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Shirl:
Hi Jay -- last October 18th (2006), my airplane was totaled in an emergency landing in the desert due to a complete engine failure (oil cooler split on start-up, engine seized about 6 minutes into the flight). We thankfully walked away with minor cuts/bruises, thanks in large part to some luck in that we got far enough to be away from houses/buildings and were over the desert when it quit (although the desert is NOT as flat as it looks from 50 feet up!), and that I was with my CFIG who made a great landing on some rough desert floor and kept "flying" till the gear snapped off and it abruptly went down on its chin. Our biggest scars are internal, but we are flying again, having learned a lot from the experience. It was obvious that the oil cooler split at one of the bottom fins, but the NTSB removed the cooler and the thermo-coupler for further testing. As of a few days ago, there still has been no final report issued, and we too are awaiting that for various reasons. I've been told it usually takes around 10 months, give or take, for a final report to be issued, and that obviously, accidents involving fatalities take priority. As for the comparison with other more recent accidents that have been laid to rest, the investigation and results of those other accidents may simply be more black-and-white and therefore easier/faster to resolve and close. I'm about to call the NTSB and ask if/when we can expect a final report. I'll let you know if I find out anything that may be helpful. "Matt Barrow" wrote: What were you flying?, certified, or home-built? A 1961 Shinn, predecessor to the Varga. They are certified, but they only made less than 200 of them, there are probably around 150 still flying. It was supposed to be competition for the C-150 as a primary trainer, but it never really caught on. It's an O-320, 2-seat, tandem-with-canopy, tricycle that flies with a stick. Great, fun little airplane. The FAA was there less than 30 minutes after it happened. After making sure our injuries were minor, the first thing they said they were going to need were the aircraft logbooks, which I am meticulous about, thank goodness. At least you walked away with the only personal damage being to your ego. :~) It wasn't pilot error, so the damage wasn't to ego, in fact the FAA investigator said the other two oil-loss, engine failures he had investigated were both fatal, so he was complimentary on how we handled it. The worst part was going through the scary experience, the apprehension you feel afterward, and realizing how QUICKLY everything happens after the engine fails and quits -- you don't have much time to make those critical decisions. We walked away with some valuable experience in addition to our minor injuries. We do many things differently now. I guess we must have been fairly well prepared or we wouldn't have walked away, but we're even moreso now. |
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