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#1
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We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on
takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the ground, through a small grove of trees. According to reliable sources, the gear was down an locked, flaps in takeoff position and fuel selectors on "Aux". Fortunately, he was the only one aboard. Condolences to the family. |
#2
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Take-offs are prohibited using the aux-tanks in the C55 and
all other Baron models. The old style handbook for those Barons did not specify that take-off be at Vmc+5 . Gear retraction is part of the after take-off procedure. Poorly trained pilots destroy many good airplanes./ "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() left engine on | takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the | ground, through a small grove of trees. | | According to reliable sources, the gear was down an locked, flaps in | takeoff position and fuel selectors on "Aux". | | Fortunately, he was the only one aboard. | | Condolences to the family. |
#3
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On Mar 6, 2:42 pm, Orval Fairbairn wrote:
We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the Let it serve as a reminder to all pilots, especially the twin jockeys, to practice those engine outs. |
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On Mar 6, 6:15 am, "James Sleeman" wrote:
On Mar 6, 2:42 pm, Orval Fairbairn wrote: We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the Let it serve as a reminder to all pilots, especially the twin jockeys, to practice those engine outs. The Baron is known to be a handful if an engine poops near Vmc... You have to be immediate in chopping both throttles in that situation... In a more perfect world Barons would be flown only by pro pilots (who are assumed to be current on engine cuts) denny - who is too old and too slow to be flying a Baron... Actually, I should be a heavy iron pilot, who when faced with an engine out, will set his coffee cup down (carefully), nudge the copilot awake, point at the engine instruments, and say, "Did you see that?".... |
#5
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James Sleeman opined
On Mar 6, 2:42 pm, Orval Fairbairn wrote: We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the Let it serve as a reminder to all pilots, especially the twin jockeys, to practice those engine outs. During take off, it is best to think of a light twin as a very expensive, and unreliable single. If an engine stops, land straight ahead. -ash Cthulhu in 2007! Why wait for nature? |
#6
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The Baron is a pussycat, you've got to be a dolt to screw it
up. "Denny" wrote in message oups.com... | On Mar 6, 6:15 am, "James Sleeman" wrote: | On Mar 6, 2:42 pm, Orval Fairbairn wrote: | | We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on | takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the | | Let it serve as a reminder to all pilots, especially the twin jockeys, | to practice those engine outs. | | The Baron is known to be a handful if an engine poops near Vmc... You | have to be immediate in chopping both throttles in that situation... | In a more perfect world Barons would be flown only by pro pilots (who | are assumed to be current on engine cuts) | | denny - who is too old and too slow to be flying a Baron... | | Actually, I should be a heavy iron pilot, who when faced with an | engine out, will set his coffee cup down (carefully), nudge the | copilot awake, point at the engine instruments, and say, "Did you see | that?".... | |
#7
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James Sleeman writes:
Let it serve as a reminder to all pilots, especially the twin jockeys, to practice those engine outs. If you fail at practice, you die just as surely as if you had never practiced. Dangerous things should be practiced in a simulator. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#8
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I spoke a while ago to a friend who had a Baron (I think a B58) - he
eventually sold it looking to get a pressurized one - but that is another story. He was trained very well - and went for flights with many CFIs who just wanted twin time and with other pilots in their Barons. Without fail he had horror stories of those pilots and CFIs. No checklists, not caring about vmc, no callouts, nothing. It is no wonder people kill themselves - the training and checkrides are a joke. Same goes for the instrument checkride around here. Sad to hear, but it is a lesson for the rest of us. Be prepared and train. Orval Fairbairn wrote: We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the ground, through a small grove of trees. According to reliable sources, the gear was down an locked, flaps in takeoff position and fuel selectors on "Aux". Fortunately, he was the only one aboard. Condolences to the family. |
#9
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![]() "Tim" wrote: I spoke a while ago to a friend who had a Baron (I think a B58) - he eventually sold it looking to get a pressurized one - but that is another story. He was trained very well - and went for flights with many CFIs who just wanted twin time and with other pilots in their Barons. Without fail he had horror stories of those pilots and CFIs. No checklists, not caring about vmc, no callouts, nothing. It is no wonder people kill themselves - the training and checkrides are a joke. Yep. I have two acquaintences who own twins; a Baron and a C-310. They've been flying a lot longer than I with no problems. I'd as soon sit on a toilet full of snakes as fly again with either of them. Same goes for the instrument checkride around here. That sounds familiar, too, alas. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
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On Mar 6, 6:33 am, "Ash Wyllie" wrote:
James Sleeman opined On Mar 6, 2:42 pm, Orval Fairbairn wrote: We lost a friend yesterday in a Baron C55. He lost the left engine on takeoff, apparently stalled, went inverted and lawn darted into the Let it serve as a reminder to all pilots, especially the twin jockeys, to practice those engine outs. During take off, it is best to think of a light twin as a very expensive, and unreliable single. If an engine stops, land straight ahead. -ash Cthulhu in 2007! Why wait for nature? Ash, That is pretty much my take on light twins. If you lost an engine on takeoff at low altitude you are better off chopping both throttles and landing it. Only turbine twins typically have enough power to climb out on a single engine without having to operate near VMC. Dean |
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