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Deland Airport Accident

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moxiepilot said:
1. http://www.dropzone.com/news/CanadianskydiverdiesinFl.shtml
Canadian Skydiver, Stephane Drapeau, 30, from Beloeil, Que 14 Apr 2005

2001, not 2005. http://www.dropzone.com/news/CanadianskydiverdiesinFl.shtml

2. Chantal Bonitto, a 31-year-old New Yorker, died Dec. 27

Dec 27, 2000.
http://www.dropzone.com/news/SkydiverfallstodeathinDe.shtml

3. http://www.540wfla.com/010305.html
A skydiver critically injured Tuesday in a skydiving accident near Deland has died. He’s been identified at 28-year-old Jan Kadie.


This one is correct. Jan 4, 2005.

4. I cant find the other one now, but I think it was at birdman.com - one of his firiends in march

So far, you're 1 for 4. Care to try again?


Happened to me. Could see the eyes of the terrified jumpers in the truck.

Based on your current track record so far this post, I have the inclination to doubt this one. Sorry dude, but you apparently didn't research your claims.
 
Just to clarify a bit of information... Chantal Bonito passed away December 27, 2000. She was a friend of mine, and I have avoided using DeLand as I did not want the sad memories popping up. Her parachute failed, she performed a cutaway. She then tried to use her reserve, which apparently also failed. I believe there has not been a definitive answer to what happened.

Always, always, always, tune in the local frequency whenever you are flying near a DZ while on VFR. The pilots will announce their intentions of an upcoming drop, and will also announce their drop progress (2 mins to jumping, jumping in progress). You can also call the local frequency and ask if there is skydiving in progress or even call the local drop plane for an update while they are in the air.

If on IFR, ATC is talking with the drop plane, and ATC will usually vector you around it.

All pilots should maintain vigilance in these areas.

My heart goes out to all in this most recent incident.
 
What sucks is when they are jumping when they shouldn't be, like when there's a low overcast, they don't tell anyone...
 
I've heard Miami Center broadcast their warning message about jumpers being droped for Marathon a few time (and I almost never listen to center).

However, I've looked up online to see if there was a DZ there and nothing came up. Anyone knows if there is one, if it's just a bunch of friends doing their thing or what the deal is?
 
kevdog said:
Hey, just curious why if Deland is such a danger zone (DZ?), being one of the world's biggest skydiving dropzones, that something like this has never happened before? I have many jumps at Deland and used to be a jump pilot at numerous DZ's. I think the most dangerous activities happening at DED, are all the dumb a$$ ERAU pilots. Please remember, skydivers in the air have just as much of a right as you do flyin an airplane. Over half of the jumpers at Deland are professionals or on world class skydiving teams and make over a 1,000 jumps a year there. 75% of the skydiving industry is also based in Deland. About 800-1,000 jumps take place every single sunny day in Deland. I seriously doubt aircraft landings even come close to that figure. If you are an inexperienced pilot and are afraid of jumpers being included in your airspace, you can simply avoid places like DED, it's marked as a parachuting center.

Already avoided. I have personally experienced jumpers cross the active in front of me below roughly 100'-300' on two occaisions. Add to that RAA based on the field and now OMN and EVB are controlled so that place gets like a bee's nest with airplanes alone. I do feel skydivers have their right to the sky, DED is all yours as far as I'm concerned. If I survived a collision with a skydiver I'm not sure if I could mentally prepare myself to fly again.
 
PaulThomas said:
I've heard Miami Center broadcast their warning message about jumpers being droped for Marathon a few time (and I almost never listen to center).

However, I've looked up online to see if there was a DZ there and nothing came up. Anyone knows if there is one, if it's just a bunch of friends doing their thing or what the deal is?

There's a DZ at Sugarloaf called Skydive Key West. As for Marathon, the only time I know of that there is any regular skydiving going on is in November each year there is a Keys Boogie. It's usually just a 3-5 day event. It's an awesome time...

http://www.danovisionproductions.com/dano/2004keysboogie.htm
 
gkrangers said:
Or give you advisories, as the jumpers wiz past the window..

And this surprises you when you fly past the DZ that is marked on the charts?
 
gkrangers said:
No, not at all. Just saying, if we're IFR, it wouldn't hurt to vector us a little bit away from the DZ. We were looking for jumpers and knew they would be near us.

I guess it depends on the ATC facility. Out west, it has been my experience that ATC vectors airplanes way out of the way around active DZ's. Never flew that much around DZ's when I was FL so I don't know what it is like there.
But when I am travelling x-country and I see that there is a DZ, regardless if I am IFR or VFR, I give it some room.
 
