ultrarunner
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 4,322
PilotswifeII said:Anyone know who the plane was registered to?
Goship Air LLC out of Idaho.
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PilotswifeII said:Anyone know who the plane was registered to?
FN FAL said:Unstabilized runways are the worst, they're down right jiggy.
Annie said:I did a quick Google search on pax Frank Jellinek. There is someone with his name, who looks like him, who liked to compete in pro/am race car competitions. I wonder if that has some relationship to the speed on approach?
What??
If your doing over 200 kts at 300 feet you'd better be "leaving" the runway and not landing on it.
Annie said:When did trying to understand the human factors involved in an aircraft trajedy, require one to "get real" (whatever that means)? Excuse me, but I happen to know, that many scientists consider the possibility of systemic relationships--be they human, or mechanical an essential factor in the equation.
Ill Mitch said:That describes CRQ's runway to a tee.
:beer:KILGORE: "It's hairy. Got some pretty heavy ordnance there. I lost a few recon ships there now and again. Is that goddang village Vin Drin Dop or Lop ? dang gook names all sound the same. Mike, do you know anything about that point at Vin Drin Dop ?"
MIKE: "That's a fantastic peak. "
KILGORE: "Peak ?"
MIKE: "About six feet. It got both the long right with left slide.
It's unbelieveable, it's just Tube City..."
KILGORE: " Well why the hell didn't you tell me that before ? There aren't any good peaks in this whole, shootty country. It's all goddang beach break."
MIKE: "It's really hairy in there,sir. That's where we lost McDonnel...they shot the hell out of us. That's...Charlie's point."
WILLARD: "Sir, we can go there tomorrow at dawn. There's always
a good off-shore breeze in the morning."
CHIEF: "We may not be able to get the boat in. The river may be too
shallow."
KILGORE: " We'll pick your boat up and put it down like a baby, right
where you want it. This is First of the Ninth, Air Cav,son- airmobile.
I can take that point and hold it as long as I like -- and you can
get anywhere you want up that river that suits you, young captain.
Hell, a six foot peak.
You take a gunship back to division -- Mike, take Lance with you -- let
him pick out a board, and bring me my Yater Spoon -- the eight six."
MIKE: "I don't know, sir -- it's -- it's --"
KILGORE: "What is it soldier?
MIKE: "It's pretty hairy in there - it's Charlie's point..."
KILGORE: "Charlie don't surf !"
Dr Pokenhiemer said:Don't know how accurate flight aware is, but last track info showed 227kts at 300ft.
I did a quick Google search on pax Frank Jellinek. There is someone with his name, who looks like him, who liked to compete in pro/am race car competitions. I wonder if that has some relationship to the speed on approach?
Annie said:Guitar Rocker:
When did trying to understand the human factors involved in an aircraft trajedy, require one to "get real" (whatever that means)? Excuse me, but I happen to know, that many scientists consider the possibility of systemic relationships--be they human, or mechanical an essential factor in the equation.
urflyingme?! said:I rode a bike last week. Does that mean I'm even MORE likely to crash an aircraft?
cheyflyer said:I think Flight Aware shows the speed as ground speed. This does not necessairly mean the Capt was flying a higher than target or ref speed. With the winds the way they have been lately, they could have been encountering a tailwind at 300 feet followed be a shear or lack of wind shortly after that. Could this have contributed to the crash.....who knows, but I'm sure the NTSB will determine this within the next few weeks/months.
cf
Ya I got a theory on why the up and down speed. The flap speed on a 560 is 200knots, so he pulled the nose up to slow to flap speed then brought it back down to try and salvage the landing.falcon20driver said:The radar data from http://flightaware.com/live/flight/N86CE/tracklog
shows them over the outer marker for 24 at 2300' MLS doing 277 kts over the ground, than on a mile final for 24 at 1200' MSL (900' AGL) doing 209 over the ground, and the next and last fix is at field elevation doing 227 kts over the ground a mile southwest of the field. Anyone know which runway they went off the end of?
It appears they landed on 24... so with the winds you posted it would have been a tailwind. It's about 350' per nm on the GS coming down. With only 4600' to land on... it's not a good setup!cheater1239 said:KCRQ 241653Z AUTO 05003KT 10SM CLR 19/M07 A2997 RMK AO2 SLP147 T01941067
KCRQ 241553Z AUTO 08006KT 10SM CLR 14/M07 A2995 RMK AO2 SLP142 T01441072
[FONT=Monospace,Courier]KCRQ 241453Z AUTO 06006KT 10SM CLR 14/M09 A2993 RMK AO2 SLP133 T01391094 53013 $[/FONT]
[FONT=Monospace,Courier]KCRQ 241353Z AUTO 08005KT 10SM CLR 10/M08 A2991 RMK AO2 SLP128 T01001078 $[/FONT]
No Citations are smarter than that, there's an 80% switch in the throttles that automatically retracts the boards if you forget( i.e. throttle up, boards go down).falcon20driver said:I wonder if they were going missed and didn't retract the speedbrake.