The Accurate Reloading Forums
Touch and go no gear!
22 April 2015, 17:40
OhierTouch and go no gear!
One lucky SOB.
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=b41_142946529422 April 2015, 18:05
Opus1Oooops.

I know I am forgetting something I know I am forgetting something. Let's see carb heat, cowls open, mixture set, trim set, flaps set, pitch set, speed check. Nope all looks good. Awww, who the hell needs a checklist anywho, I've done this a thousand times. Hey, does anyone else hear like a grinding noise...
O-B-U-M-M-M-P-F-F-I-T-C-H-H
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22 April 2015, 18:15
poprivitNow, both engines have to be torn down and inspected. That should eat up most of $20k. Also, props and prop controls will have to be replaced.
Expensive mistake.
(What's that horn blaring for, and why are all those lights blinking. Oh well, I'll just finish this text …)
22 April 2015, 18:19
Opus1And don't forget the paint and a few ounces of aluminum he left on the runway. Most of that will buff out I bet.
Ain't flying fun!
___________________
Just Remember, We ALL Told You So.
22 April 2015, 20:44
pagosawingnutAnd most likely a new pair of pants and new upholstery for the pilots seat!

22 April 2015, 21:25
OhierI wonder if his license was pinched? Permanently?
22 April 2015, 23:29
Opus1You can actually crash a few times before your license is yanked - assuming no one died and even then if you have a good excuse, the FAA will not act too aggressively.
We had a guy here in Georgia that just crashed his 5th aircraft and he's still threatening to continue flying. Of course he doesn't have too many willing passengers...
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Just Remember, We ALL Told You So.
quote:
Originally posted by Opus1:
You can actually crash a few times before your license is yanked - assuming no one died and even then if you have a good excuse, the FAA will not act too aggressively.
We had a guy here in Georgia that just crashed his 5th aircraft and he's still threatening to continue flying. Of course he doesn't have too many willing passengers...
There was a doctor in Minnesota who crashed his Stearman several times and routinely violated the FAR's and was still flying last time I heard.
The Aerostar pilot will soon find out it would have been cheaper to just accept the "slide" and let his insurance cover the damage than to have gone around and landed elsewhere.
I see the pilot claims it was a botched go-around.
07 May 2015, 20:07
jeffeossooh my .. i bet there's a new hole ripped out of the seat
I bet there is something else in that seat besides that hole.
___________________
Just Remember, We ALL Told You So.
08 May 2015, 02:54
Grizzly AdamsHad a neighbor, flying farmer , that did a no undercarriage landing at their Saskatchewan farm, earning him the moniker, Wheels Up Morgan.

Guy flew well into his eighties, rumor was he never got a license.
Grizz
Indeed, no human being has yet lived under conditions which, considering the prevailing climates of the past, can be regarded as normal. John E Pfeiffer, The Emergence of Man
Those who can't skin, can hold a leg. Abraham Lincoln
Only one war at a time. Abe Again.
isn't he just making matters worse by taking it back up?
I was first on scene to a crash where the pilot had taken off with a prop he had recently damaged and did not get checked.
Prop came off very soon after take off and he crashed through the roof of a nearby building.
Watched him burn to death and not a thing I could do about it.
One of the worst shifts of a 33+ year career.
shane
09 May 2015, 18:48
Toomany ToolsIMO he compounded a major mistake with incredibly bad decision making. He risked his life for the sake of the aircraft and in my world little could be more foolish. Once he realized he'd forgotten the gear he should have cut the engines and rode it out on the ground.
John Farner
If you haven't, please join the NRA!