I work at an FBO in DAB and one of the line guys here has a brother who is a line guy over in DeLand. He was working when this happened and got a view of it first hand. He was fueling when he heard a thud on his truck. Looked to see one of the legs and blood all over. Needless to say, he was quite shaken up over it all.
 
EDUC8-or said:
I was with a student doing practice approaches and ATC kept us above 2,500' on the VOR 23 due to the accident.

I've been in the pattern at DED and skyidvers have crossed the active runway while taking off or on short final. I've also seen jumpers on days when they must have done some pretty amazing maneuvers to stay out of the clouds on the way down.

I will no longer do pattern work at DED during the day.
So you will fly there with an assumption there are no such thing as night jump operations?

I have gone past more light planes in free fall in the last few years...don't know if it's just more traffic or more pilots not looking at charts before they go flying.

Last summer I was making a skydive...deployed at 2,500 feet like a good boy and was in the saddle by 2,000 or so. As I reach for my steering toggles, I hear a plane...I look dead in front of me and it's head on. I could even see the guy's face...he makes a hard turn and I'm giving him both fingers and screaming ever dirty word in the book at him. He had this stupid WTF? look on his face...and probably a unexpected hot carl in his pants. The DZO and the other jumpers saw this happen and after I told em my part of the story, the DZO just said, "Good, we don't have to worry about him flying by the airport anymore!"

The summer before last I was doing a two way and training that person in some relative work...a camera man was on our dive filming the training. We caught this one on video. My student freefalling past the plane and me deploying at the planes altitude. You should have dumb look on that guys face. The camera man didn't see the plane until I told him to put the video from the camera on and play it. Right when the camera man deployed, you freeze frame the video, and there it is...a big white low wing piper.

Several summers ago, I was doing some training on another two way...used a borrowed rig. Borrowed gear KILLS! The pilot chute came out of the leg mounted pouch (I strictly use B.O.C. now!) at 10,000 feet. While I was sitting there wondering what the heck happened...a big G-IV or V passed beneath me...it had big engines on it, like a high bypass turbofan. The eery part was how quiet this plane was as it flew beneath me by 100 feet...passed right between my legs....I just waved at those jokers.

Anyhooo...those two rayban wearing dorks looked pretty confused as well. They were out of Appleton and were on a maint flight...never checked on with center or Green Bay approach. After the jump pilot called the tower at Appleton and got us a tail number, I made a to call to the ATW FBO and found out who the plane belonged to, got the phone number of the aircraft's flight department and left a message with their flight department secretary. I didn't say anything mean, but I did advise her that we're on the chart and that we primarily jump on wed and fri afternoons and that we jump all day sat, sun and holidays...wx permiting. I also left a number where I could be reached if they had any questions. It's all about making people aware...not always about getting an ass chewing session underway.

Here's an even better one. Rember when Air Willy had the BAT Plane...the BAE ATP? One saturday I make the call to Green Bay that I'm one minute from dropping jumpers from 12,000. They tell me the coast is clear...I call door! And the jumpers are outside and gone! I banked the plane to wach the jumpers fall away and right directly over the airport on the deck is this big freaking twin turboprop airliner.

Green Bay gets a call from the plane and they ask, "Skydivers? Where are the skydivers?!!!?" Green bay asks me if I dropped the jumpers and I said they are long gone. Green bay calls them and said, "The jumpers are falling right on top of you!" It was a maint flight and they were out there dinking around...Green Bay has great radar...so these guys must have been pretty low.

Now that EAA is coming, I'm getting a sick feeling in my stomach thinking about all these dorks flying over our airport without a clue. I usually skip that week for skydiving, but it's inevitable that I will wind up flying several loads. You see lots of cool stuff that week, like heards of T-6 texans flying in formation and occaisionally a YAK round engine traininer will land and buy some fuel...but what I really hate is those guys that dont look at a sectional and fly right over our airport. Is this year going to be the year one of these guys makes the paper crashing to or from EAA, because they got struck by a skydiver? I hope not.
 
Based on your current track record so far this post, I have the inclination to doubt this one. Sorry dude, but you apparently didn't research your claims.

You'll have to excuse me and accept my apology, my research was at midnight after flying all day, however in response to the near hit on the rwy with the jump truck - that was with me and could be verified by Capt Nick Alleyene who now flys for Jet Blue and was the capt of that flight.

