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Status of Comair FO (Update)

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The_Russian

Low Level Pilot
Joined
Sep 3, 2003
Posts
2,574
By JEFFREY McMURRAY, Associated Press Writer 9 minutes ago

LEXINGTON, Ky. - Doctors have amputated the left leg of a co-pilot whose plane crashed on takeoff after turning onto the wrong runway, and he does not remember the accident that killed 49 people, his family said Monday.
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James Polehinke, the lone survivor of the Aug. 27 crash at the Blue Grass Airport, faces several additional surgeries to repair fractures, one involving his spinal cord, the family said.
Polehinke "does not remember anything," the family said in a statement. He is asking about his family and dogs and wants to go home.
"He is more wakeful at times and more communicative, but is still not completely lucid and currently has no recollection of the accident," the statement said.
Polehinke remains in serious condition at University of Kentucky Hospital.
The family said he should be able to begin rehabilitation after the surgeries, but he is not expected to be released for several weeks, university spokesman Jay Blanton said.
A police officer pulled Polehinke from the charred wreckage of ComAir Flight 5191 after the plane struggled to get airborne and crashed into a field.
According to federal investigators, the flight's captain, Jeffrey Clay, taxied the jet onto the wrong runway, which was too short, before Polehinke took the controls for takeoff.
The sole air traffic controller on duty had cleared the plane to takeoff from the longer runway, then turned away to perform other duties and did not see the crash.
Also Monday, the National Transportation Safety Board said toxicology testing on both pilots detected no traces of alcohol or illegal drugs.
A low level of an over-the-counter decongestant was detected in Polehinke's blood, it said. FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said the substance was not on the agency's banned list.
The NTSB also said a review of the wreckage turned up no evidence of engine failure before the commuter jet plowed through a perimeter fence.
The flight data recorder indicates the plane stopped near the shorter runway for about 45 seconds before the flight was cleared for takeoff, the NTSB said.
Brown said the information indicates the plane made a rolling takeoff, which means it did not stop once reaching the runway. It was unclear whether the pilots looked at the compass and other navigational instruments while on the runway or prior to takeoff.
"Rolling takeoffs are not against the rules, but normally they're only done when there is a lot of traffic, using the same runway," Brown said. "Usually a pilot would want to line up on the runway and stop before taking off."
Comair spokeswoman Kate Marx said rolling takeoffs are "considered normal and are conducted on a regular basis."
Flight 5191 was the third of three planes scheduled to takeoff from the Lexington airport in the early morning of Aug. 27, the NTSB said. The other two planes departed safely from the longer runway, which is 7,003 feet long. The shorter runway is half that length. Both runways use the same taxiway, which had been slightly altered a week before the crash because of a construction project.
 
"Rolling takeoffs are not against the rules, but normally they're only done when there is a lot of traffic, using the same runway," Brown said. "Usually a pilot would want to line up on the runway and stop before taking off."

Laura Brown is dumb!
 
And technically a "rolling takeoff" may involve a stop on the runway. It just means they didn't hold the brakes while increasing thrust to takeoff power. There is plenty of time in there to do any pretakeoff checks, the way she says it is implying that rolling takeoffs are unsafe.
 
Healing his body will be the easy part. We can only hope for the recovery of his psyche as well.

This poor man has a very long hard road ahead of him. I have read that he has had traumatic brain injury which can cause problems for the rest of his life. I guess depending on which area is damaged predicts what problems. I have a friend that was in a bad car wreck and had traumatic brain injury and he did some very strange things for a long time. He went through a stage of no inhibition control and did some really bizarre stuff. That area of his brain healed enough that it resolved, but he still suffers from depression, comprehension and memory problems. He still has no memory of the car wreck.
There is mention of a spine fracture that still needs surgery, don't know if that means his spine is broken, or just a vertabrae. I may be reading more between the lines than there really is, I hope so. Losing a leg alone is tough enough. My heart breaks for him. I wish him the best in his recovery.
 
I find it very interesting that Brown states they did a rolling takeoff.

According to the latest NTSB release: http://www.ntsb.gov/Pressrel/2006/060925.htm

The FDR indicates that the aircraft stopped near 26 for 45 seconds and at that time they were cleared for takeoff. They then started to taxi onto the runway and took 36 seconds to lineup before power was increased for takeoff. That sure doesn't sound like any 'rolling' takeoff I've ever seen. Weasel's probably right....they may not have held the brakes before spooling up.

I find it interesting that the contrary to many of us thought early on, the controller cleared them for takeoff while they were holding short of 26, not while they were taxiing or still on the ramp near the terminal.
 
This poor man has a very long hard road ahead of him. I have read that he has had traumatic brain injury which can cause problems for the rest of his life. I guess depending on which area is damaged predicts what problems. I have a friend that was in a bad car wreck and had traumatic brain injury and he did some very strange things for a long time. He went through a stage of no inhibition control and did some really bizarre stuff. That area of his brain healed enough that it resolved, but he still suffers from depression, comprehension and memory problems. He still has no memory of the car wreck.
There is mention of a spine fracture that still needs surgery, don't know if that means his spine is broken, or just a vertabrae. I may be reading more between the lines than there really is, I hope so. Losing a leg alone is tough enough. My heart breaks for him. I wish him the best in his recovery.

I agree. Some things are worse than death. We can only hope things work out for him. I think we all feel extra empathy being pilots.
 
I really hope that his body and mind heals as quick as possible. I cant even begin to imagine what he has been through and what he faces int he future.
 
I find it very interesting that Brown states they did a rolling takeoff.

According to the latest NTSB release: http://www.ntsb.gov/Pressrel/2006/060925.htm

I find it interesting that the contrary to many of us thought early on, the controller cleared them for takeoff while they were holding short of 26, not while they were taxiing or still on the ramp near the terminal.

Not unusual at all, especially if it is not busy. And were they told to "Hold Short of Runway two-six" and then "cleared for take off on two-two?" I've have not read the ATC transcripts, yet.

T8
 

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