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#1
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http://fox40.trb.com/
In an amazing coincidence, a Sacramento TV station was at Cameron Park airport filming background for a story about the crash of a plane that had departed earlier in the day and caught a second crash on video. Go to the web site and click on "Cameron Park Plane Crash" on the right side. It sure looks like the pilot was taking off from a high-density altitude airport with no flaps, downwind. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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Good grief, I hate to see that kind of stuff, turns my stomach.
Guess I shouldn't follow links like this. Might have caught some downdraft from the trees, too. - usual second guesses. |
#3
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Jay Honeck wrote:
http://fox40.trb.com/ In an amazing coincidence, a Sacramento TV station was at Cameron Park airport filming background for a story about the crash of a plane that had departed earlier in the day and caught a second crash on video. Go to the web site and click on "Cameron Park Plane Crash" on the right side. It sure looks like the pilot was taking off from a high-density altitude airport with no flaps, downwind. Wow, that was ugly. It looked like he was accelerating pretty good when he went past the camera, but just couldn't quite establish a climb. I did hear the one witness mention it being a downwind takeoff. Another witness mentioned an engine sputter, so it also sounds like it wasn't leaned at all for the altitude. Very unfortunate. Matt |
#4
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![]() Another witness mentioned an engine sputter Whatever the cause of a crash, there's always someone who hears the engine splutter... |
#5
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On Aug 31, 7:40 pm, Mike Granby wrote:
Another witness mentioned an engine sputter Whatever the cause of a crash, there's always someone who hears the engine splutter... All aircraft engines sputter, that's just the nature of how they work. They don't sound like BMV engines. |
#6
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Aug 31, 7:40 pm, Mike Granby wrote: Another witness mentioned an engine sputter Whatever the cause of a crash, there's always someone who hears the engine splutter... All aircraft engines sputter, that's just the nature of how they work. They don't sound like BMV engines. Is it possible the pilot decided to abort after he was airborne? The engine sounded strong and the airplane came off fine at rotation, then it seems to run out of steam. Or was that simply due to its climbing out of ground effect? -- Dan T-182T at BFM |
#7
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![]() "Dan Luke" wrote Is it possible the pilot decided to abort after he was airborne? Surely not. There was not a place to land, anywhere. Plus, he did not push the nose down, at all. The engine sounded strong and the airplane came off fine at rotation, then it seems to run out of steam. Or was that simply due to its climbing out of ground effect? That would be my guess. It also looked to me like he pulled the nose up, a tiny bit more, and without the ground effect, that was all it took to get on the back side of the power curve. That in itself is a good lesson to be learned. Try to practice recognizing the back side of the power curve, in slow flight. -- Jim in NC |
#8
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Dan Luke wrote:
"Robert M. Gary" wrote: On Aug 31, 7:40 pm, Mike Granby wrote: Another witness mentioned an engine sputter Whatever the cause of a crash, there's always someone who hears the engine splutter... All aircraft engines sputter, that's just the nature of how they work. They don't sound like BMV engines. Is it possible the pilot decided to abort after he was airborne? The engine sounded strong and the airplane came off fine at rotation, then it seems to run out of steam. Or was that simply due to its climbing out of ground effect? It definitely wasn't obvious from the vantage point of the camera. Could have been wind shear, coming out of ground effect too soon, engine trouble, etc. Matt |
#9
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Robert M. Gary wrote:
On Aug 31, 7:40 pm, Mike Granby wrote: Another witness mentioned an engine sputter Whatever the cause of a crash, there's always someone who hears the engine splutter... All aircraft engines sputter, that's just the nature of how they work. They don't sound like BMV engines. Bull. I can easily tell a well-running aircraft engine from one that isn't running well. Matt |
#10
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On Sep 1, 8:34 am, Matt Whiting wrote:
Robert M. Gary wrote: On Aug 31, 7:40 pm, Mike Granby wrote: Another witness mentioned an engine sputter Whatever the cause of a crash, there's always someone who hears the engine splutter... All aircraft engines sputter, that's just the nature of how they work. They don't sound like BMV engines. Bull. I can easily tell a well-running aircraft engine from one that isn't running well. So what? You've probably be near a running airplane engine. If you think that the common layperson can tell the difference between a good running airplane engine and bad running one than you should follow Alice to Wonderland. -Robert |
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