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#1
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How did the jumper jump outa that plane, travel upward & forward & break
his legs on the L.E. of the wing outboard the engine nacele ??? 'twas on the OK news last nite, but didn't catch where it happened.. |
#2
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jerry wass wrote:
How did the jumper jump outa that plane, travel upward & forward & break his legs on the L.E. of the wing outboard the engine nacele ??? 'twas on the OK news last nite, but didn't catch where it happened.. Jump from high altitude and the jump bird pilot will bring the bird down to pattern altitude at a mind blowing desent rate. A jumper fully tucked up can catch and even outrun the jump plane under the right conditions. In this case, it appears that the a/c was already down in the pattern and the jumper blew through the pattern altitude and struck the a/c from overhead still in freefall. Non-survivable injuries unless the EMT's just happened to be right there when he landed. Craig C. |
#3
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![]() wrote In this case, it appears that the a/c was already down in the pattern and the jumper blew through the pattern altitude and struck the a/c from overhead still in freefall. Non-survivable injuries unless the EMT's just happened to be right there when he landed. What, broken legs, un-survivable? Were they massively bleeding, from compound breaks or something? -- Jim in NC |
#4
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("Morgans" wrote)
What, broken legs, un-survivable? Were they massively bleeding, from compound breaks or something? AvWeb http://www.avweb.com/newswire/11_17a.../189644-1.html Florida skydiver Albert "Gus" Wing III, 50, died after he collided with the wing of the Twin Otter that he jumped from Saturday morning, severing both legs at the knees. After the impact at 600 feet, Wing controlled his parachute to a landing but died from his injuries later at Halifax Medical Center. The aircraft landed safely... Montblack |
#5
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![]() "Bryan Martin" wrote His legs were severed at the knees on impact. http://www.local6.com/firstnews/4410256/detail.html That sucks. Condolences to family and friends. -- Jim in NC |
#6
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jerry wass wrote:
How did the jumper jump outa that plane, travel upward & forward & break his legs on the L.E. of the wing outboard the engine nacele ??? 'twas on the OK news last nite, but didn't catch where it happened.. Most jump planes dive for the ground after release, and it is likely the airplane ran him down. Matt |
#7
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I have seen jump planes beat the sky diver down. Many times I have seen
the pilot put a plane (Cessna) into a spin from 10,000 to 12,000 feet and pull at about 1500 feet, usually near the downwind leg of the pattern. Many times the plane is on the runway before the sky diver touches down. jerry wass wrote: How did the jumper jump outa that plane, travel upward & forward & break his legs on the L.E. of the wing outboard the engine nacele ??? 'twas on the OK news last nite, but didn't catch where it happened.. |
#8
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If we are talking about the Skydive Deland incident, Then there are a
LOT of bits of misinformation that need to be tweaked here in these first two posts. The jumper, Gus Wing, was a veteran jumper. He and the Otter pilot are both reputed to be saftey-freaks. The jumper was serving as a photographer for a student/tandem jump and was reportedly getting in position to film the student's landing. He was under canopy (NOT in freefall) and the accident occured at either 600 or 1000 ft (depending on what version of the story). (Very few people would DARE freefall at 600 ft AGL, I speculate) The Otter Checklists I've seen call out a landing speed of 90 kts, and approach speeds anywhere from 100-140 knots depending on phase of approach. The story is that his legs were hit by the leading edge of the otter, severing them partially or totally. The jumper was able to land, but died at the hospital. Those bits were gleaned from Usenet, CNN, Local media and Dropzone.com. I am not a jumper and live over 800 miles away and have no personal connection to any of this. The rest is my opinion and speculation. Now.. from a medical standpoint, A traumatic amputation usually mangles things in the process.. torn blood vessels dont have as much of a tendency to "self seal" as do tranversely CUT ones (like cutting a vessel with a razor).. and the Femoral (and further down, the Popliteal) arteries are large vessels that can flow a lot of volume. Your heart can pump your entire blood volume in a minute. If there is a big enough hole, you really CAN bleed out that fast. Couple that with torn vessels, mangled legs, the probablility that for the first minute or two (or maybe longer.. people who jumped from the same plane reported hearing sirens as they landed.. so help was CLOSE) the people arriving are NOT trained medical personnel who would KNOW to apply direct pressure to pressure points (above the injury) to try to stop the bleeding (rather than trying to stem it with direct pressure at a mangled injury site). Couple this again with responding medical personnel only having IV fluids to try and raise blood pressure.. IV fluids dont carry oxygen.. hemoglobin does.. and right now there are no acceptable blood substitutes out there (there have been recent trials, but no marketed product).. all this leaves you with a diminishing chance of survival. My speculation is that unless Mr. Wing had paradropped into a MASH unit, he was doomed by his injury, having significantly bled out in the last minute of his descent. Even if a trained paramedic crew was right there and on the scene immediately, they would have had a hell of a fight (to save him) on their hands. Dave wrote: jerry wass wrote: How did the jumper jump outa that plane, travel upward & forward & break his legs on the L.E. of the wing outboard the engine nacele ??? 'twas on the OK news last nite, but didn't catch where it happened.. Jump from high altitude and the jump bird pilot will bring the bird down to pattern altitude at a mind blowing desent rate. A jumper fully tucked up can catch and even outrun the jump plane under the right conditions. In this case, it appears that the a/c was already down in the pattern and the jumper blew through the pattern altitude and struck the a/c from overhead still in freefall. Non-survivable injuries unless the EMT's just happened to be right there when he landed. Craig C. |
#9
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Dave S wrote:
My speculation is that unless Mr. Wing had paradropped into a MASH unit, he was doomed by his injury, having significantly bled out in the last minute of his descent. Even if a trained paramedic crew was right there and on the scene immediately, they would have had a hell of a fight (to save him) on their hands. A paramedic crew can't do squat except try to stop things from getting any worse while rushing him to a surgical (preferably trauma staffed) facility. Unlike cardiac and other medical cases where the paramedics have stuff they can do to actually treat in the field, it's still pretty much swoop and scoop for large-scale trauma. |
#10
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the pilot put a plane (Cessna) into a spin from 10,000 to 12,000 feet and
pull at about 1500 feet, usually near the downwind leg of the When you say spin, do you mean a controlled radial decent, or an O-Crap I'm in a spin? |
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