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#11
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"Jeff" wrote:
...your serious..a guy sawed off the tips of his prop and then flew the plane again? I'm completely serious. There were numerous witnesses. There are other wild tales about this guy, but less well documented so I won't repeat them here. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#12
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yea... that was it..
BT "Ray Andraka" wrote in message ... I also saw the article. I think it was in IFR refresher last month. BTIZ wrote: This months report is FLYING mag is a repeat of a report that I read in another Aviation Mag, I can't find it right now, but it was either AOPA or Pvt Pilot. The "first" article was much more detailed, described the same "non-maint" issues right down to the radio shop and the duct tape gas cap. but to answer the question. Yes there are people and aircraft out there like that, and they are not policed. Even internally, people hate to "Squeal" on others, "as long as it does not affect me" syndrome. Sadly, it does effect them, either through higher insurance costs, or maintenance shops that go out of business when they get "Sued" for allowing an aircraft to fly, even if it was 3 yrs since it was in his shop. BT "Jeff" wrote in message ... Has anyone read the new flying magazine? There is an article in it about a guy in a bonanza who crashed doing an instrument approach using a hand held non-aviation GPS, but whats worse is his maint. on his airplane, putting tape over the gas tank when he lost his gas cap and so on. I wonder if there are many people out there who actually take these kind of chances. -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. President, the Andraka Consulting Group, Inc. 401/884-7930 Fax 401/884-7950 http://www.andraka.com "They that give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin, 1759 |
#13
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Yes, they are out there, and these folks don't help GA.
Clyde "Jeff" wrote in message ... Has anyone read the new flying magazine? There is an article in it about a guy in a bonanza who crashed doing an instrument approach using a hand held non-aviation GPS, but whats worse is his maint. on his airplane, putting tape over the gas tank when he lost his gas cap and so on. I wonder if there are many people out there who actually take these kind of chances. |
#14
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Newps,
So we found a wheel chock and a mallet. Well, I would walk away rather than being part in something like that. I sure think aviation is over-regulated, but that'S a major Forrest Gump moment: Stupid is as stupid does. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#15
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On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 20:55:24 GMT, Jay Honeck wrote:
I wonder if there are many people out there who actually take these kind of chances. I've not personally witnessed any of the kind outlined in the article. However, I see enough pilots simply jump in and go -- without so much as checking the oil or looking in the gas tanks -- to understand how this sort of thing happens. There was a Beech Duke at Houston Gulf. I swear that the guy who flew it (about once every four months) wouldn't have noticed if the right wing was missing beyond the engine nascelle (until he tried to rotate of course). The plane had a LOT of defects which were readily apparent to the most cursory inspection, including some very bad corrosion on the vertical stab. There was another at SPX too, who crashed a Bonanza on his third attempt to get in on the ILS into Hobby (the weather was too bad). On his third attempt he ran out of gas. This was a Bo with the tip tanks, too. He ended up crashing into a house. The only thing he did right is control the aircraft all the way to impact. Somehow he survived with only minor injuries. He had delusions of rebuilding the plane too (and from what I saw there wasn't an unbent piece of metal left). -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#16
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Newps wrote in message news:vaWSa.115114$H17.35404@sccrnsc02...
Last month a buddy taxiied his J-5 into a hole, a seriously big hole. One prop tip was bent about 30 degrees back from straight, the other just had the paint scraped. So we found a wheel chock and a mallet. With a couple guys holding onto the prop, another holding the chock against the back of the prop the other guy whacked on the prop until it was more or less straight. Then he flew home. I wouldn't call this uncommon. That must be a Montana thing. I met a guy at the Spotted Bear backcountry strip who was lucky enough to have had just enough altitude to glide there. His crank had snapped over the adjacent Wilderness Area. Turns out he'd taxied into a snowbank a few months prior. When I talked to him, he still hadn't made the connection between his prop strike and the broken crank on his Champ. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#17
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"Dylan Smith" wrote:
There was a Beech Duke at Houston Gulf. I swear that the guy who flew it (about once every four months) wouldn't have noticed if the right wing was missing beyond the engine nascelle (until he tried to rotate of course). The plane had a LOT of defects which were readily apparent to the most cursory inspection, including some very bad corrosion on the vertical stab. There's a Cardinal at one of our local fields with corrosion so bad there are actually holes in it. I hear its tail number on CTAF once in a while. This kind of thing is not too uncommon, apparently. It's a wonder these aircraft don't show up in the accident reports more often. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#18
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Jeff wrote:
Has anyone read the new flying magazine? There is an article in it about a guy in a bonanza who crashed doing an instrument approach using a hand held non-aviation GPS, but whats worse is his maint. on his airplane, putting tape over the gas tank when he lost his gas cap and so on. I wonder if there are many people out there who actually take these kind of chances. I assume you're talking about the Aftermath column. IMO that column is worth the price of the magazine alone. Read it long enough and you'll soon learn there are lots of people like that out there. Some of the pilots whose crashes are profiled in there are so stupid it almost makes you feel complacent because you know you would never do that. For example, the guy who tried to fly an overloaded Warrior from Reno to Denver without completing his club checkout, and oh btw he was also on Meth when he and his friends went into a lake. Or the farmer who had no logbooks for his 172, kept it in a barn, never did maintanence, used tractor gas in it and didn't have a valid medical. Or the welder who fixed his own engine block to save money. But as you get that complacent, then they come out with one that makes you gasp and realize that could be you if you don't keep your safety edge. Like the midair between an experienced and a student pilot who were both talking to (and trusting) the same class D controller who lost track of them in the haze. Or the guy who went down because it was Sunday, he had to get back home on Monday, and the weather was OK when he took off but it just got progressively and slowly worse and by the time it was no longer VFR he was trapped with no way out. Or the professional pilots who got complacent and lost focus on the "easy" short last leg of a long flight home. Mike -- PP-ASEL PA28-161 http://www.wingsofcarolina.org Note: email invalid. Respond on newsgroup |
#19
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TTA Cherokee Driver wrote:
Or the farmer who had no logbooks for his 172, kept it in a barn, never did maintanence, used tractor gas in it and didn't have a valid medical. Of those, the only one which really impacts safety is the lack of maintanence. |
#20
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You guys worry too much. I've got some great pictures of all these
hands working on that prop. Thomas Borchert wrote: Newps, So we found a wheel chock and a mallet. Well, I would walk away rather than being part in something like that. I sure think aviation is over-regulated, but that'S a major Forrest Gump moment: Stupid is as stupid does. |
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