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![]() "Mortimer Schnerd, RN" wrote in message . .. Skywise wrote: Why so fast, "90 mph"? What are the v speeds of this plane? I couldn't find them readily online. Looking at the photo it didn't appear the flaps were down at all. I'm thinking with flaps they could have gone slower down the runway and the pickup would have been able to keep up easier and they'd have more time on each attempt. I always used 80 knots (or about 90 mph) on final in the C-210. You could slow it down a little more but you're messing around with "coffin corner" if you have to climb out again. These guys did an excellent job. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE The coffin corner is where the Mach limit and the stall speed come together at extremely high altitudes. Mike MU-2 |
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Mike Rapoport wrote:
The coffin corner is where the Mach limit and the stall speed come together at extremely high altitudes. Well, then... a poor choice of words. Is "behind the power curve" better? My point is you'd be flying close to the ground with no altitude to trade for airspeed. I can't imagine trying to fly right off the ground like that without carrying power... and maybe you won't have enough excess to climb out if you get to wallowing too much. Remember, it took these guys 10 tries to get both gear down. There was no reason to expect it not to take another few tries to get them both down. I think they flew an appropriate airspeed. I'm not sure why they didn't carry any flap unless they were afraid they'd sink when the flaps were retracted on the go-around. I had one other thought on the matter: lucky for them they weren't flying an older C-210. Those had the huge clamshell gear doors that had to cycle after the gear came down and locked. Dropping the gear on those resulted in a huge increase in drag that would push you against the shoulder harness for a few moments. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
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These guys did an excellent job.
Sorry, but I agree with Kyle. I'm glad it came out okay, but... ....those guys are dumber than a box o' rocks. A plane is nothing but a tool, and it sure ain't worth risking lives to save -- and they put several lives at risk with their silly stunt. Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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Of course that is taking it for granted the pilot had the skill to belly it
in without killing everyone on board. Dang leave it to you guys! An A&P saves a pilots butt and the poor A&P still can't get a break! ![]() someone knows the outcome could very well be their own death,...hmmmm does hero come to mind? ![]() Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech and you can bet your sweet bippy , you would have crashed if you were waiting on me to pull your gear down riding in a truck! ![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:K00Ce.157526$_o.60441@attbi_s71... These guys did an excellent job. Sorry, but I agree with Kyle. I'm glad it came out okay, but... ...those guys are dumber than a box o' rocks. A plane is nothing but a tool, and it sure ain't worth risking lives to save -- and they put several lives at risk with their silly stunt. Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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"W P Dixon" wrote in
: Of course that is taking it for granted the pilot had the skill to belly it in without killing everyone on board. Dang leave it to you guys! An A&P saves a pilots butt and the poor A&P still can't get a break! ![]() When someone knows the outcome could very well be their own death,...hmmmm does hero come to mind? ![]() please...... Patrick student SPL aircraft structural mech and you can bet your sweet bippy , you would have crashed if you were waiting on me to pull your gear down riding in a truck! ![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:K00Ce.157526$_o.60441@attbi_s71... These guys did an excellent job. Sorry, but I agree with Kyle. I'm glad it came out okay, but... ...those guys are dumber than a box o' rocks. A plane is nothing but a tool, and it sure ain't worth risking lives to save -- and they put several lives at risk with their silly stunt. Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Perhaps the problem prevented them from bringing the gear back up? Brian -- http://www.skywise711.com - Lasers, Seismology, Astronomy, Skepticism Seismic FAQ: http://www.skywise711.com/SeismicFAQ/SeismicFAQ.html Blog: http://www.skywise711.com/Blog Sed quis custodiet ipsos Custodes? |
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Jay Honeck wrote:
Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. Maybe yes, maybe no. I've mentioned before I've crashed twice. The first one was a C-210 with a main gear that collapsed. It started with a dead stick landing and me holding off dropping the gear until I cleared the trees at the approach end of St. Lucie County (FL). As it was I brushed them slightly, then put the gear down. Those giant damned gear doors opened, the plane fell out of the sky, the gear came down and the left one didn't lock. I touched down with the gear doors still hanging out and immediately started an uncontrollable turn to the left. When we came to a stop, we were facing 180° the other way. No prop strike, but I dragged the left wing, the left gear door got trashed and the empennage got canted about 15-20°... some major structural damage. Nobody got hurt but if I'd hit a drainage ditch along the way it would have turned out much worse. It's real easy to second guess these guys. I'm just not sure it's appropriate. -- Mortimer Schnerd, RN VE |
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It's real easy to second guess these guys. I'm just not sure it's
appropriate. You're probably right. All's well that ends well, and those guys accomplished a very difficult thing. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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On Sat, 16 Jul 2005 04:27:22 +0000, Jay Honeck wrote:
...those guys are dumber than a box o' rocks. A plane is nothing but a tool, and it sure ain't worth risking lives to save -- and they put several lives at risk with their silly stunt. Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. You've got it completely correct. A gear-up landing is no big deal. Shoot for the concrete rather than grass. Land slow. Slide a bit, and climb out. Call the insurance company - that is what you pay premiums for. Despite what you see on TV or what breathless reporters suggest, landing gear-up does not automatically cause the plane to flip over and explode in a fireball. It is a real shame that we all, as pilots or CFIs, don't seem to be able to convey this piece of information to our peers or students. This has been discussed since the dawn of avilation, and for at least the last 15 years on Usenet (see http://makeashorterlink.com/?B36F2507B ). The classic example of this was the flight that killed about 6 people, including the senator from Pennsylvania. Rather that simply landing with a gear-unsafe indication, the result was a midair. Stupid, stupid, stupid. |
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Jay Honeck wrote:
These guys did an excellent job. Sorry, but I agree with Kyle. I'm glad it came out okay, but... ...those guys are dumber than a box o' rocks. A plane is nothing but a tool, and it sure ain't worth risking lives to save -- and they put several lives at risk with their silly stunt. Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. Nah, some things are worth doing just to see if you can do it. Your statement could easily be said about sky diving, rock climbing or any of myriad other activities. I'd give something like this a try in a heart beat. If all of the participants are volunteers, then I add nothing wrong with giving this a try. Sure, things may go awry, but that is life. I wouldn't do this with kids in the airplane or anyone who didn't understand and accept the risks, but if I wasn't risking the life of anyone other than myself and other volunteers, then I see no issue. Matt |
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Maybe you got a point here. As long as those people knew the risks, I don't
see any reason to call them stupid. I wouldn't do that myself. It is not the first time I heard about that kind of attempt. I have seen it before on clip. Look at this way: a fireman walk into a burning house in order to save the house from burning down. Is it stupid? Let the house burn down? Toks Desalu PP-ASEL Dyin' to Soar! "Matt Whiting" wrote in message ... Jay Honeck wrote: These guys did an excellent job. Sorry, but I agree with Kyle. I'm glad it came out okay, but... ...those guys are dumber than a box o' rocks. A plane is nothing but a tool, and it sure ain't worth risking lives to save -- and they put several lives at risk with their silly stunt. Belly the plane in, jack it up, fix it, and everyone walks away. Nah, some things are worth doing just to see if you can do it. Your statement could easily be said about sky diving, rock climbing or any of myriad other activities. I'd give something like this a try in a heart beat. If all of the participants are volunteers, then I add nothing wrong with giving this a try. Sure, things may go awry, but that is life. I wouldn't do this with kids in the airplane or anyone who didn't understand and accept the risks, but if I wasn't risking the life of anyone other than myself and other volunteers, then I see no issue. Matt |
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