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#1
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I was out hopping some of the local airports last Saturday night and had a
very near miss with a very large bird. It appeared to be a large owl, or something similar. I was at about 50 to 100 feet on take-off, about 75 knots, and seriously out of runway. The whole situation just got me to thinking about bird strikes and light GA aircraft. I have seen and heard a lot of first and second hand stories about deer strikes on quiet runways, and usually do a low pass to check, especially the quiet places. But I guess I had never heard or seriously considered a bird strike with such a large bird. Any first had experiences out there? Any speculation on what could have happened if he struck the wing tip, or better yet the propeller arc? I was flying a Cessna 172SP. His flight path was exactly the opposite direction. |
#2
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On Aug 20, 1:51 pm, "Maxwell" wrote:
I was out hopping some of the local airports last Saturday night and had a very near miss with a very large bird. It appeared to be a large owl, or something similar. I was at about 50 to 100 feet on take-off, about 75 knots, and seriously out of runway. The whole situation just got me to thinking about bird strikes and light GA aircraft. I have seen and heard a lot of first and second hand stories about deer strikes on quiet runways, and usually do a low pass to check, especially the quiet places. But I guess I had never heard or seriously considered a bird strike with such a large bird. Any first had experiences out there? Any speculation on what could have happened if he struck the wing tip, or better yet the propeller arc? I was flying a Cessna 172SP. His flight path was exactly the opposite direction. I've had many bird strikes (100's) in both airplanes and helicopters. Have had several that came thru the windscreen into the cockpit. On one birdstrike, the bird/s glanced off my helmet and left a near perfect imprint of feathers when I ducked. The birds were dead and I had a large hole in the windscreen. Landed without further incident. I've never been injured from a bird strike but have had severe damage to the aircraft that required some expensive repairs. One incident that caused me to rethink birdstrikes was finding a piece of plexiglass shaped like a dagger with extremely sharp edges inside the cockpit. If I had been hit in the throat with that piece, could I have bled out before I could get back on the ground? Perhaps..... and it sure made me think. I used that same piece of plexiglass for a letter opener for years. Perhaps the most unusual was a little Mallard hen that came thru the windscreen of a helicopter and flew around in the cockpit until I knocked it down into the chin bubble. From my experiences, if faced with an imminent bird strike, I'll try to fly up and turn to take the strike on the belly of the aircraft rather than thru the windscreen. I've hit birds with both prop and rotorblade. It always 100% of the time resulted in a red explosion with blood and guts on the window. There was a fast shudder/vibration that went away in seconds. I've seen some major damage from birdstrikes and on occasion, an aircraft that was brought down by them. If you haven't, check the OopsList.com and find a lot of birdstrike pics. Cheers Ol S&B flyin buzzard - World INfamous Pilot/Instructor |
#3
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Hawk into the upper curvature of a C182 windscreen. No damage, very loud.
Sparrows into the air intake of an Archer, discovered post flight. Unknown into the prop and spread alongside the cowl of a Lance Near miss of a turkey buzzard in an Aztec Saw another Aztec that had a goose crunch the leading edge back to the spar. Jim "Maxwell" wrote in message ... I was out hopping some of the local airports last Saturday night and had a very near miss with a very large bird. It appeared to be a large owl, or something similar. I was at about 50 to 100 feet on take-off, about 75 knots, and seriously out of runway. The whole situation just got me to thinking about bird strikes and light GA aircraft. I have seen and heard a lot of first and second hand stories about deer strikes on quiet runways, and usually do a low pass to check, especially the quiet places. But I guess I had never heard or seriously considered a bird strike with such a large bird. Any first had experiences out there? Any speculation on what could have happened if he struck the wing tip, or better yet the propeller arc? I was flying a Cessna 172SP. His flight path was exactly the opposite direction. |
#4
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Maxwell wrote:
Any first had experiences out there? Any speculation on what could have happened if he struck the wing tip, or better yet the propeller arc? I was flying a Cessna 172SP. His flight path was exactly the opposite direction. I hit a similar sized bird (turkey buzard) with the wing of a Skyhawk. It pushed a section of the leading edge between two ribs back to the spar. |
#5
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Maxwell,
Any first had experiences out there? A hawk hitting the wing of the DA-40 I was flying over Scottsdale, AZ. No damage, I just had to wipe off the blood spatter and feathers. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#6
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![]() "Jim Stewart" wrote in message ... Any first had experiences out there? Any speculation on what could have happened if he struck the wing tip, or better yet the propeller arc? We had a C-152 on the training line that had a birdstrike dent in one leading edge. I guess it was deemed just small enough to not require repair, but that plane briskly dropped that wing every time in a stall. My own experience is almost too insignificant to mention..a hit on my lower fuze just as I was rolling out into final on my very first flight in a single-seat glider. I only mention it because most of the time I have hit birds in cars (and that one time in an aircraft) I was turning at the time. Perhaps birds assume that all machines travel in a straight line? Vaughn |
#7
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A lot of seagulls at kgyy. I often see them dodging me on takeoff but
have never hit one. Read an article about somebody who hit one with a Velocity a while back - came right through the ws into the pilot's face. He couldn't see anything because eyes were covered with guts and gore. Fortunately he had a companion who was able to control the aircraft while he got cleaned up enough to land. It is part of the reason why I passed up an opportunity to install a 1- piece windshield in the Arrow several years ago. |
#8
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Maxwell wrote:
I was out hopping some of the local airports last Saturday night and had a very near miss with a very large bird. It appeared to be a large owl, or something similar. I was at about 50 to 100 feet on take-off, about 75 knots, and seriously out of runway. The whole situation just got me to thinking about bird strikes and light GA aircraft. I have seen and heard a lot of first and second hand stories about deer strikes on quiet runways, and usually do a low pass to check, especially the quiet places. But I guess I had never heard or seriously considered a bird strike with such a large bird. Any first had experiences out there? Any speculation on what could have happened if he struck the wing tip, or better yet the propeller arc? I was flying a Cessna 172SP. His flight path was exactly the opposite direction. Not first hand, but about a month ago an instructor and student in a 150 hit a hawk a couple miles away. The hawk broke the windscreen causing so much drag that the instructor had to land in a tomato field. Everyone except the hawk and 150 escaped with minor injuries. |
#9
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![]() Last week I landed on the grass at Plum Island MA and was rather amazed to see fifty or a hundred Canada geese at the far end of the runway. Perhaps unwisely, I braked and turned around. (Probably I would have done better to taxi toward them and scare them off.) Of course when I took off again, all the honkers took fright and took flight. Happily the Cub can climb faster than a goose. Blue skies! -- Dan Ford Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941-1942 new from HarperCollins www.FlyingTigersBook.com |
#10
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On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 08:09:52 -0700, Paul kgyy
wrote: A lot of seagulls at kgyy. I often see them dodging me on takeoff but have never hit one. Read an article about somebody who hit one with a Velocity a while back - came right through the ws into the pilot's face. He couldn't see anything because eyes were covered with guts and gore. Fortunately he had a companion who was able to control the aircraft while he got cleaned up enough to land. It is part of the reason why I passed up an opportunity to install a 1- piece windshield in the Arrow several years ago. Depends on the windshield. It could be one of the reasons for going to a one piece. The one piece, speed sloped (tm) windshield in the Bonanza is far stronger than the original two piece. Mine is 1/2" thick. I've bounced some pretty big birds off it. It's silent in torrential rain where the old plexiglass in the Cherokee 180 was deafening in heavy rain. |
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