https://www.avweb.com/flight-safety/10- ... air-crash/
[quote]second crash of a King Air in a little more than a week.[/quote]
Not A Good Job: Addison TX King Air 350
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Sounds similar to the one in Wichita a few years back......
What do friction locks have to do with what appears to be a loss of control accident immediately after take off.??
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Pilots wouldn't like it, but I suspect accident survival rates would improve if a
system was installed in twins, triggered by auto-feather, to pull both throttles
back to idle and to disconnect the control column, so that the aircraft would
descend at the trimmed airspeed in a straight line, to flare by itself in ground
effect.
Perhaps the code for such a system could be farmed out offshore, to be
written for $9 per hour.
system was installed in twins, triggered by auto-feather, to pull both throttles
back to idle and to disconnect the control column, so that the aircraft would
descend at the trimmed airspeed in a straight line, to flare by itself in ground
effect.
Perhaps the code for such a system could be farmed out offshore, to be
written for $9 per hour.
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- Joined: Thu Jun 11, 2015 6:46 pm
[quote author=Colonel Sanders link=topic=9823.msg28231#msg28231 date=1562425679]
Pilots wouldn't like it
[/quote]
Correct. Do not like. Then again, I’m not much of a pilot anymore so whatever keeps a tube of innocent passengers from being murdered by negligence is probably cool.
Pilots wouldn't like it
[/quote]
Correct. Do not like. Then again, I’m not much of a pilot anymore so whatever keeps a tube of innocent passengers from being murdered by negligence is probably cool.
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- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2015 10:31 am
In airspeed, is life.
Lower the nose.
Not sure how to make that simpler.
Food for thought: flying a twin with one engine
is fatal, these days.
There used to be an old stick and rudder pilot
by the name of Bob Hoover, that could shut down
BOTH engines of his twin, then do very nice
surface acro.
Stick and rudder skill is obsolete- I get that. And
Bob Hoover was deeply hated by the regulator.
But I can’t help but thinking that somewhere along
the line, something good got lost.
Lower the nose.
Not sure how to make that simpler.
Food for thought: flying a twin with one engine
is fatal, these days.
There used to be an old stick and rudder pilot
by the name of Bob Hoover, that could shut down
BOTH engines of his twin, then do very nice
surface acro.
Stick and rudder skill is obsolete- I get that. And
Bob Hoover was deeply hated by the regulator.
But I can’t help but thinking that somewhere along
the line, something good got lost.
Judging by the first post here basic flying skills are getting lost.....or are not being learned period
The cost is staggering.
The cost is staggering.
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