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#1
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This happend in my neck of the woods, amazing there wasn't a car crash or
something from rubber necking! http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dl...OCAL/802250370 |
#2
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In article ,
"Darkwing" theducksmail"AT"yahoo.com wrote: This happend in my neck of the woods, amazing there wasn't a car crash or something from rubber necking! http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dl...OCAL/802250370 Carburetor ice? From the picture, it looks as if there was a fair amount of water vapor/fog in the air. IIRC, the temperature in that area was ideal for carb ice formation. -- Remove _'s from email address to talk to me. |
#3
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Carburetor ice? From the picture, it looks as if there was a fair
amount of water vapor/fog in the air. IIRC, the temperature in that area was ideal for carb ice formation. Yep, according to this article: http://www.theindychannel.com/news/1...3/detail.html# |
#4
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Mike Proctor wrote:
Carburetor ice? From the picture, it looks as if there was a fair amount of water vapor/fog in the air. IIRC, the temperature in that area was ideal for carb ice formation. Yep, according to this article: http://www.theindychannel.com/news/1...3/detail.html# Well, the article did cite "ice", but it wasn't carb ice, that's a fuel injected motor. Perhaps ice crystals on a fuel screen, or maybe he iced up the air filter, although the alternate air should have cured that. Happy Flying! Scott Skylane |
#5
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![]() "Mike Proctor" wrote in message t... Carburetor ice? From the picture, it looks as if there was a fair amount of water vapor/fog in the air. IIRC, the temperature in that area was ideal for carb ice formation. Yep, according to this article: http://www.theindychannel.com/news/1...3/detail.html# I hadn't heard what exactly the issue was, I was figuring the fuel lines were contaminated with air but apparently not. |
#6
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According to the article posted below, the pilot reported that he was at
7000 feet when the engine stopped and that "he couldn't possibly make it to the nearest airport, Mount Comfort, which was about seven miles away". The elevation of Mount Comfort is 811 ft. with a 3,850 ft. x 100 ft. runway. Not to belittle his commendable job of putting the plane down safely, nor to assume that I could do the same as easily, but it would seem to me that 7 miles from 7000 ft. would be within a reasonable gliding distance for most GA aircraft, and to say that "he couldn't possibly make it" there doesn't sound right to me. Even factoring in a delay to sort things out and make some decisions and therefore starting a decent from 6000 ft. direct to an airport 7 miles away would still seem more plausible to me than trying to land on a highway during the day. Anyone agree or disagree? Art Varrassi CP-ASEL "Mike Proctor" wrote in message t... Carburetor ice? From the picture, it looks as if there was a fair amount of water vapor/fog in the air. IIRC, the temperature in that area was ideal for carb ice formation. Yep, according to this article: http://www.theindychannel.com/news/1...3/detail.html# |
#7
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Correction to my previous post: Mount Comfort's elevation is 862 ft. with a
5500 ft. x 100 ft. runway. "Art Varrassi" wrote in message ... According to the article posted below, the pilot reported that he was at 7000 feet when the engine stopped and that "he couldn't possibly make it to the nearest airport, Mount Comfort, which was about seven miles away". The elevation of Mount Comfort is 811 ft. with a 3,850 ft. x 100 ft. runway. Not to belittle his commendable job of putting the plane down safely, nor to assume that I could do the same as easily, but it would seem to me that 7 miles from 7000 ft. would be within a reasonable gliding distance for most GA aircraft, and to say that "he couldn't possibly make it" there doesn't sound right to me. Even factoring in a delay to sort things out and make some decisions and therefore starting a decent from 6000 ft. direct to an airport 7 miles away would still seem more plausible to me than trying to land on a highway during the day. Anyone agree or disagree? Art Varrassi CP-ASEL "Mike Proctor" wrote in message t... Carburetor ice? From the picture, it looks as if there was a fair amount of water vapor/fog in the air. IIRC, the temperature in that area was ideal for carb ice formation. Yep, according to this article: http://www.theindychannel.com/news/1...3/detail.html# |
#8
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#9
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"gatt" wrote:
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dl...OCAL/802250370 Well done, pilot! Depends. Did he do something stupid that caused the problem? In that case he endangered himself and others. I am awaiting the full story. Ron Lee |
#10
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Ron Lee writes:
Depends. Did he do something stupid that caused the problem? In that case he endangered himself and others. I am awaiting the full story. Carb heat? |
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