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![]() "Dan Foster" wrote: Not so sure it's necessarily plane's fault like the family and friends seems to think -- odds in general aviation are pretty good that it's often human error somewhere in the chain. Sorry for the loss of your friend. Could have been just about any of the things you mention, or a combination of several; we may never know, of course. Still, if I were betting, my money would be on simple spatial disorientation as the cause. Very easy to lose one's bearings over water at night, even when it's good VMC. Even over land, one can get out of shape from visual illusions very easily. The only time I ever came close to killing myself in an airplane was in the pattern at a rural airport on a nice, VMC night. Turning base, I looked at the airspeed indicator a moment and, when I looked outside again, got a false horizon off some ground lights and quickly overbanked the airplane. By the time I realized I had a problem--just a few seconds--I was within a couple hundred feet of the ground in a 60-deg. bank and descending fast. I had a moment of near panic as I realized I couldn't find the real horizon. The attitude indicator saved the day--er, night--but a few more seconds delay would have put me in the ground. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
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![]() "Dan Luke" wrote in message ... "Dan Foster" wrote: Not so sure it's necessarily plane's fault like the family and friends seems to think -- odds in general aviation are pretty good that it's often human error somewhere in the chain. Sorry for the loss of your friend. Could have been just about any of the things you mention, or a combination of several; we may never know, of course. Still, if I were betting, my money would be on simple spatial disorientation as the cause. Very easy to lose one's bearings over water at night, even when it's good VMC. The so-called "Black Hole Approach". http://www.avweb.com/news/airman/182402-1.html Even over land, one can get out of shape from visual illusions very easily. |
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![]() "Matt Barrow" wrote: The so-called "Black Hole Approach". http://www.avweb.com/news/airman/182402-1.html Maybe, as in http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?e...15X02030&key=1 Either that or a JFK-type loss of control. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
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