![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 23 May 2007, Newps wrote:
Well what fun is that? Your missing out on a lot of terriffic scenery. Sail over the pass at 6000 or 6500 assuming the wind allows. True... but over the terrain in question, at that altitude, your ONLY emergency landing options are the highway and its immediate surroundings, which in that area are NOT good options. Anyone who's driven that stretch of Hwy.12 knows what I'm talking about; west of the pass it's 80 miles of twisting & turning with hardly a straight stretch long enough to think about passing in a car, much less landing an airplane. (East of the pass it's much straighter & flatter.) Being up a ways over the surrounding terrain drastically improves your choices, and hence your chance of surviving an emergency landing. Less scenic, but safer. Besides, I see terrific scenery every time I look out the window. ![]() looking at mountains 70 miles away. And every time I fly, usually the first thing I do is climb out of a narrow 2000 ft. deep valley. There's a lot more flat areas there than the chart would have you believe. Well, "flat" isn't generally the first word that springs to mind when I'm flying over it. I'd go with something closer to, some spots that are bare enough, and close enough to level, and long enough, to have a pretty good chance of getting an airplane on the ground without killing yourself. But, there are lots of mountains where even that's not true. A couple years ago a guy went down about 25 miles SE of here because of a mechanical problem, while flying IFR from Jackson Hole to Lewiston. By the time he broke out of the cloud layer he didn't have a whole lot of good choices of landing spot. Destroyed the airplane and messed him up pretty bad, so moving very far was out of the question. The plane flipped over and broke off the ELT antenna. The weather was really nasty that week so they couldn't get search planes up. Took them 2 days to find him, and even then it was just pure luck -- friend of mine driving on a logging road where the sheriff didn't think they should even be looking. Radar coverage stops at around 9000 there, I believe, so they didn't really know where he was. There's a lot of really remote, rugged country around here, and the terrain & vegetation are such that without a working ELT, it would be really easy for an airplane to disappear without a trace even if they knew you were inside a few square mile area. Best argument I know for having a handheld radio (with good batteries), and preferably a PLB as well. http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?e...16X00620&key=1 I tried to get flight following on the way home from Missoula once. Didn't get it because, at 12,500, I was below radar most of the way. All that to say, in mountains, it pays to be a bit cautious when making decisions of route, altitude, weather, etc. -Dan |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Pilot dies midflight; co-pilot lands plane | A Guy Called Tyketto | Piloting | 0 | January 21st 07 07:56 PM |
BD-6 article, 9/73 Plane & Pilot | [email protected] | Home Built | 2 | March 24th 06 11:15 AM |
jan 2003 plane & pilot | [email protected] | Owning | 1 | June 16th 05 02:49 PM |
Best Single Pilot IFR Plane | Charles Talleyrand | Owning | 57 | January 3rd 04 01:02 PM |
Best Single Pilot IFR Plane | Charles Talleyrand | Instrument Flight Rules | 64 | December 9th 03 07:20 PM |