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Any word on the condition of the pilot who crashed
yesterday? |
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On Apr 17, 6:55 pm, John Brenann
wrote: Any word on the condition of the pilot who crashed yesterday? Dale Kramer crashed into the ridge yesterday. He was on the mountain all night with significant injuries. Details are sketchy but apparently an EMT got to the sight some time during the night and was able to provide support.(IV etc}. Dale was extricated from the sight today and taken to the hospital. Description was significant injuries but alive and ?stable ? guarded. Hopefully more news tomorrow. rich chesser 6u |
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![]() There was a very serious glider accident Monday morning involving a glider flying along the Bald Eagle Ridge. The winds were very strong with gusts as high as 50 Kts and there was lots of rain and snow. The flight originated at Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The pilot was seriously injured with broken leg and arm along with other injuries. He did have an ELT, and his cell phone did work briefly until a local cell tower was damaged by the high winds. The search team was unable to locate the pilot all day and called off the search Monday evening due to extremely high winds and snow/poor visibility. They resumed the search this morning and found him. It took most of Tuesday to retrieve the pilot so a helicopter could take him to a hospital where it is expected he will recover. The bottom line is the pilot spent a day and a half alone in the wilderness even though he had an operating ELT. Without an ELT it might have been several days before he was found. In some conditions, the glider might not be found for months. If you fly - especially cross country - and even more especially if you fly over hostile terrain, you owe it to those who will search for you to carry a signaling device in your glider. New low cost Personal GPS ELT devices are now available, and they are not so expensive. Check out our web site www.eglider.org. I have placed on the home page, the Aerofix 406 Personal ELT. It is small and we sell it for less than anyone I am aware of at $549.95 The pilot must turn on these Personal ELT devices. They do not go off themselves when you crash. However, most survivable accidents do not disable the pilot entirely. You should also have an aircraft ELT installed in your glider. Even these devices may not go off depending on how the glider crashes. The personal ELT can be attached to your parachute so the rescue team will find you and not your aircraft. While you are at it - review your emergency kit items to see if they are up to date. Don't forget a whistle! On our home page, near the bottom, click on "news articles" and review the article about emergency kits. There are suggested items you should consider carrying in your glider. Thomas Knauff phone 814 355 2483 fax 814 355 2633 www.eglider.org Sign up for our free newsletter. |
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As of 4PM Thursday afternoon, Dale is in good hands and doing fine.
His injuries were a simple fracture of the left upper arm, a simple fracture of the upper left leg, a complicated fracture(s) of the area just above the left ankle, and frostbite of both feet. He is in the University of Pittsburgh Trauma Center, having arrived there via stretcher, ambulance, two helicopters and a Lear jet. The first of x number of operations was today to deal with the ankle. The team of surgeons is still mapping the plan for total repair, but there have been no setbacks, Dale is healthy and the future looks to be "routine" if that is the proper word. There were four key components to Dale's survival, anyone of which missing would have probably doomed him: A functioning ELT, a mobile (cell)phone, Dale's instinct for survival, and John Good. Dale was able to make a crucial phone call to Carmen who got the news to John Good who had just aborted the flight at Bedford Airport and who immediately went to work organizing the rescue. He then went to the area of the search and worked with the CAP, EMS and police out of a house at the foot of the ridge where they suspected Dale to be. The details recounted by Dale in the Cumberland hospital were voluminous and it was a riveting experience for those of us with him to hear about it and listen to his matter-of-fact account. Hopefully, someday everyone will be able to read Dale and John's report on this. It will be good reading. And it will include such frustrations as Dale's life and death attempts to preserve his cell phone battery only to have the FAA call (twice!) requesting such crucial information as glider serial number, number of persons on board, etc., etc. And Dale's hours-long efforts to dig a hole under his left arm, to get his chute out and around him, to engineer (unsuccessfully) some way to get power to his cell phone via the logger battery or ship's microphone, and all this while lying on a 45 degree slope with his left leg trapped in the nose of the inverted wreckage above him. And, near the top (4,200') of a remote, forested ridge with sub freezing winds blowing 60 mph. John Good can better reveal the rescue side of the event, with all the bureacratic frustrations and delays and ultimate success. Suffice it to say, John saved a life. Karl Striedieck "Ian Cant" wrote in message ... Could not agree more about the desirability of good location aids. Although the personal locator beacon has the disadvantage of needing manual activation [which in some situations might not be possible] it also has the advantage that it can be activated in advance - for instance, when facing a certain landing in dangerous terrain, it could be activated on final approach, ensuring a signal is sent out even if the landing is disastrous and the ELT fails to activate on impact. Also, the much better location accuracy with GPS should lead to a quicker find - this accident apparently happened quite early in the day but the ELT limitations did not ensure location of the pilot before nightfall. Both systems have some limitations, having both is perfection, having at least one is good common sense for most X-C flight. Ian At 13:48 18 April 2007, wrote: There was a very serious glider accident Monday morning involving a glider flying along the Bald Eagle Ridge. The winds were very strong with gusts as high as 50 Kts and there was lots of