GypsyPilot
Mohawk Town
Can you be legal with 4 people in a 172? Sure, I've done it lots of times when those people included kids or young women. Have I ever flown 4 adult men in a 172? Nope, never made that work.
Could engine trouble have been a problem? possibly
Could W&B have been a problem? possibly
Any accident is a chain of events that could have been broken at any time with different results. Nobody is arguing it is a simple discussion. If you don't like or choose not to contribute to the discussion, then move along. Plain and simple.
"Tyler Evans was driving down Bishop Road when he saw the crash.
"It took off, it stalled, went up hooked and then it went down and crashed over here," he said."
""We heard the propeller, like you could here that something was wrong with it," said Ruzanna Tovmasyan who then heard the crash. "
"Another neighbor Mark Gerald also heard the engine sputtering.
"Kind of like a backfiring sound, like the engine was trying to quit," he said. "You knew there was something wrong with the motor no question. We hear these planes all day long.""
http://www.newsnet5.com/news/local-news/oh-lake/plane-crashes-in-willoughby-hills-in-lake-county
As far as I'm concerned, those witnesses may as well have said a flying saucer came down and fired lasers at the Cessna. I have zero faith in witness statements from the general public.
Interesting point. On this flight, I had 3 dudes and a normal sized girl in the plane, weights were legal, did some non-standard flying, listened to my ass(you can totally say ass on here), everything was groovy. You bring up a good point with the experience at lower weight comment, I think it's important that people understand the airplane is going to fly differently depending on many factors including weight and thus you can't always depend on standard pitch attitudes and what not. On departure in a 172, whatever attitude gives me 75knots on the climbout is what I'll fly, because that's what the airplane wants to do. I can see always pitching to the same attitude after rotation leading to bad things, like what you mentioned. But again, if you have the airplane within weight and CG limits, consider runway length and density altitude, then I don't see a problem. Just nurse the plane a bit when you first takeoff to see how it's going to handle, then do that pilot stuff. Thus far, never had an "oh crap" moment that had anything to do with a heavy but legal airplane nor heard a stall horn anytime I wasn't expecting it.Performance across weights is a broad spectrum, not a black and white "legal or not legal." We all remember how the airplane took off like a rocket on our first solo after the instructor got out. A small amount of weight can make a large difference, especially in climb rate. Have I loaded up 4 people in a C172, calculated a careful W&B, and been perfectly legal? Yes. Have I scared myself half to death in that very same legal airplane by hearing the stall warning horn go off in what I thought was a reasonable pitch attitude for climb based on my experience at a much lower weight? Yep, done that too.
I have legally flown a lot of over gross light aircraft - it is surprising what the FAA grants waivers for when no passengers are carried.This. I've done it in a 160 horse 172P at 82-degrees. Made sure the last guy didn't refill and took fuel 50lbs shy of max t/o weight and was well within margins. Plane performed just fine.
Yeah, I was a fresh private pilot and distracted at the time. You are 100% correct, one should always re-evaluate their pitch attitude in climb based on what the airspeed is doing - and adjust accordingly. I was distracted (climbing out of Teterboro, VFR, with 3 friends in the summer, after a departure delayed by fog, with residual haze, the radio chatter constant, trying to find landmarks off the side of the nose, and worried about busting airspace or missing a radio call), inexperienced, and my scan was poor. It was a good learning experience.Interesting point. On this flight, I had 3 dudes and a normal sized girl in the plane, weights were legal, did some non-standard flying, listened to my ass(you can totally say ass on here), everything was groovy. You bring up a good point with the experience at lower weight comment, I think it's important that people understand the airplane is going to fly differently depending on many factors including weight and thus you can't always depend on standard pitch attitudes and what not. On departure in a 172, whatever attitude gives me 75knots on the climbout is what I'll fly, because that's what the airplane wants to do. I can see always pitching to the same attitude after rotation leading to bad things, like what you mentioned. But again, if you have the airplane within weight and CG limits, consider runway length and density altitude, then I don't see a problem. Just nurse the plane a bit when you first takeoff to see how it's going to handle, then do that pilot stuff. Thus far, never had an "oh crap" moment that had anything to do with a heavy but legal airplane nor heard a stall horn anytime I wasn't expecting it.
Yeah, I was also wondering about partial power loss. Binary issues are pretty simple to deal with, whether engine power, vacuum system in IMC, lights at night, gear fully extended or retracted, etc. But when system partially or slowly fail - that's when experience and judgment save the day.Have we thought about the possibility of partial power loss? Nobody teaches partial power loss on climbout it seems like.