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On Aug 31, 11:40*am, Jim Logajan wrote:
Ian Strachan wrote: On Aug 28, 11:27 pm, " wrote: some of us also fly Pawnee towplanes and have a certain interest in what happened. * This may already be known to you, and it may have nothing to do with this accident, but it appears that Pawnees have been built with three different types of fuel tanks, with one type accounting for a disproportionate share of post-crash fires. In 1987 the U.S. NTSB issued the following recommendation to Piper Aircraft regarding the higher incidence of post-crash fire fatalities of those aircraft having a fiberglass fuel tank: http://www.ntsb.gov/Recs/letters/1987/A87_100.pdf The accident aircraft had a serial number of 25-468, so if the NTSB recommendation was not followed for that aircraft and it still had the same tank, it may have had a fiberglass fuel tank and therefore among the group showing the highest percentage of fatalities and injuries due to post-crash fires. Turning to this tragic accident, in very general terms, what happened? That cannot be "secret", surely? Gary Boggs' posts have the most pertinent information. Also, see news video link I include below. In particular, what were the approximate flight paths of the towplane and also of the glider? *That will indicate a lot, and rule out some causes such as structural failure (my club uses a 235hp Pawnee amongst others, so I have a definite interest!) A possible cause could be engine failure (full or partial, the latter often being more difficult to deal with), although landing straight ahead should not normally have fatal consequences. *Did the towplane turn after releasing the glider? *Someone must know. The towplane landed approximately straight ahead into a field at the north end of the runway. There is a local TV news video at the following URL, and in it they have a shot from a helicopter where you can see the area of blackend burned grass where he landed at about 1:28 into the video: http://kezi.com/news/local/138834 Here's a Google map link of the airport:http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ie...123.007479&spn... The NTSB numbers would not seem to be statistically meaningful except to say crashed Pawnees are known to burn regardless of tank type. The number of crashes is too small to say one tank type is better than another. There are other airplanes with worse post crash fire records. The Beechcraft Baron has fuel drains as the lowest part of the aircraft with the gear retracted so in a gear-up landing they are the first things to contact the runway. Fuel always spills and a fire almost always follows. |
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