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#11
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Gary Drescher wrote:
It's not impossibly tight if it's planned and executed properly. In fact, there's no (legal) choice but to make the turn. The VFR corridor over the East River ends at the northern tip of Roosevelt Island. At that point, you either make a U-turn or bust LGA's Class B (unless you have a clearance). thanks for the very insightful post. |
#12
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"Jim Macklin" wrote in message
news:YLhXg.2547$XX2.2048@dukeread04... Google for "524 e 72nd st.,new york city" and look at the sat photo. There is a soccer field just northeast across the river. IF they were having some engine problem, that could have looked like the best place to land. Passing the tops of the buildings and with probable winds aloft being twice as strong as surface winds [maybe 25 kts. ] and the venturi effect, the plane could have easily been turned directly into the building. Just a guess. I don't understand your scenario. They'd have been flying north along the east shore of the narrow river, then making a U-turn to fly south along the west shore. Aside from the river itself, plausible nearby landing sites are along the east shore and on the island in the middle of the river; I don't see how heading for those sites would have led them to crash on the west side of the river. (Plus, there was no distress call or other indication of engine problems.) If they flew too fast, making the turn too wide (which is my guess), they'd have hit the north side of a building on the west shore--which they did. --Gary "Blasto" wrote in message ups.com... | Confusing reports on the Lidle crash-- Mayor Bloomberg, sounding | utterly confident in his sources, says the plane took off from | Teterboro, circled the Statue of Liberty, flew up (south-to-north) the | East River, then into the building. A few minutes earlier, a CNN | reporter using PASSUR asserted that after taking off the plane tracked | straight west-to-east over Central Park, turned right and followed the | East River (north-to-south) and suddenly banked right into the | building. Given that the impact was on the building's north face, the | latter account seems more likely. | | Anyone have newer info? | | -- | B | |
#13
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I'm just trying to understand what happened. Looked at the
Google sat photo, the soccer field looked like the best and closest landing area. Not really sure if the locations is totally correct. All I know for sure is that the news media hires idiots who can fill hours with nothing. I do know from experience that winds around the buildings can cause lots of turbulence which could cause control problems. Just where the airplane was when the problem began is unknown, all we know for sure is where it ended up. All my flying in the NYC area has been in King Air and Beechjet aircraft, have not run the VFR corridors. Don't have a current chart and not sure what they did and what the rules are. Anybody know of a free download for a terminal NYC chart that shows the area in question? "Gary Drescher" wrote in message . .. | "Jim Macklin" wrote in message | news:YLhXg.2547$XX2.2048@dukeread04... | Google for "524 e 72nd st.,new york city" and look at the | sat photo. There is a soccer field just northeast across | the river. IF they were having some engine problem, that | could have looked like the best place to land. Passing the | tops of the buildings and with probable winds aloft being | twice as strong as surface winds [maybe 25 kts. ] and the | venturi effect, the plane could have easily been turned | directly into the building. Just a guess. | | I don't understand your scenario. They'd have been flying north along the | east shore of the narrow river, then making a U-turn to fly south along the | west shore. Aside from the river itself, plausible nearby landing sites are | along the east shore and on the island in the middle of the river; I don't | see how heading for those sites would have led them to crash on the west | side of the river. (Plus, there was no distress call or other indication of | engine problems.) | | If they flew too fast, making the turn too wide (which is my guess), they'd | have hit the north side of a building on the west shore--which they did. | | --Gary | | | | | "Blasto" wrote in message | ups.com... | | Confusing reports on the Lidle crash-- Mayor Bloomberg, | sounding | | utterly confident in his sources, says the plane took off | from | | Teterboro, circled the Statue of Liberty, flew up | (south-to-north) the | | East River, then into the building. A few minutes earlier, | a CNN | | reporter using PASSUR asserted that after taking off the | plane tracked | | straight west-to-east over Central Park, turned right and | followed the | | East River (north-to-south) and suddenly banked right into | the | | building. Given that the impact was on the building's | north face, the | | latter account seems more likely. | | | | Anyone have newer info? | | | | -- | | B | | | | | | |
#14
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"Jim Macklin" wrote in message
news:4ApXg.2566$XX2.1045@dukeread04... All my flying in the NYC area has been in King Air and Beechjet aircraft, have not run the VFR corridors. Don't have a current chart and not sure what they did and what the rules are. Anybody know of a free download for a terminal NYC chart that shows the area in question? http://skyvector.com/ |
#15
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Peter R. wrote:
How does an aircraft hit the north face of a building along the river there? One possibility is that the pilot lost control of the aircraft during the turn, say due to a stall. Another possibility is that the pilot misjudged the point at which to begin the turn. Accellerated stall is a possibility. Overbank an already tight turn. Remember that once the stall occurs it's not only altitude that is lost, lift is what is turning the aircraft. |
#16
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"Jim Macklin" wrote:
Anybody know of a free download for a terminal NYC chart that shows the area in question? http://skyvector.com/ |
#17
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"Jim Macklin" wrote:
Anybody know of a free download for a terminal NYC chart that shows the area in question? http://aviationtoolbox.org/raw_data/...20TAC%2069.tif (31MB) |
#18
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Tom Fleischman wrote:
The corridor [...] includes helicopter and sometimes seaplane traffic. Sometimes? I used to have an office overlooking the East River a few blocks from the 23rd street SPB. Seaplanes come in and out on a regular basis all day long. Scheduled service out to the Hamptons. Mostly Cessna Caravan amphibians. I chatted with one of the pilots one day. He said the float system cost as much as the rest of the airplane. |
#19
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![]() Roy Smith wrote: Sometimes? I used to have an office overlooking the East River a few blocks from the 23rd street SPB. Seaplanes come in and out on a regular basis all day long. Scheduled service out to the Hamptons. Mostly Cessna Caravan amphibians. I chatted with one of the pilots one day. He said the float system cost as much as the rest of the airplane. I did some flying with an operator out of Bridgeport CT (BDR) that flew Caravan amphibs into the 23rd St dock. We flew commuters back & forth to Easthampton (HTO). And yes, the Wipline amphib floats aren't cheap, they cost about 250k for the pair (A tad less than a $1.5M C208 though) |
#20
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Gary Drescher wrote:
I don't understand your scenario. They'd have been flying north along the east shore of the narrow river, then making a U-turn to fly south along the west shore. Aside from the river itself, plausible nearby landing sites are along the east shore and on the island in the middle of the river; I don't see how heading for those sites would have led them to crash on the west side of the river. (Plus, there was no distress call or other indication of engine problems.) If they flew too fast, making the turn too wide (which is my guess), they'd have hit the north side of a building on the west shore--which they did. --Gary Also, the winds were coming from ENE gusting to 22. Going northbound on the west fork of the East River and making a lefthand turn, the turning radius would be significantly wider. This would have contributed to the "surprise" factor as well (not unlike the typical overshooting the final in a crosswind situation). Marco |
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