![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Great video, there are couple of questions I would ask though.
1) Why did he not turn much tighter to return to the airfield, one looses much less height in a tight turn that a shallow one? From a tight turn he might have been able to land downwind. Of course I do not know what the winds were, or how feasible is to land P-51 downwind. 2) Why did he cross the highway, surely he could have turned base halfway down the strip and have enough runway to stop. Whilst I appreciate that he did not do it under the pressure of the situation, I was surprised however, that it did not come up in the discussion. Cheers Paul On Sunday, 2 August 2020 03:05:48 UTC+10, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sat, 01 Aug 2020 08:29:13 -0700, jfitch wrote: This is slightly off topic, as its about an engine failure in a P-51, but is well worth watching because the majority of it is concerned with the pilot talking us through a video shot from the aircraft followed by a very interesting discussion as he and the interviewer unpick his thought processes. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/BBpqvPujZgM FWIW the URL was posted in a club heads-up about power loss in a tug or TMG. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 02 Aug 2020 03:39:34 -0700, Paul B wrote:
Great video, there are couple of questions I would ask though. 1) Why did he not turn much tighter to return to the airfield, one looses much less height in a tight turn that a shallow one? From a tight turn he might have been able to land downwind. Of course I do not know what the winds were, or how feasible is to land P-51 downwind. 2) Why did he cross the highway, surely he could have turned base halfway down the strip and have enough runway to stop. If you have Google Earth or similar, go he 52° 5'32.77"N 0° 7'43.46"E Take a look at the situation. From the video it looks as though he was flying a left-hand circuit, with the downwind leg on the north of the airfield. This means that there was an easterly, so they would have crossed the motorway immediately after takeoff. The main runway was shortened when the M11 motorway was built across it in 1977, 1200ft from its eastern end. Here I'm guessing but its likely the formation formed up ENE from the airfield, maybe somewhere south of Whittlesford or Pampisford, ready for a pass down runway 24. Turning in early wouldn't have been a good idea with lots of buildings to cross: you can see them off to his left in the video and doing so would also have meant flying over a lot of spectators, so definitely a no-no. Whilst I appreciate that he did not do it under the pressure of the situation, I was surprised however, that it did not come up in the discussion. I thought the pilot said he considered and discarded that option. Reason left unsaid, but buildings and lots of people would have been a good enough reason for that. This is slightly off topic, as its about an engine failure in a P-51, but is well worth watching because the majority of it is concerned with the pilot talking us through a video shot from the aircraft followed by a very interesting discussion as he and the interviewer unpick his thought processes. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/BBpqvPujZgM -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I recall hearing the pilot say that he had his gear up to extend his
glide and someone yelled on the radio about that.Â* In the heat of the moment the radio call made him turn away from the airport. On 8/2/2020 5:41 AM, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 02 Aug 2020 03:39:34 -0700, Paul B wrote: Great video, there are couple of questions I would ask though. 1) Why did he not turn much tighter to return to the airfield, one looses much less height in a tight turn that a shallow one? From a tight turn he might have been able to land downwind. Of course I do not know what the winds were, or how feasible is to land P-51 downwind. 2) Why did he cross the highway, surely he could have turned base halfway down the strip and have enough runway to stop. If you have Google Earth or similar, go he 52° 5'32.77"N 0° 7'43.46"E Take a look at the situation. From the video it looks as though he was flying a left-hand circuit, with the downwind leg on the north of the airfield. This means that there was an easterly, so they would have crossed the motorway immediately after takeoff. The main runway was shortened when the M11 motorway was built across it in 1977, 1200ft from its eastern end. Here I'm guessing but its likely the formation formed up ENE from the airfield, maybe somewhere south of Whittlesford or Pampisford, ready for a pass down runway 24. Turning in early wouldn't have been a good idea with lots of buildings to cross: you can see them off to his left in the video and doing so would also have meant flying over a lot of spectators, so definitely a no-no. Whilst I appreciate that he did not do it under the pressure of the situation, I was surprised however, that it did not come up in the discussion. I thought the pilot said he considered and discarded that option. Reason left unsaid, but buildings and lots of people would have been a good enough reason for that. This is slightly off topic, as its about an engine failure in a P-51, but is well worth watching because the majority of it is concerned with the pilot talking us through a video shot from the aircraft followed by a very interesting discussion as he and the interviewer unpick his thought processes. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/BBpqvPujZgM -- Dan, 5J |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
He mentioned multiple times that he was low energy - low altitude, low airspeed. In another portion of the interview he mentioned the machine guns were whistling, which is a well known indicator that your angle of attack is critical. Turning tighter would increase wing load, which increases stall speed, which increases the chance of a low speed stall/spin. My guess is that was a top concern at the time.
