and they continue to be involved in accidents now and then. Eventually they will all be gone too. What's your point? How is the MU2 any different from any other aircraft not still in production? Pete |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Aerobatics | 28 | January 2nd 09 02:26 PM |
AmeriFlight Crash | C J Campbell | Piloting | 5 | December 1st 03 02:13 PM |
Single-Seat Accident Records (Was BD-5B) | Ron Wanttaja | Home Built | 41 | November 20th 03 05:39 AM |
USAF = US Amphetamine Fools | RT | Military Aviation | 104 | September 25th 03 03:17 PM |
AOPA Stall/Spin Study -- Stowell's Review (8,000 words) | Rich Stowell | Piloting | 25 | September 11th 03 01:27 PM |