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Is this yet another Cirrus



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 24th 06, 05:59 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Is this yet another Cirrus

I was at the airport watching the flames consume this plane. My
student (solo) was waiting to take off #2 on the taxiway. Another
instructor from my school was with his student also waiting in #1
position. They both describe its final approach to be very odd in that
the plane was coming down with a very high angle of attack. They also
say that once the plane slammed to the ground, the landing gears
buckled, the wings shook, and power may have been applied around the
time the left wing struck the ground. It somersaulted into the woods.
If the plane went to the right, it would have hit both my school's
planes. Lucky that planes have a left yawing tendency.

-John

Darkwing wrote:
"Gig 601XL Builder" wrDOTgiaconaATcox.net wrote in message
...


Or one we've previously talked about?



Both occupants of a Cirrus SR22 walked away from what became a fiery crash
at Lincoln Park Airport in New Jersey, Sunday afternoon. The aircraft was
landing when it started to the left of the runway, the pilot applied
throttle, and the aircraft veered further left, according to a policeman
interviewed by the Associated Press. The aircraft impacted trees some 100
feet from the runway. The two men escaped the wreckage before it burned...



I seen that earlier today, I think that is a new one (again!).

Cirrus get your's today!

----------------------------------------------
DW


  #2  
Old January 24th 06, 07:51 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Is this yet another Cirrus

wrote:
I was at the airport watching the flames consume this plane. My
student (solo) was waiting to take off #2 on the taxiway.


Something every solo student likes to see. G

Barry
  #3  
Old January 24th 06, 08:32 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Is this yet another Cirrus


wrote in message
oups.com...
I was at the airport watching the flames consume this plane. My
student (solo) was waiting to take off #2 on the taxiway. Another
instructor from my school was with his student also waiting in #1
position. They both describe its final approach to be very odd in that
the plane was coming down with a very high angle of attack. They also
say that once the plane slammed to the ground, the landing gears
buckled, the wings shook, and power may have been applied around the
time the left wing struck the ground. It somersaulted into the woods.
If the plane went to the right, it would have hit both my school's
planes. Lucky that planes have a left yawing tendency.

-John



So did they get out and go help the guy? I don't know what the hell you
would do if that happened in front of you, call 911/FBO and shut the plane
down I assume.

--------------------------------------------
DW


 




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