06 Nov 2025, 18:43 [ UTC - 5; DST ]
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 18:32 |
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Joined: 05/05/09 Posts: 381 Post Likes: +22 Company: prime concrete const. Location: virginia beach, virginia
Aircraft: be-33
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Username Protected wrote: i know the pilot very well.the plane has a io 550 in it,not a turbine. Wow, that's a fast 550. His 3/15 FlightAware track shows him going 251 knots in level flight. yeah it's a twin turbo 550.it makes 375 horsepower.it climbs indicating 160 kts.
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 18:34 |
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Joined: 12/14/07 Posts: 854 Post Likes: +13 Company: Critter Aviation Location: 7F7 Central Texas
Aircraft: Bonanza V35 N333JP
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Username Protected wrote: If you gotta put your plane down that should be your problem, not some helpless guy on the beach. I'd prosecute this joker for manslaughter. He couldn't see out his windscreen, so I think that'll be up to a DA and a grand jury. But I'd doubt it. Even common people could see this as an "act of God" with its lack of statistical possibility.
_________________ Keep Smilin'!
Dr. Bill Commercial Pilot, Instrument Airplane, ENGLISH PROFICIENT
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 18:50 |
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Joined: 08/30/09 Posts: 143 Company: Autoworks Location: Lincoln Ne [LNK]
Aircraft: Baron 55
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Username Protected wrote: If you gotta put your plane down that should be your problem, not some helpless guy on the beach. I'd prosecute this joker for manslaughter. Losing a prop changes your CG greatly, thus affecting your landing/handling qualities, ask airshow people like sean tucker and steve falon who have lost props. he was lucky just to get it down and you want to lock him up. jim
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 18:54 |
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Joined: 07/05/09 Posts: 4618 Post Likes: +1476 Company: Waypoint Lighting Location: Austin, TX (KGTU)
Aircraft: '65 Deb C33
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Username Protected wrote: Even common people could see this as an "act of God" with its lack of statistical possibility. There is no such thing as an "act of God" anymore........we're now subjected to an "occurrence of nature"......
_________________ Stu
Leave it better than you found it.
http://www.WaypointLighting.com
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 19:25 |
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Joined: 12/14/07 Posts: 854 Post Likes: +13 Company: Critter Aviation Location: 7F7 Central Texas
Aircraft: Bonanza V35 N333JP
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Username Protected wrote: Even common people could see this as an "act of God" with its lack of statistical possibility. There is no such thing as an "act of God" anymore........we're now subjected to an "occurrence of nature"......
Beware: Thread creep...
As long as it's still "one nation under God..", I'll call it an act of God.
When it becomes "one nation under nature..", I'll consider moving to the Bahamas!
_________________ Keep Smilin'!
Dr. Bill Commercial Pilot, Instrument Airplane, ENGLISH PROFICIENT
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 20:22 |
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Joined: 05/05/09 Posts: 381 Post Likes: +22 Company: prime concrete const. Location: virginia beach, virginia
Aircraft: be-33
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Username Protected wrote: He could control his craft well enough to land on a beach. He made a decision to land where he knew there would be people, instead of in the ocean where he knew there wouldn't. The loss of the prop was an act of God, but the death of the man was caused by the pilot's decision to put his own safety ahead of people he certainly knew were on the ground.
His own words: "I've got a lot of issues going on right now," Smith said. "I've got a plane that's all torn up. And I've got a young man that I killed." In other words, his priorities in order of importance: me, my plane, my victim. throw a couple of quarts of oil on your windshield,with no power,and see if you could land without hitting anything....
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Post subject: Re: Turbine Lancair prop comes off Posted: 16 Mar 2010, 21:00 |
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Joined: 02/13/10 Posts: 20344 Post Likes: +25354 Location: Castle Rock, Colorado
Aircraft: Prior C310,BE33,SR22
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Username Protected wrote: A reasonably prudent pilot would also know that landing in water is near certain death. Not so, Ed. If one is "landing", and not the stall/spin crashing, about 90% of ditchings / landings in water are survivable. I would think that is especially true if near a shoreline / beach.
_________________ Arlen Get your motor runnin' Head out on the highway - Mars Bonfire
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