On Sunday, August 2, 2020 at 5:39:36 AM UTC-5, Paul B wrote: Great video, there are couple of questions I would ask though. 1) Why did he not turn much tighter to return to the airfield, one looses much less height in a tight turn that a shallow one? From a tight turn he might have been able to land downwind. Of course I do not know what the winds were, or how feasible is to land P-51 downwind. 2) Why did he cross the highway, surely he could have turned base halfway down the strip and have enough runway to stop. Whilst I appreciate that he did not do it under the pressure of the situation, I was surprised however, that it did not come up in the discussion. Cheers Paul On Sunday, 2 August 2020 03:05:48 UTC+10, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sat, 01 Aug 2020 08:29:13 -0700, jfitch wrote: This is slightly off topic, as its about an engine failure in a P-51, but is well worth watching because the majority of it is concerned with the pilot talking us through a video shot from the aircraft followed by a very interesting discussion as he and the interviewer unpick his thought processes. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/BBpqvPujZgM FWIW the URL was posted in a club heads-up about power loss in a tug or TMG. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I must be missing something. He has no excess altitude to convert to speed.. He has no engine to add thrust. So, exactly how is he supposed to increase speed?
On Sunday, August 2, 2020 at 11:46:24 AM UTC-5, Eric Greenwell wrote: He could safely turn tighter by letting the speed increase as he banked more; put another way, maintain his angle of attack (NOT the airspeed) as he increases the bank. res wrote on 8/2/2020 8:34 AM: He mentioned multiple times that he was low energy - low altitude, low airspeed. In another portion of the interview he mentioned the machine guns were whistling, which is a well known indicator that your angle of attack is critical. Turning tighter would increase wing load, which increases stall speed, which increases the chance of a low speed stall/spin. My guess is that was a top concern at the time. On Sunday, August 2, 2020 at 5:39:36 AM UTC-5, Paul B wrote: Great video, there are couple of questions I would ask though. 1) Why did he not turn much tighter to return to the airfield, one looses much less height in a tight turn that a shallow one? From a tight turn he might have been able to land downwind. Of course I do not know what the winds were, or how feasible is to land P-51 downwind. 2) Why did he cross the highway, surely he could have turned base halfway down the strip and have enough runway to stop. Whilst I appreciate that he did not do it under the pressure of the situation, I was surprised however, that it did not come up in the discussion.. Cheers Paul On Sunday, 2 August 2020 03:05:48 UTC+10, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sat, 01 Aug 2020 08:29:13 -0700, jfitch wrote: This is slightly off topic, as its about an engine failure in a P-51, but is well worth watching because the majority of it is concerned with the pilot talking us through a video shot from the aircraft followed by a very interesting discussion as he and the interviewer unpick his thought processes. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/BBpqvPujZgM FWIW the URL was posted in a club heads-up about power loss in a tug or TMG. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The tighter turn works for gliders after a rope break, so I'm thinking (as did
Paul B), it would work for the P51 pilot. There is an optimum bank for minimizing the loss of altitude (and he did have some altitude). Had he turned tighter (about 40 degrees typically), he would have made it further around the turn than making a wide turn. Yes, initially he would be a bit lower, but his greater turn rate would more than compensates for that, and he can get back some of the that altitude when he stops turning and slows down. wrote on 8/2/2020 11:10 AM: I must be missing something. He has no excess altitude to convert to speed.. He has no engine to add thrust. So, exactly how is he supposed to increase speed? On Sunday, August 2, 2020 at 11:46:24 AM UTC-5, Eric Greenwell wrote: He could safely turn tighter by letting the speed increase as he banked more; put another way, maintain his angle of attack (NOT the airspeed) as he increases the bank. res wrote on 8/2/2020 8:34 AM: He mentioned multiple times that he was low energy - low altitude, low airspeed. In another portion of the interview he mentioned the machine guns were whistling, which is a well known indicator that your angle of attack is critical. Turning tighter would increase wing load, which increases stall speed, which increases the chance of a low speed stall/spin. My guess is that was a top concern at the time. On Sunday, August 2, 2020 at 5:39:36 AM UTC-5, Paul B wrote: Great video, there are couple of questions I would ask though. 1) Why did he not turn much tighter to return to the airfield, one looses much less height in a tight turn that a shallow one? From a tight turn he might have been able to land downwind. Of course I do not know what the winds were, or how feasible is to land P-51 downwind. 