TWA
Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2005
- Posts
- 581
My first story occured at the FBO I work at, about 2 weeks after opening. We had a beutiful King Air 300 in our hangar for charter. This was a big deal for us, since at the time our runway was only 3800'ish. Real early on a saturday morning he leaves to go pick up passengers at a nearby airport. It is real foggy at the airport. He has two missed approaches. A guy on the ground is talkin to him with a hand held and tells him not to risk it, that there's another plane they have there that they can take. Third time's a charm. He gets too low on the approach and hits a large cluster of trees. We haven't had such a regular customer since.
Second story happened last year on a Saturday morning. I'm the only one on duty. A guy on the field had built a hummell or some other small VW powered plane. He had only flown it once and scared the sh!t out of himself. His wife had told him to get rid of it the week before. About 1030 a local 911 dispatcher (also one of our part time line guys) calls and asks if I know anything about a crash at a gravel pit on final. I didn't even hear the guy in the pattern, since he wasn't usin his radio. I went to check it out and was gettin there right after the first fire trucks. I talked to the guys who called it in and they said they heard the engine quit and saw if go strait into the ground. The FAA brought the wreckage back to one of our hangars for inspection later in the week (saturday, go figure). It looked like a crushed aluminum pop can, with a little twist in it. The final report hasn't been issued on it yet, but speculation is he ran out of gas on final, tried to glide it in, and stalled it. Kinda creepy, I was the last one to talk to the guy and didn't even realize it until i was asked to go get the plate number off his truck.
Second story happened last year on a Saturday morning. I'm the only one on duty. A guy on the field had built a hummell or some other small VW powered plane. He had only flown it once and scared the sh!t out of himself. His wife had told him to get rid of it the week before. About 1030 a local 911 dispatcher (also one of our part time line guys) calls and asks if I know anything about a crash at a gravel pit on final. I didn't even hear the guy in the pattern, since he wasn't usin his radio. I went to check it out and was gettin there right after the first fire trucks. I talked to the guys who called it in and they said they heard the engine quit and saw if go strait into the ground. The FAA brought the wreckage back to one of our hangars for inspection later in the week (saturday, go figure). It looked like a crushed aluminum pop can, with a little twist in it. The final report hasn't been issued on it yet, but speculation is he ran out of gas on final, tried to glide it in, and stalled it. Kinda creepy, I was the last one to talk to the guy and didn't even realize it until i was asked to go get the plate number off his truck.
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