I just hate DED - too busy and too many morons coming out of RAA
 
So, is it safe to assume the pilot is at fault? Skydivers don't have any maneuverability, so shoudn't the plane "see and avoid". At 600 feet, I would also assume the skydiver had his chute deployed.
 
surfnole said:
So, is it safe to assume the pilot is at fault?

In a word, NO!


Nobody here knows exactly what happened. By all acounts both the Otter pilot and the skydiver were very safety concious, with tons of experiance.

The skydiver does have right of way, but skydivers should also keep clear of the traffic pattern.

I've flown jumpers before and it is a fun job, but there are very real risks involved. Avoiding a midaitr with the jumers was always on my mind. I flew my descent far enough away that they shoud have no problem staying clear.

That said, they can be very hard to see. Even when under canopy. They can easilly descend into your flight path. If both parties are headed in the same direction, that sets the stage for a classic "overtaking/descending" midair. IIRC this is the most common midair scenerio for all aircraft.
 
FN FAL said:
So you will fly there with an assumption there are no such thing as night jump operations?

No, but generally the pattern in Deland isn't so busy at night and I personally can't remember the last time I heard "Jumpers Away!" after dark-thirty.

Here's a question for you jumpers out there: How much room is "enough" when diverting around an airport with skydiving ops? When you exit the jump plane, where are you in reference to the airport? Does it depend on winds, etc...? I want to be cautious and I also want to teach my students to give you guys lots of room.
 
EDUC8-or said:
Here's a question for you jumpers out there: How much room is "enough" when diverting around an airport with skydiving ops? When you exit the jump plane, where are you in reference to the airport? Does it depend on winds, etc...?

I always made my jump runs into the wind. I would useually open the door about .3nm from the DZ and would always have all the jumpers out befor I was 1nm upwind.


If you stay at least 3-5 nm away, you're fine in most cases.
 
Deland has never been known as one of the most safety conscious places for skydiving operations. I've personally seen them jump when there was an overcast over the field, around 3 thousand overcast. Also, it seems the Otter pilots always have to "beat" the jumpers down. They are usually in such a hurry, I can easily believe they would be a danger to both jumpers and other planes....flame away.
 
b82rez said:
Deland has never been known as one of the most safety conscious places for skydiving operations. I've personally seen them jump when there was an overcast over the field, around 3 thousand overcast. Also, it seems the Otter pilots always have to "beat" the jumpers down. They are usually in such a hurry, I can easily believe they would be a danger to both jumpers and other planes....flame away.


Otter pilots don't have to beat the jumpers down. We do it quite naturally. The otter can descend at about 6,000 fpm. At the DZ I flew at I could carry that right down to about 600 AGL and level out, slow to flap speed, land on the numbers without ever bringing in the power and beat most of the tandems down. On very good days I would be on my takeoff roll while the last tandem was landing. That was CRANKING loads.

Like any aviation activity there must be traffic patterns established to keep dis-similar traffic apart. We don't know who was out of position on this accident but someone was.

It's a tough thing to lose a legend in the sport. Imagine if Chuck Yeager had gone in because of a midair and the other one flying the airplane was Charles Lindbergh. Get my view?

If you want to know more about flying skydivers check out www.DiverDriver.com. It is a free education website for those wanting to know more about "diver driving". It has a training syllabus outline, questionare, advice on specific aircraft, and lists most known jump plane accidents.
 
DiverDriver said:
Otter pilots don't have to beat the jumpers down. We do it quite naturally. The otter can descend at about 6,000 fpm. At the DZ I flew at I could carry that right down to about 600 AGL and level out, slow to flap speed, land on the numbers without ever bringing in the power and beat most of the tandems down. On very good days I would be on my takeoff roll while the last tandem was landing. That was CRANKING loads.

I appreciate your response. My one point would be that even though the otter can do that "naturally", there are many times a descent and landing like that will be hazardous to others; such as if there are other people in the pattern. At DED (at least 6 years ago which was the last time I was there), this operation would be carried out regardless of other operations. That's why I said it seems like they have to beat the jumpers down.

It is very sad that this has happened, that being said.... I have witnessed jump operations at Deland that, in my limited scope opinion, were severely not in the best interests of safety for both jumpers and aircraft. Hopefully this incident will bring attention to that and help to shift the paradigm.
 
Oh I agree. Many times I have not raced down like I can. Yes, it is all situational.
 
USMCmech said:
The skydiver does have right of way, but skydivers should

Hey, this is not a challenge to your statement, it's just a request for more information if anyone has it... I haven't been able to find a regulation that shows this one way or the other, is there one?

