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Dudley Henriques wrote in
: Bertie the Bunyip wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4_iJ...eature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZN1lC...eature=related http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9txDhi5wC2A Have my own notions, but would be interested from a pros viewpoint. I'm assuming that mechanical was not a factor in any of these, BTW.Might have been, but it appears that in each case the pilot went in with no commital gates and no escape route. Bertie Can't say much about the Extra (at least it looked like an Extra) but the Hurricane and the King Cobra are accidents I've been involved in with safety discussions within the war bird demonstration community. OK, the first one should have been the T6 slow roll where he dished out in the end.(orange one in south america?) Looks like he had nothing even beginning the roll and had completely lost the plot by the time he reached even 45 degrees and should have just thrown it away at that point. To me, the KC accident looked like the result of a way too low energy state going through the top gate. He should have had at least 150 indicated inverted on top but it looked like he lost his energy to drag going up the up line by pulling too much g. He was practically dead in the water on top but apparently at fairly high power. This looked like it torqued him in roll pretty good and he lost it coming through the gate. He recovered as the angle of attack narrowed back into the work range but by then he was committed way too nose low and had no radial g available to affect the recovery. OK, pretty much as I saw it as well (though I ould never have put it so well!) But it seems to me he should have been formulating some sort of plan to get out as he neared the top of the first loop and saw it all going wrong. Never flown anything as powerful, fast and heavy as that doing aerobatics, of course, but it seems to me he had only two options after he passed 90deg; a hammerhead might have been a bit ropey at that altitude in that airplane, and I don't know if they're even on the menu in that thing. A hammerhead being ruled out for whatever reason, I'd just pitch over forward hard and bump my way out if the airspeed was that far gone. The bottom of the list would be to pull hard and then roll out, which is what he did, intetionally or otherwise, but if he had pulled a bit harder a bit earlier, he'd at least have exited the torque roll a bit more nose down which might have avoided the secondary problem. Did it have fuel injection? Was he having to think about avoiding negative G? The Hurricane looks like it will come down to a simple brain fart. The guy was very qualified and had experience. So far it looks like he simply committed to a Split S below his minimum AGL parameter for the Hurricane. This one is very similar to the Thunderbird F16 accident at Mountain Home AFB where the team lost a Viper. Brain fart! Again, exactly as I saw it. He was screwed the second he rolled over. Reason I ask is I was just wondering how good my eye was after so long away from aerobatics. Bertie |
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