Oh man, how sad. That roll was just awful and damn fast. It had me thinking hell, that can't be just a wing stall. Why the heck was he rushing so? One engine out on that plane is not that big of a deal, especially given where he was. I wonder if the other engine was having an issue as well or he panicked or what.I watched it on the big screen and I can see the gear down now. Yeah, it does look like he could have snagged the right main on a power line.
That was a classic stall spin accident, single engine or otherwise. The roll itself was fast, all the time spent prior to that flying with tons of inside rudder wasn't that fast. Add the pulling the nose up to make the runway with all that right rudder and you've got yourself the classic base to final spin. Sad that the pilot had more than enough warning and didn't break the chain to stop the accident. (assuming all other systems were working properly).Oh man, how sad. That roll was just awful and damn fast. It had me thinking hell, that can't be just a wing stall. Why the heck was he rushing so? One engine out on that plane is not that big of a deal, especially given where he was. I wonder if the other engine was having an issue as well or he panicked or what.
He may have been pushing it around with the rudder as well. If he did that enough, over he goes. It very much looked to me like he was diving in also. Look at it carefully at 17 seconds in. Look at the very back, under the tail. Does it look like he hit something? The wire? Or am I seeing something else? Is it just the tail rolling over in yaw or what? Did that pushed yaw then cause the wing to stall? Granted, I am watching this on a laptop, but something looks a little funny there. Then look closely at the wing at the same time point. Watch the trees near the tip of that wing. It looks like the wing has dipped down into and has struck the tree or trees, you can even see some branches/leaves moving and is this after something else has happened (like hitting the wire) that I just can't make out clearly? Was the wire (if this is the issue) just behind that tree? Watch it a couple of times and see what you think. He could have just snapped rolled it, but I am just not sure watching this several times at that instant just prior to the roll. Unfortunately, all the reports/write-ups I can find, are in Portuguese.I watched it on my iphone first and the way he was diving in on the and leveled off hard and low looked like he was going for a high speed pass and over shot the centerline. Looking at it again, if he were to catch a main on a wire there would be considerable amount of yaw and the nose would dive. The attitude remained constant as the departure happened. I think you're right that he was trying to rush the approach. Looks like he overshot final, and entered an accelerated stall while skidding. If the right engine had failed, not applying enough left rudder was causing the skid. Looks like he was trying to turn right while still banking into good (left) engine... I've actually seen an airplane hit powerlines before and from what I recall, there was more of an electrical flash when the lines break... If they're powered...
An intentional snap roll entered at just 20 kts above Vs initially has about twice the roll rate of a roll initiated with aileron. The speed of the autorotation on departure does make sense given the speed of the approach.
Monday morning QB much?folks, this is pilot error, this is what it looks like. It's sad, but true.
Hard to see, but take it in and learn the lesson of this tragedy...there is no clipping of a wire, it is very apparent if you can just stop looking for an excuse for the poor guy.
no I don't, that's why it means something. Nearly every person above mine in the post is trying to find some hope that the guy didn't just kill himself from lack of airmanship (monday morning QB'ing) but when I point out the simple truth that you can all see in front of your face (should you so desire) I get the poke. It's cool, I expected it.Monday morning QB much?
I think the flash you are seeing is the wing tip strobes. You'll see them several times in the video. This is a case of the left wing out flying the stalled right wing. If I had to guess I'd say the roll and impact with terrain may have caused the wing to come off.There is what looks like a small flash and maybe a little smoke on the right wing around the 00:15 point. It's hard to tell with the trees and stuff but part of the wing may have come off, hence the roll.
Fair enough, I'm not watching it on the best computer. And I'd like the record to reflect that I was not trying to absolve the pilot just pointing out something I saw.I
I think the flash you are seeing is the wing tip strobes. You'll see them several times in the video. This is a case of the left wing out flying the stalled right wing. If I had to guess I'd say the roll and impact with terrain may have caused the wing to come off.