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PC 12 down???

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Thanks, then if im in a 747 I would try it. But wouldnt you think if your in a light plane picking up that much ice you would be going down :confused:
 
Through what? An overcast sky with the possibility of icing? Out of all the pilot reports listed the Travel Air was the only one reporting severe ice. Unfortunately there are no listed reports before the Beech to compare to but taking off into forcast light-moderate icing conditions is a part of life. If the Beech wasn't equipped for anti/deicing then it wouldn't have been a good idea but who knows what ice reports the Beech pilot had access to.
 
Flyin Tony said:
Anyone thats going to go fly in that is nuts (whats a BE95?)

Oh my god...ICE. Airplanes can't fly in that can they? I mean...I mean that stuff's bad right? I heard peolple have crashed airplanes because of ice.

Ease up kids.
 
Sgt. Hartman said:
Oh my god...ICE. Airplanes can't fly in that can they? I mean...I mean that stuff's bad right? I heard peolple have crashed airplanes because of ice.

Ease up kids.



Well the Travel Air isn't the greatest performer in the world, add some ice and its a real pig. That's all I meant.
 
Yeah, it wouldn't take much to constitute severe ice in a Travel Air...TC
 
I dont mean to sound rude, or heartless but this is what happens when rich folks decide that they want to fly an airplane instead if hiring a professional pilot. I rightseated for a guy that flew in the CJ over at simuflite, I have no idea how this guy got his type!!!??? This guy was an accident waiting to happen. But when I asked him how much time he had in the airplane he responded with arrogance "125 hours"...
 
the 12 is certified for flight into known Icing and has an ice pusher mode...and a seperator.....and it takes a lot of ice to overload that plane...but if you dont activate the systems...it WILL be an undesireable outcome..I'm still trying to figure out how a turbine sputters tho???? did you see the pic of the other son staring at the wreckage...to bizarre
 
"Sputterring?" Without engaging the Seperator, 'significant' ice accumulations restricting airflow to the motor would cause a compressor
stall and even a flow reversal. Inside the plane it is a mild popping sound while outside it sounds like gunshots. It would be curious to see a radar data track. No one comes out of the clouds in a nose down attitude for 1700' in controlled flight.

ICE is only an instigator. It does not bring airplanes down. A Pilot's/Crew's failure to address the ice is what brings aircraft down. Anyone who has been flying around the northeast and OH Valley for the last week or more, knows there has been a weird inversion hanging around. Better than freezing at the surface and M0*C in the clouds and above freezing above the clouds. The Travelair was aware the whole time and alert for icing because he read the forecast and expected it. Sweating the whole time to punch through the front before his 'uncertified for known ice' aircraft held a similar fate. I take UA's from guys like this and the C172 as well, with a grain of salt. They are out where they knew they shouldn't have been and ruin everyone elses day by telling on themselves when they say, "Oh, it was only forecast for LT-MOD, but Man0Oh-Man, that schiznit was, SEVERE! WOW!". PC12 dude dropped out of the FL24*'s where it was really cold and got complascent descending through 10K', popped right into the clouds where a significant amount of precip, freezing temps with his ice cold airframe. I agree with another post here regarding a professional who likely would have been reduced to Gear and Radio Boy. But, I believe self preservation would have kicked in and such a presence would have noted the position of de/anti-ice switches prior to entering those conditions. I would be suprised if NTSB notes thes switches in their proper settings. I submit the aircraft was flying just fine until dude threw a bunch of flaps and gear out for landing. He got really slow from there and probably had the stall and AOA horn (if they weren't frozen) pounding on his head so much that he didn't hear the compressor stall telling him his power advancement was going nowhere.

Now, how is that for a 'litteral' Monday morning QB. 'Scuse the attitude, but I just saw my premiums take another hike in the -12 with this dumbarses' stupid human trick. Oh, just wait until all these little 'personal jets' start dropping like flies. I like that bit with the CJ guy and a proud 125 hours. That's a nice industry forecast right there.

Another wonderful and perfectly good airplane reduced to pepsi cans. and milk bottles. Tough beat for the kid at school.

Really, guys and gals, you see these people out there every day and you know their background, who are you hurting by asking these individuals for a moment of their time and privately expressing your concern for their safety, that of their passengers and their investment by not having an experienced and qualified individual as crew for a significant amount of time as they transition to the new aircraft? Probably you are hurting their pride. SO, WHAT! done right and in PRIVATE, they will get over it and give it as sincere a consideration as you relay to them. DON'T be hatin' or offering your services for an aircraft like this that you have zero time in. Anyone can fudge their way through any piston twin. PT6's, Garrett's, Allison's and jet's are whole new animals and much study is needed to understand their operation. Everyone knows someone with more advanced training and experience who is looking for a job. Refer such qualified individuals for such tasks. The world will be a lot safer place and people's lawns will quit getting messed up.

100-1/2
 
Hello,

After seeing the pictures and reading the thread. A couple of things jump out at me. First, the lack of a post-crash fire is indication of fuel starvation. I'm not sure what the range is on the PC-12, but they had departed from an airport in Florida.
Another interesting fact, is the report of "severe" rime ice. Now, in my experience flying in the ice-laden clouds of the Appalachians, I've never seen that phenomena(severe rime?). However, icing reports are a very subjective observation and often reports are given by pilots that might not have seen what meets the AIM criteria. They just see a whole lot of that white stuff out there. I wasn't there obviously, but I find that PIREP questionable compared to others in the same time-frame.
It is tragic no matter what the cause, and I hope that a cause is found and a reoccurance can be avoided.

Regards,

ex-Navy Rotorhead
 
The crash in MO, was that the one that the guy lost control near the airport while his family was waiting for him to pick them up? I was thinking it was in AZ but I guess not.
 

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