Thread: Sad news
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Old June 29th 12, 01:51 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Jonathon May[_2_]
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Default Sad news

At 00:39 29 June 2012, Evan Ludeman wrote:
On Jun 28, 7:44=A0pm, John Cochrane
wrote:
Ramy


The accident was described to me by friends on site... who probably
don't feel like talking about it. =A0I don't much, either, except to

sa=
y
it's clear that it was a landing accident, hit trees on short final.
High winds a factor, probably. =A0Good field was selected, pattern

was
flown, it wasn't some panic straight in thing. =A0Location is ~2

miles
SSE of YSA. =A0I liked Derek. =A0Very sad about this.


-Evan Ludeman / T8


Evan:

At 2 miles out it would only take 300 feet to make it home. "Good
pattern" and 2 miles out don't really add up. If you have 600 feet at
2 miles to make a good pattern, making it to the airport is easy.

I don't intend uninformed criticism of the pilot here, 2 miles out is
a coffin corner for all of us. =A0I am just curious whether to file the
tragedy in the =A0"final glide mishap" rather than "landout mishap"
category.

I note the Canadian rules say a 500 foot finish cylinder at 2 km, but
still the rather mild altitude penalty of 20 points per 100 feet,
unlike the current US rule in which you are scored as a landout 200



I am in Great Britain so some what remote ,but I am deeply moved and wish
to pass on my condolences.I cannot believe this is pilot error ,comp pilots

have so much instinctive skill, that is what allows them to deal with every

thing else while there body flys the plane.So my thoughts are medical ,or
possible the main ballast dumped and the fin stayed in and pushed the c of
g
beyond the recoverable range.
Again my heart felt sympathy to all friends and family.
Jon May
feet below finish height. =A0Also that the altitude is up to the CD. Do
you know the finish configuration at this contest? Sorry to bring it
up on ras, but this is the sort of thing that no NTSB ever would have
the wit to ask. 2 miles out puts the pilot half a mile from the finish
cylinder, an unusual place for a pilot to abandon a task.


http://www.sac.ca/index2.php?

option=3Dcom_docman&task=3Ddoc_view&gid=3D53=
8&...

Thanks for the info. I'm only pursuing it because it has been a
terrible season, and perhaps time to search again if there is anything
we can do to lessen the frequency of these tragedies.

John Cochrane


I haven't talked to the person who has the flight log, let alone seen
it myself. We really can't analyze this accident without it. I don't
have an exact location for the crash and there is some uncertainty in
my mind as to whether the location given in a different article is
correct... because I can't match that tree line to anything I can see
on satellite views where the accident is said to have occurred. More
likely is that it is a bit farther out.

I really only weighed in here because I am as certain as I can be
based on second or third hand info that this was a landing accident,
not a thermaling stall/spin, as one might have suspected based on the
news.

-Evan / T8