2) Why did he cross the highway, surely he could have turned base halfway down the strip and have enough runway to stop. Whilst I appreciate that he did not do it under the pressure of the situation, I was surprised however, that it did not come up in the discussion.. Cheers Paul On Sunday, 2 August 2020 03:05:48 UTC+10, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sat, 01 Aug 2020 08:29:13 -0700, jfitch wrote: This is slightly off topic, as its about an engine failure in a P-51, but is well worth watching because the majority of it is concerned with the pilot talking us through a video shot from the aircraft followed by a very interesting discussion as he and the interviewer unpick his thought processes. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/BBpqvPujZgM FWIW the URL was posted in a club heads-up about power loss in a tug or TMG. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 2 Aug 2020 13:40:28 -0700, Eric Greenwell
wrote: The tighter turn works for gliders after a rope break, so I'm thinking (as did Paul B), it would work for the P51 pilot. There is an optimum bank for minimizing the loss of altitude (and he did have some altitude). Had he turned tighter (about 40 degrees typically), he would have made it further around the turn than making a wide turn. Yes, initially he would be a bit lower, but his greater turn rate would more than compensates for that, and he can get back some of the that altitude when he stops turning and slows down. Hi Eric, From the video one can clearly see that his energy is barely enough to cross the extended center line, including the flare. Definitely not enough energy to make a turn, not to mention to drop the gear. Let's do some maths: When he started the turn to base leg he was between 250 and 350 ft AGL (depending on his altimeter settings) and 150 mph. P-51D stall speed clean: 100 mph, hence stall speed at 40 degreed bank: 114 mph . So, if he had flown a perfect approach at 120 MPH and 40 degrees of bank, he would have had a turn diameter of 2305 ft, resulting in a flight path distance of 3620 ft. Having an altitude of 350 ft AGL, this would have needed an L/D of 10.3, with 250 ft he would have needed 14.5. At 175 mph the L/D of the P-51D is 15:1, prop in high pitch. Close to the stall speed L/D is an estimated 30 percent less, hence 10:1. Propellor in low pitch will further reduce this number. I found no numbers on the influence of open cooling flaps. Let's assume an L/D of 10:1 for now (from the video probably a lot lower). Hence, the pilot might have had the chance to complete his turn if all his factors had been in his favour, but even under these circulstances he would not have had the energy to extend the gear. He didn't have the altitude to extend it over the runway after the turn, and extending it during the turn would have affected his L/D so much that a crash was unavoidable. If he had run out of energy (altitude and/or speed) in the last phase of the turn, he would have definitely crashed, directly in front of him the M-11 motorway, his flightpath still pointing at the thousands of spectators. Hardly survivable. Conclusion: This landing is a perfect example of getting one's priorities right: Fly the plane to a safe controlled landing instead of trying to get back to the airfield, risking a probably deadly crash if only the slightest thing goes wrong. Cheers Andreas |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Conclusion:
This landing is a perfect example of getting one's priorities right" Yes, but only in the last 5 seconds of the flight. Right before he aborted the left hand turn, he was going to land on the strip. That was his plan. My point is that he should have turned before he reached the freeway. Not necessarily when it was all happening, I am aware of the pressure that he was under. However he clearly was desperate to make the runway and that mistake, to me, was a teaching moment. He did allude to the fact that a disabled aircraft is simply a tool dissipate energy, but did not discussed the fact that he was trying to reach the runway when he should not have. Also, Martin G, from the video and the topology, his downwind was to the south of the airfield, flying West to East (approx), otherwise a left hand turn could not take him across the freeway. And as you have noted there are no obstacles or crowds on that side. So he had choices. To reiterate, I am NOT discussing his performance during the event. I know nothing about flying P-51 etc. I am only discussing the debrief. Cheers Paul On Tuesday, 4 August 2020 10:34:35 UTC+10, Andreas Maurer wrote: On Sun, 2 Aug 2020 13:40:28 -0700, Eric Greenwell wrote: The tighter turn works for gliders after a rope break, so I'm thinking (as did Paul B), it would work for the P51 pilot. There is an optimum bank for minimizing the loss of altitude (and he did have some altitude). Had he turned tighter (about 40 degrees typically), he would have made it further around the turn than making a wide turn. Yes, initially he would be a bit lower, but his greater turn rate would more than compensates for that, and he can get back some of the that altitude when he stops turning and slows down. Hi Eric, From the video one can clearly see that his energy is barely enough