Do a/c HAVE to yield to skydivers per FARs/AIM or any other legally accepted source?
Thanks
 
Here's a question for you jumpers out there: How much room is "enough" when diverting around an airport with skydiving ops? When you exit the jump plane, where are you in reference to the airport? Does it depend on winds, etc...? I want to be cautious and I also want to teach my students to give you guys lots of room.

From the Skydiver Information Manual (their Bible) -the entire thing is available online at the USPA site.
(diagram attached)


edit "You may NOT post attachments"
Well I guess you won't get to see it but it answers your question.

PM me your email address and I can send it directly.
or tell me how to post attachments to Flightinfo.com
 
What distance did they give?

On most days, the jumpers don't need more than the width of a normal traffic pattern.

Some dropzones are busy and run turbine planes continiously, ours just has two cessnas. We only need the interloping pilots to use their transponders and querry approach when they fly through. If we are climbing through 5,000 on our way to 12,000...it will be at least ten minutes before we have an exit. By all means, fly on through. It's a free country...it's not "controlled" airspace. With a little common sense and forethought, there's room for everybody out there.

But if you like to go on a cross country and not monitor ATC or Unicom or don't bother to get VFR advisories from center or approach...you might have rude awakening.

I had heard a while back, ATC was willing to consider that dropzones would become controlled airspace, but the USPA wasn't willing to back this because the controlers wanted the authority to shut down the airspace at their discretion.

I think the way things are now are fine, if everybody was alert and knew what they were doing. I wish we could work out a delio with ATC to have some controlled airspace and that we could jump through clouds as well. But I think it would be too confusing for the VFR private pilot crowd.

I believe in Austrailia, they have the controlled airspace at DZ's and they are allowed to jump through clouds...which for IFR operations wouldn't be a problem, as ATC would either tell the jump plane to not drop jumpers or they would make sure no IFR flight was vectored underneath a jump plane. There's control with those flights. The VFR guys would still be the fly in the ointment.
 
EDUC8-or said:
Here's a question for you jumpers out there: How much room is "enough" when diverting around an airport with skydiving ops? When you exit the jump plane, where are you in reference to the airport? Does it depend on winds, etc...? I want to be cautious and I also want to teach my students to give you guys lots of room.

It depends on the winds aloft. We are subject to the winds just as much as an airplane is, so we are pushed by the winds aloft even in freefall. If the winds are an average of 60 knots between 15,000' and 3,000', we will be pushed 1nm downwind during freefall. We have to take that into account when spotting the load(determining the exit point). We then have to account for winds from our parachute opening altitude down to the ground. Most canopies don't fly very fast - 15 to 20mph at most - so if the winds are very strong, we can be flying into a 40 knot wind and backing up at over 20 knots.

Usually, exit points will begin just prior to the airport(unless winds are strong, then usually around the middle to end of the airport), and the jumprun will last until the last jumpers are out, or until they are at a point that the jumpers wouldn't be able to make it back to the airport. Usually, all jumpers are out within 3 miles of the airport, even in the worst winds. Jumpruns are USUALLY, but not ALWAYS, flown into the wind.

There is one more thing to worry about near DZ's. At some DZ's it's commonplace, at others they never see it. It's known as CRW - Canopy Relative Work, referred to by skydivers as "Crew". This is where a group of jumpers exit at normal altitude(10,000-15,000 usually, depending on aircraft used and DZ) and deploy their parachutes immediately, then fly formations while under canopy. These canopies descend at about 1,000fpm, so you can do the math and figure out how far upwind they will exit based on the winds aloft. 30 knot winds, we will generally get out about 6 to 8 miles upwind. We tend to err on the side of caution and exit further upwind than we need to....because if it turns out we exited too far up, we can always turn and run with the wind, and give us a 45-50 knot groundspeed in a 30 knot wind.
 
moxiepilot said:
You'll have to excuse me and accept my apology, my research was at midnight after flying all day, however in response to the near hit on the rwy with the jump truck - that was with me and could be verified by Capt Nick Alleyene who now flys for Jet Blue and was the capt of that flight.

I just hate DED - too busy and too many morons coming out of RAA

Dude you are full of it. Nick is not an employee of JetBlue. He is not even a captain. He's an FO with ExpressJet and left TAB Express in February 2005. Also stop posting stuff that is flame bait. You may not like TAB. That's fine. You may not like RAA. That's cool. You are entitled to your opinions but get your facts straight and think before your write.
 

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