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"Kyle Boatright" wrote in message
. .. The theory about that accident in the RV community is that the pilot had used the seatbelt on the passenger's side as a control lock, was in a rush to leave the show, and didn't do a control check before takeoff. With the belt latched, the elevator was in an "up" configuration, and the rest, unfortunately, is history. That was a popular theory, true, and not just among RVers. However, the NTSB carefully looked at the possibility and while they could not with 100% certainty exclude that possibility, the investigation showed no evidence whatsoever that the controls were secured by the seatbelt on takeoff, and some reasonable evidence that they were not (in particular, there was no burn residue of the seatbelt found on the control stick, in spite of there being seatbelt burn residue elsewhere...also, several witnesses failed to note any unusual deflection of the elevator, as would be readily apparent if the theory were true). The final NTSB conclusion was "The pilot's excessive climb rate, which lead to his failure to maintain an airspeed above stalling speed", with the "seatbelt control lock" theory carrying no weight at all. http://www.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief2.asp?...FA105& akey=1 Pete |
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On Tue, 19 Dec 2006 16:33:20 -0800, xxx wrote
(in article . com): Article reproduced in its entirety: --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Pilot hurt in plane crash at Thetford airport Published: Monday, December 18, 2006 THETFORD - A pilot from Post Mills was injured Sunday morning when the plane he was piloting crashed at the Post Mills Airport in Thetford, said state police in Bradford. Andy Gelston, 45, was transported by helicopter to Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center for unspecified injuries after the engine on his light sport aircraft stalled at between 50 and 100 feet in the air and crashed, nose first, at the end of the grass runway. The Federal Aviation Administration is conducting an investigation. The engine stalled and crashed nose first? What about the rest of the airplane? No doubt the illiterate news reporter heard that the aircraft "stalled" and assumed that had something to do with the engine. |
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