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I've been reading through the BD-5 thread and have a question.
I guess this is an opinion thread but what happens to a rear engine mounted directly behind the pilot in a crash? In something like an ultralight, BD-5, Cutiss pusher or Vari-EZ does an engine have a tendency to rip loose and go through the pilot due to inertia in a sudden stop? Or in many crashes is the direction of flight not straight ahead, like if the aircraft was in a stall when it contacted the ground? The force is down not forward through the cockpit. Bernadette |
#2
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![]() I really hate to admit it, but, to my great chagrin I once departure stalled and crashed a rear-engine ultralight. Think of a Quicksilver, except the engine was under the wing. Well, it didn't "tear loose" but rather went right over my head. A friend and a passerby together elevated the tangled mass of tubing enough for me to crawl out from under it. Amazing how hard it is to release a seat belt when your body is dangling from it... Al Mills |
#3
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![]() I really hate to admit it, but, to my great chagrin I once departure stalled and crashed a rear-engine ultralight. Think of a Quicksilver, except the engine was under the wing. Well, it didn't "tear loose" but rather went right over my head. A friend and a passerby together elevated the tangled mass of tubing enough for me to crawl out from under it. Amazing how hard it is to release a seat belt when your body is dangling from it... Al Mills +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Sounds like your seatbelt was NOT an aviation approved type. If it was, it should have unlatched easily... allowing you to fall and break your neck or whatever was going to break your fall. g Barnyard BOb -- |
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BOb
Don't laugh. Saw a P-51 pour full power on after a landing attempt that went bad and bird torque rolled inverted and went into sand beside runway. Group ran out and picked wing up to let pilot get out. Bubble canopy was broken of course and when he released is seat belt fell on his head and cracked a vertebrae. Can't win sometimes for losing I guess? Big John On Tue, 18 Nov 2003 16:51:36 -0600, - Barnyard BOb - wrote: I really hate to admit it, but, to my great chagrin I once departure stalled and crashed a rear-engine ultralight. Think of a Quicksilver, except the engine was under the wing. Well, it didn't "tear loose" but rather went right over my head. A friend and a passerby together elevated the tangled mass of tubing enough for me to crawl out from under it. Amazing how hard it is to release a seat belt when your body is dangling from it... Al Mills +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Sounds like your seatbelt was NOT an aviation approved type. If it was, it should have unlatched easily... allowing you to fall and break your neck or whatever was going to break your fall. g Barnyard BOb -- |
#5
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![]() BOb Don't laugh. Saw a P-51 pour full power on after a landing attempt that went bad and bird torque rolled inverted and went into sand beside runway. Group ran out and picked wing up to let pilot get out. Bubble canopy was broken of course and when he released is seat belt fell on his head and cracked a vertebrae. Can't win sometimes for losing I guess? Big John +++++++++++++++++++++++++ I'm not laughing. Just because the crash may be over... undoing a seatbelt still may require extreme care and caution. I first became aware of this early in my crop dusting career. Seems a fellow put his Stearman on its back and in haste to exit his inverted position... yep, injured his neck and back a bit. That bit of foolishness might have paralyzed him.... had he been SOBER. I'm not even going to take a stab at the moral of this story. g Barnyard BOb -- seen a lot in 50 years of flight |
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#9
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Yeah and they told us that the struts holding the rotodome on the AWACs
were of unequal strength so that it would break to the side instead of chopping thru the fuselage. Good thing we never had to find out. -- Kevin McCue KRYN '47 Luscombe 8E Rans S-17 (for sale) -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
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Dan
Don't know if you ever saw the N-9 (P-40) and K-14 computing gunsights (P-51). Both would leave a 'mark' on your forhead in a crash (that you survived) Used to be a 'mark of honor'. Then they started making everyone wear helments. Big John On 18 Nov 2003 21:03:51 GMT, (B2431) wrote: From: BernadetteTS Date: 11/18/2003 9:55 AM Central Standard Time Message-id: I've been reading through the BD-5 thread and have a question. I guess this is an opinion thread but what happens to a rear engine mounted directly behind the pilot in a crash? In something like an ultralight, BD-5, Cutiss pusher or Vari-EZ does an engine have a tendency to rip loose and go through the pilot due to inertia in a sudden stop? Or in many crashes is the direction of flight not straight ahead, like if the aircraft was in a stall when it contacted the ground? The force is down not forward through the cockpit. Bernadette Another design that would appear to be dangerous is mounting the engine above and behind the cockpit. In a descending crash or a head on crash the engine will most likely land on whomever is in the cockpit and probably ruin his whole day. Something else I have seen is a tidy row of toggle switches over one's knee. I bet they would redecorate one's kneecap in a crash. Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired |
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