http://www.floridatoday.com/article...?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|Home&nclick_check=1Three people have died according to rescue personnel who first came upon the wreckage of a plane that crashed into the woods west of the runways of Melbourne International Airport today shortly after 5 p.m.
Reports are that the cockpit is crumbled and a request has been made for equipment to assist in extricating the bodies.
Rescue crews search the woods west of Wickham Road and north of NASA Boulevard, then expanded to search wooded areas east of Wickham before locating the small plane an hour after witnesses reported a plane going down hard below the treeline.
"I saw a plane go down," said Franklin Duran, 52, of Melbourne. "Completely nosedive."
Another SR22. Holy crap
My coworker was very upset he witnessed it, saying that the whole thing could have been avoided if calmer heads would have prevailed.
Is that for sure?
at1024 said:I spoke with one of my coworkers who witnessed this firsthand. This is his account and not mine. He was on final when this particular aircraft came in on a tight base and cut him off. My coworker saw it coming and started a go around. The other airplane banked fairly steep turning final, and then the controller started yelling at him. At that point he banked even more steeply and went into a stall and spun. Now I haven't been down to Melbourne yet but it's widely known that they're controllers are known for being on the aggressive side. I have an instrument student who absolutely refuses to let me take him there because of a bad experience he had with the tower as a student pilot.
Well, hopefully, but from the sounds of it it'll just be another base to final stall spin. Don't know what more we can learn from those.Guess we'll see what comes out of this, detail-wise. Hopefully some good learning.
Well, hopefully, but from the sounds of it it'll just be another base to final stall spin. Don't know what more we can learn from those.
...but the vast majority of stall spin accidents involve CFIs, the one group required to undergo spin training. I won't be surprised if we hear a CFI was on this airplane. Indicates to me there is a problem with the current stall/spin CFI training.Teach spin recovery rather than spin avoidance at the primary level? Not that you can recover from a base to final stall/spin necessarily, but at least you'd get to see what happens if you push it that far. I know I know, :deadhorse:...
Edit: RIP to the pilots, and sorry your friend got a front row seat to that accident on final. Pretty much sucks all around.![]()
...but the vast majority of stall spin accidents involve CFIs, the one group required to undergo spin training. I won't be surprised if we hear a CFI was on this airplane. Indicates to me there is a problem with the current stall/spin CFI training.
Granted, the study is dated, but between 1991-2000 91% of the fatal stall/spin accidents involved a CFI. It seems as if every time we read of a CFI fatality it involves a spin.Wow! I had not heard that statistic before, that's crazy.