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#1
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On Dec 25, 9:08*am, "Anyolmouse" wrote:
"Monk" wrote in message ... | I just received these images from a fellow pilot. *Good thing there | wasn't a copilot in that seat. | | "Yikes! Meeting a goose at 11,000 ft. And 185 kts can ruin your whole | day." | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/att/GetAttachment.aspx?tnail=0&mes....0|8CB2EEC85F0D88 0| | |http://tinyurl.com/7kpav3 | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/att/GetAttachment.aspx?tnail=1&mes....0|8CB2EEC85F0D88 0| | |http://tinyurl.com/7hb8ps | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/att/GetAttachment.aspx?tnail=2&mes....0|8CB2EEC85F0D88 0| | |http://tinyurl.com/7zx4v4 | There was a goose strike several years back in OKC where the co-pilot/passenger was killed. I think it was a C-310 making a high speed descent into Wiley Post. There were some pictures in the newspaper showing the goose remains strung out in the back seat and of the windscreen damage. Anybody else recall this with maybe more details? -- Anyolmouse I would be interested in more info on this. Monk |
#2
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![]() "Monk" wrote in message ... On Dec 25, 9:08 am, "Anyolmouse" wrote: "Monk" wrote in message ... | I just received these images from a fellow pilot. Good thing there | wasn't a copilot in that seat. | | "Yikes! Meeting a goose at 11,000 ft. And 185 kts can ruin your whole | day." | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=0&mes.. ..0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7kpav3 | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=1&mes.. ..0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7hb8ps | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=2&mes.. ..0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7zx4v4 | There was a goose strike several years back in OKC where the co-pilot/passenger was killed. I think it was a C-310 making a high speed descent into Wiley Post. There were some pictures in the newspaper showing the goose remains strung out in the back seat and of the windscreen damage. Anybody else recall this with maybe more details? -- Anyolmouse I would be interested in more info on this. Monk I have been searching for it and haven't had any luck so far. This site is interesting: http://www.birdstrike.org/ In the blue column on the left side click on "significant bird strike events and also the FAA-USDA report below it. The Top ten Bird Strke Myths is interesting too. The highest known strike occurred at 37,000 feet. -- Anyolmouse |
#3
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On Dec 25, 4:49*pm, "Anyolmouse" wrote:
"Monk" wrote in message ... On Dec 25, 9:08 am, "Anyolmouse" wrote: "Monk" wrote in message ... | I just received these images from a fellow pilot. Good thing there | wasn't a copilot in that seat. | | "Yikes! Meeting a goose at 11,000 ft. And 185 kts can ruin your whole | day." | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=0&mes... .0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7kpav3 | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=1&mes... .0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7hb8ps | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=2&mes... .0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7zx4v4 | There was a goose strike several years back in OKC where the co-pilot/passenger was killed. I think it was a C-310 making a high speed descent into Wiley Post. There were some pictures in the newspaper showing the goose remains strung out in the back seat and of the windscreen damage. Anybody else recall this with maybe more details? -- Anyolmouse I would be interested in more info on this. Monk I have been searching for it and haven't had any luck so far. This site is interesting:http://www.birdstrike.org/In the blue column on the left side click on "significant bird strike events and also the FAA-USDA report below it. The Top ten Bird Strke Myths is interesting too. The highest known strike occurred at 37,000 feet. -- Anyolmouse Thanks for the link. Monk |
#4
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Anyolmouse wrote:
"Monk" wrote in message ... On Dec 25, 9:08 am, "Anyolmouse" wrote: "Monk" wrote in message ... | I just received these images from a fellow pilot. Good thing there | wasn't a copilot in that seat. | | "Yikes! Meeting a goose at 11,000 ft. And 185 kts can ruin your whole | day." | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=0&mes.. .0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7kpav3 | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=1&mes.. .0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7hb8ps | | |http://co120w.col120.mail.live.com/a...px?tnail=2&mes.. .0|8CB2EEC85F0D880| | |http://tinyurl.com/7zx4v4 | There was a goose strike several years back in OKC where the co-pilot/passenger was killed. I think it was a C-310 making a high speed descent into Wiley Post. There were some pictures in the newspaper showing the goose remains strung out in the back seat and of the windscreen damage. Anybody else recall this with maybe more details? -- Anyolmouse I would be interested in more info on this. Monk I have been searching for it and haven't had any luck so far. This site is interesting: http://www.birdstrike.org/ In the blue column on the left side click on "significant bird strike events and also the FAA-USDA report below it. The Top ten Bird Strke Myths is interesting too. The highest known strike occurred at 37,000 feet. I can't address that particular strike, but I do recall one in Turkey where the leading edges of both wings of a C-130 had dings from flying into a flock of small birds. If memory serves, this was in the 1979 time frame, there was a total of 7 dings. Within a few days of the C-130 event one of the F-4E in my unit took a similar bird on the top of the nose about a foot in front of the wind screen. It penetrated into the aircraft. I no longer recall the total damage. In Spain we had condors to contend with. We lost the head off an F-4E pave spike laser designator pod from a condor strike. After removing the pod we had to remove its rack. The poor girl who did it was covered in bird parts. Another condor strike, also F-4E, resulted in the airplane being shipped back to Germany a year later for serious structural repair. The bird got cut into two big parts by the leading edge of the left variramp. One part tore the side of the intake a few feet in and tore the CSD dome on the engine as well as FODding out the engine itself. The other part entered the rear cockpit damaging all kinds of wiring. The left wing tank was punched off, but the right one couldn't be jettisoned. It was summer, so you can imagine what the rear cockpit smelled like the next day. An interesting aside here is all bird parts from strikes were sent to Warner-Robbins in plastic bags. I guess some GM 9 zillion had to certify it was a bird and not a cow or something. Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired |
#5
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There is also a story about General Charles Yeager intentionally
whacking a duck with a Beech D-18 wingtip. It's in his book, anyway. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Meeting A Goose at 11,000 Ft. | Monk | Piloting | 32 | December 31st 08 06:10 AM |
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Goose at FL 360???? | A Lieberman | Piloting | 49 | November 15th 05 12:08 AM |
Spurce Goose | Airborne | Simulators | 10 | March 29th 05 07:03 AM |
Spurce Goose | Ace | Simulators | 1 | March 2nd 05 09:19 PM |