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" When I got back to shore, I called the State Police to see if there were
any searches or overdue aircraft reports. They were totally uninterested." Our tax dollars at work H. N502TB "Roger Long" om wrote in message .. . Our summer cottage is on Queechy Lake which is near the 26 runway extension of PSF (Pittsfield, MA) and close enough that planes are often climbing or transitioning to pattern entry speeds when they go over. The lake is picturesque so low level buzz jobs are not uncommon. I was napping last Friday afternoon when the sound of a plane, a Lycoming O-320 by the sound of it, brought me into semi-consciousness. It was circling low and throttling up as it climbed out of low passes. Suddenly, the engine went silent. It was at fairly high RPM and stopped with what sounded like a faint "chunk". That brought me bolt upright and wide awake. I threw on my shoes and ran the couple hundred yards down to the lake expecting to find that a plane had ditched. No one had seen or heard anything. I decided that I must have been dreaming. I was sitting with some other people about three hours later and I asked if anyone had seen a plane flying low over the lake. It turned out that one person had. It was circling low over the other end of the lake and waggling its wings. The person who saw it said that the engine suddenly quit and it disappeared over the hill just after the engine went silent. That spooked me. When I got back to shore, I called the State Police to see if there were any searches or overdue aircraft reports. They were totally uninterested. Thinking about it later, I wish I had been more aggressive. Pulling the throttle back suddenly wouldn't make the engine on my 172 sound like that. The transition from power to silence was instant. Flying into trees during a botched pull up from a buzz job is the best explanation for what I heard. Then again, I was asleep. Presumably, if they were buzzing and waving wings at someone on the ground, people were watching. If anyone sees anything about a missing plane on the MA/NY border that I missed, please let me know. -- Roger Long |
#2
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"Roger Long" says
Flying into trees during a botched pull up from a buzz job is the best explanation for what I heard. Then again, I was asleep. Gee I used to fly around in my "sleep" without even using an airplane. Mac |
#3
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Perhaps it was a motor glider. Their engines stop quickly when the pilot
feathers the prop. And then the plane just glides away! jerry "Roger Long" om wrote in message .. . Our summer cottage is on Queechy Lake which is near the 26 runway extension of PSF (Pittsfield, MA) and close enough that planes are often climbing or transitioning to pattern entry speeds when they go over. The lake is picturesque so low level buzz jobs are not uncommon. I was napping last Friday afternoon when the sound of a plane, a Lycoming O-320 by the sound of it, brought me into semi-consciousness. It was circling low and throttling up as it climbed out of low passes. Suddenly, the engine went silent. It was at fairly high RPM and stopped with what sounded like a faint "chunk". That brought me bolt upright and wide awake. I threw on my shoes and ran the couple hundred yards down to the lake expecting to find that a plane had ditched. No one had seen or heard anything. I decided that I must have been dreaming. I was sitting with some other people about three hours later and I asked if anyone had seen a plane flying low over the lake. It turned out that one person had. It was circling low over the other end of the lake and waggling its wings. The person who saw it said that the engine suddenly quit and it disappeared over the hill just after the engine went silent. That spooked me. When I got back to shore, I called the State Police to see if there were any searches or overdue aircraft reports. They were totally uninterested. Thinking about it later, I wish I had been more aggressive. Pulling the throttle back suddenly wouldn't make the engine on my 172 sound like that. The transition from power to silence was instant. Flying into trees during a botched pull up from a buzz job is the best explanation for what I heard. Then again, I was asleep. Presumably, if they were buzzing and waving wings at someone on the ground, people were watching. If anyone sees anything about a missing plane on the MA/NY border that I missed, please let me know. -- Roger Long ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#4
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![]() "JerryK" wrote in message ... Perhaps it was a motor glider. Their engines stop quickly when the pilot feathers the prop. And then the plane just glides away! or an ultralight or one of those light plane approximations of such. Some of the engine/prop combinations on these don't wind mill much.. |
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