rain and snow. The flight originated at Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The pilot was seriously injured with broken leg and arm along with other injuries. He did have an ELT, and his cell phone did work briefly until a local cell tower was damaged by the high winds. The search team was unable to locate the pilot all day and called off the search Monday evening due to extremely high winds and snow/poor visibility. They resumed the search this morning and found him. It took most of Tuesday to retrieve the pilot so a helicopter could take him to a hospital where it is expected he will recover. The bottom line is the pilot spent a day and a half alone in the wilderness even though he had an operating ELT. Without an ELT it might have been several days before he was found. In some conditions, the glider might not be found for months. If you fly - especially cross country - and even more especially if you fly over hostile terrain, you owe it to those who will search for you to carry a signaling device in your glider. New low cost Personal GPS ELT devices are now available, and they are not so expensive. Check out our web site www.eglider.org. I have placed on the home page, the Aerofix 406 Personal ELT. It is small and we sell it for less than anyone I am aware of at $549.95 The pilot must turn on these Personal ELT devices. They do not go off themselves when you crash. However, most survivable accidents do not disable the pilot entirely. You should also have an aircraft ELT installed in your glider. Even these devices may not go off depending on how the glider crashes. The personal ELT can be attached to your parachute so the rescue team will find you and not your aircraft. While you are at it - review your emergency kit items to see if they are up to date. Don't forget a whistle! On our home page, near the bottom, click on 'news articles' and review the article about emergency kits. There are suggested items you should consider carrying in your glider. Thomas Knauff phone 814 355 2483 fax 814 355 2633 www.eglider.org Sign up for our free newsletter. |
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Ian Cant wrote:
Could not agree more about the desirability of good location aids. Although the personal locator beacon has the disadvantage of needing manual activation [which in some situations might not be possible] it also has the advantage that it can be activated in advance - for instance, when facing a certain landing in dangerous terrain, it could be activated on final approach, ensuring a signal is sent out even if the landing is disastrous and the ELT fails to activate on impact. All ELT's have a manual activation switch, so they can also be activated by the pilot in the situation Ian describes. I hadn't thought about doing this with mine, but it sounds like a good idea. The post-landing checklist should have "Check ELT" on it, so the pilot would remember to deactivate after landing if it's not needed. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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On Apr 21, 1:37 pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Ian Cant wrote: ...Although the personal locator beacon has the disadvantage of needing manual activation [which in some situations might not be possible] it also has the advantage that it can be activated in advance - for instance, when facing a certain landing in dangerous terrain, it could be activated on final approach, ensuring a signal is sent out even if the landing is disastrous and the ELT fails to activate on impact. All ELT's have a manual activation switch, so they can also be activated by the pilot in the situation Ian describes. I hadn't thought about doing this with mine, but it sounds like a good idea. The post-landing checklist should have "Check ELT" on it, so the pilot would remember to deactivate after landing if it's not needed. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes"http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" atwww.motorglider.org The ELT normally has a three-position switch if it's switchable: "on" "arm" and "off" If you turn it "on" it continuously emits a distress call and beeps loudly. The distress call will activate search and rescue efforts, beginning with an attempt to discover whether it's a false alarm (since most ELT activations are inadvertent). While this act may seem like a safety measure, the side effects may overload the emergency response system if all us glider pilots start doing this for every landing. Rather, perhaps it should be routine to turn it "on" as the initial step in committing to an off-airport landing, turning it "off" after landing if all is OK. And Tom Knauf is right, a GPS-equipped 406mHz personal locator beacon is cheap life insurance, and less than the cost of the parachute to which it should be attached, which we also hope not to be needing. Dan Johnson |
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danlj wrote:
(some deletions) Ian Cant wrote: it also has the advantage that it can be activated in advance - for instance, when facing a certain landing in dangerous terrain, it could be activated on final approach, ensuring a signal is sent out even if the landing is disastrous and the ELT fails to activate on impact. The ELT normally has a three-position switch if it's switchable: "on" "arm" and "off" If you turn it "on" it continuously emits a distress call and beeps loudly. The distress call will activate search and rescue efforts, beginning with an attempt to discover whether it's a false alarm (since most ELT activations are inadvertent). While this act may seem like a safety measure, the side effects may overload the emergency response system if all us glider pilots start doing this for every landing. Rather, perhaps it should be routine to turn it "on" as the initial step in committing to an off-airport landing, turning it "off" after landing if all is OK. Both Ian and I agree with you, as Ian's comment makes clear the manual activation is for a potentially disastrous landing, not every landing. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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On the survival kit thread can anyone tell me what items that Dale had
in his survival kit? What items did he use and need? What items does he feel he should have had with him? http://www.geocities.com/jhderosa/aviation/survival/ - John |
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