phantomdriver
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2005
- Posts
- 115
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avbug said:Peaks on the west side are a little over 15,000, I believe, and about 9,500 on the left. On radar, it forms a narrow corridor which is misleading, because it isn't straight. Stay just east of the highway at night and (don't quote me here) I believe above 7,500' between Bishop and Lone Pine.
The peaks on the West side go all the way up to 14, 495 feet, Mt. Whitney, the tallest mountain in the lower 48 states. There are also, along the Sierra Crest, 11 other mountains over 14,000 feet, and one, Mt. Williamson, though in the Sierra, sits just off the sierra crest at 14,375 feet. On the East, near Bishop it is the White Mountains, and White Mountain itself is 14,250 feet. To the South on the east side is the Inyo Mountains and they are closer to the 9,500 feet you mentioned. There is one more peak in California that is over 14,000 feet and that is Mt. Shasta in the Syskiyou Range of Northern California.
avbug said:Of course, if you can live anywhere other than Kalifornia...it's always best.
Just ask any Kalifornian.
scangadah said:I knew a guy that was in the back of a Lance(cargo config) and the howling wind blew the door shut and locked him in. He just about froze solid when the courier let him ot.
CorpLearDriver said:I have a vague recollection of this incident. It happened after AMF intalled the all metal cargo interiors in their aircraft. When I was in the Lance, it had a 1" Plywood Bulkhead between the front two seats and the back and a plywood floor. The cargo net was thrown anchored behind the pilot seats in front of the bulkhead and was thrown over it and the cargo and attached via hooks at the rear of the cabin.
Coming out of Mammoth and Bishop at night on my way to Inyokern and Willie J Fox and Burbank, I usually overflew Lone Pine because another airplane had picked up the work 45 minutes before. So, I only had 5 bags on board, which isn't much under that cargo net. Over Owens Lake in the winter time, I'd slow way down, throw the gear out and get beat up pretty good. Those bags spent more time against the net and ceiling of the cabin than they ever did lying on the plywood.
And then there was the "squeeze".....
scangadah said:That was it exactly. That metal bulkhead had the little window in it.
I only did that run a few times. Hated the "squeeze".
I also remember that in town there is that gas station with the 2" galvy pipe welded at a crazy angle and pointed at MT. Whitney. It was mounted next to sidewalk like a hillbilly telescope.
Spooky 1 said:Okay I am really dating myself but here goes. Back in the early sixties there was a fellow named Bob White. He owned Bob White Flying Service out of Lone Pine and was recognized as "the authority" on flying along the Eastern Sierras. There were a couple of airports actually in the local mountains, Templeton Meadows, and Monache Meadows as I recall. Both of these airports had taken their toll on lives and airframes. Not sure if either of them are open these days. I had only been into Monache Meadows once with a fellow that had a lot more experience than I. Bob White was famous for a lot of things but probably one of the biggest was finding a DC3 that had crashed up against Mt. Whitney in the winter of 1969?
Outside of Lone Pine, right up against the mountains there is a road refered to as "movie road". There were probably dozens if not more western movies shot up in these locations. Watching westerns from the 60's era, you can see some of the local sights in the background.
Spooky 1 said:Bob White was famous for a lot of things but probably one of the biggest was finding a DC3 that had crashed up against Mt. Whitney in the winter of 1969?
They were coming from somewhere (Hawthorne, Searchlight, NV?) to Burbank in the middle of a snowstorm. 26 pax, two pilots, and a stew. They were tryng to sneak over on to the western side of the mountains. The storm was so powerful that even though this happened around Christmas, they did not locate the airplane until the following summer. Probably a lot of DC3 parts still up there on the mountain side. It was a very big deal in the Calfornia papers at the time. I think a Google search would provide more details but none the less, Bob White was the man that found the wreckage.
CorpLearDriver said:I was curious about the crash you described, so I did a little hunting. Here's what I found.
Date / Time: Tuesday, February 18, 1969 / 5:10 a.m.
Operator / Flight No.: Mineral County Airlines / Flight 708
Location: Near Lone Pine, Calif.
Details and Probable Cause: The vintage twin-engine Douglas DC-3 airliner (N15570), a scheduled “gamblers special” flight popular with casino-goers, was en route from Hawthorne, Nevada, to Burbank and Long Beach, carrying 32 passengers and a crew of three.
Following a visual flight rules (VFR) flightplan while flying in instrument flight rules (IFR) weather conditions, the aircraft disappeared in the vicinity of the 14,495-foot-high Mount Whitney -- the highest peak in California (and highest in the U.S. outside Alaska).
The search for the missing aircraft was suspended a week later when heavy snows blanketed the region. Almost six months later, on August 8, searchers finally were able to locate the remains of the DC-3 and its occupants when melting snows exposed the wreckage.
The airliner had slammed into the face of a near-vertical cliff at the 11,770-foot level on the eastern slope of Mt. Whitney, instantly killing all on board. Most of wreckage had then tumbled over 350 feet down a slope below the cliff.
The crash was attributed to the pilot’s improper VFR flight in IFR weather conditions, and subsequent deviation from the prescribed course into area where there were no reliable navigational aids. Fatalities: 35 -- 32 passengers and a crew of 3.
Source: http://members.aol.com/jaydeebee1/crash60s.html
Flyin Tony said:Theres nothing at the airport, I flew over it the other day and landed there not to long ago.
CorpLearDriver said:Another area in the Sierras that has taken its toll in aircraft metal and body parts is Independence Pass. In the 70's the FAA published "Diamond Routes" so pilots could find their way through the mountains. The route through Independence Pass depicted either a right or left turn (I don't recall which) but it was opposite of the way your were actually supposed to turn. The fateful turn put you into a blind box canyon and it was so tight, you could't turn around in it. A lot of planes impacted the terrian with no place else to go. Soon after, the FAA removed Diamond Routes from the Sectionals.
phantomdriver said:Has anyone hoked Mt. Whitney yet? Is it good to hike?
Immelman said:Yup, same trip as when I went in over Kearsarge, above. We hiked in from the north, spent a few days coming down the John Muir/Pacific Crest trail and then on to whitney... it was really enjoyable. Really I prefered it better than doing the quick trip that people do from the eastern slope. It was great camping out above 10,000' for several nights and actually acclimating. Got up to 14,000 and while the day hikers were hypoxic we ran (well, almost ran) to the summit.
Another cool way to get there if you can arrange the transport and have a week is to take the high sierra trail, starting on the west side in sequoia park and go through all the way to whitney... wonderful country.