Engine failure on takeoff. With five guys, their gear, and fuel onboard, I’m assuming he was pretty close to MTOW. Probably ran out of options fairly quickly.
I don’t know how high he got, but I probably would have went for the water.
When I flew meat missiles in a 182, we never had more that 1/4 full tanks for that reason. Since we were climbing over the field, it was no big deal.
That would result in less altitude and a lower chance of recovery to the airport. I flew jumpers to and it was Vy all the way up with considerations for CHTs. You don't need airspeed in an engine failure, you're already flying. You need altitude. I don't know why you'd climb at Vx unless rising terrain was a factor.Flew jumpers in both 182 and 'Van. My biggest worry was a low level E/G failure at Vx. For that reason I always used conservative climb angles and higher speeds during initial climb.
A buddy of mine flies there and is very shaken up. From a trip to the airport pub with him a few years back, it was very clear that the aviation community in Kuai is a tight nit and fun-loving bunch. Everyone from the helicopter pilots to the line guys to the mainline airline pilots who lived on the islands was out there having a great time. I hope they all find comfort in each other, I'd imagine the majority are just as shattered as the Skydive Kaui pilots themselves.
Typical skydive stuff?There were some pretty crazy quotes from former employees about MX and safety in a local article about it yesterday.
Link?There were some pretty crazy quotes from former employees about MX and safety in a local article about it yesterday.
Link?
I don't think skydivers care about safety.
Because 'they' make you do your job?
No because rather than talking to me knowing there is an extremely busy arrival route literally directly above their airport and in the middle of their jump zone they just climb and hope for the best.