to cross the extended center line, including the flare. Definitely not enough energy to make a turn, not to mention to drop the gear. Let's do some maths: When he started the turn to base leg he was between 250 and 350 ft AGL (depending on his altimeter settings) and 150 mph. P-51D stall speed clean: 100 mph, hence stall speed at 40 degreed bank: 114 mph . So, if he had flown a perfect approach at 120 MPH and 40 degrees of bank, he would have had a turn diameter of 2305 ft, resulting in a flight path distance of 3620 ft. Having an altitude of 350 ft AGL, this would have needed an L/D of 10.3, with 250 ft he would have needed 14.5. At 175 mph the L/D of the P-51D is 15:1, prop in high pitch. Close to the stall speed L/D is an estimated 30 percent less, hence 10:1. Propellor in low pitch will further reduce this number. I found no numbers on the influence of open cooling flaps. Let's assume an L/D of 10:1 for now (from the video probably a lot lower). Hence, the pilot might have had the chance to complete his turn if all his factors had been in his favour, but even under these circulstances he would not have had the energy to extend the gear. He didn't have the altitude to extend it over the runway after the turn, and extending it during the turn would have affected his L/D so much that a crash was unavoidable. If he had run out of energy (altitude and/or speed) in the last phase of the turn, he would have definitely crashed, directly in front of him the M-11 motorway, his flightpath still pointing at the thousands of spectators. Hardly survivable. Conclusion: This landing is a perfect example of getting one's priorities right: Fly the plane to a safe controlled landing instead of trying to get back to the airfield, risking a probably deadly crash if only the slightest thing goes wrong. Cheers Andreas |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Andreas Maurer wrote on 8/3/2020 5:34 PM:
On Sun, 2 Aug 2020 13:40:28 -0700, Eric Greenwell wrote: The tighter turn works for gliders after a rope break, so I'm thinking (as did Paul B), it would work for the P51 pilot. There is an optimum bank for minimizing the loss of altitude (and he did have some altitude). Had he turned tighter (about 40 degrees typically), he would have made it further around the turn than making a wide turn. Yes, initially he would be a bit lower, but his greater turn rate would more than compensates for that, and he can get back some of the that altitude when he stops turning and slows down. Hi Eric, From the video one can clearly see that his energy is barely enough to cross the extended center line, including the flare. Definitely not enough energy to make a turn, not to mention to drop the gear. Let's do some maths: When he started the turn to base leg he was between 250 and 350 ft AGL (depending on his altimeter settings) and 150 mph. P-51D stall speed clean: 100 mph, hence stall speed at 40 degreed bank: 114 mph . So, if he had flown a perfect approach at 120 MPH and 40 degrees of bank, he would have had a turn diameter of 2305 ft, resulting in a flight path distance of 3620 ft. Having an altitude of 350 ft AGL, this would have needed an L/D of 10.3, with 250 ft he would have needed 14.5. At 175 mph the L/D of the P-51D is 15:1, prop in high pitch. Close to the stall speed L/D is an estimated 30 percent less, hence 10:1. Propellor in low pitch will further reduce this number. I found no numbers on the influence of open cooling flaps. Let's assume an L/D of 10:1 for now (from the video probably a lot lower). Hence, the pilot might have had the chance to complete his turn if all his factors had been in his favour, but even under these circulstances he would not have had the energy to extend the gear. He didn't have the altitude to extend it over the runway after the turn, and extending it during the turn would have affected his L/D so much that a crash was unavoidable. If he had run out of energy (altitude and/or speed) in the last phase of the turn, he would have definitely crashed, directly in front of him the M-11 motorway, his flightpath still pointing at the thousands of spectators. Hardly survivable. Conclusion: This landing is a perfect example of getting one's priorities right: Fly the plane to a safe controlled landing instead of trying to get back to the airfield, risking a probably deadly crash if only the slightest thing goes wrong. Two things - you are supposed to fly the 40 degree turn at the minimum sink speed for that bank angle, not near stall. So, the L/D would be significantly higher than 10 - I wasn't suggesting the tighter turn would be a better choice, only that it would get him further around. Your answer may be what Paul B is looking for, as the person who won -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Lake Elsinore, 1-26 crash landing video | David Reitter | Soaring | 2 | July 13th 12 09:33 PM |
Short field landing Lake Providence LA (0M8) with ATC COMS - Video | A Lieberma[_2_] | Owning | 0 | July 21st 09 12:06 AM |
South Lake Tahoe Class D | Ray | Piloting | 2 | May 15th 05 03:31 AM |
Lake Tahoe | Ross Richardson | Owning | 5 | March 28th 05 07:04 PM |
DONNER LAKE TAHOE 2005 TRUCKEE,CA PHOTOS | DONNER LAKE 2005 | Piloting | 3 | January 16th 05 08:06 AM |