My second solo flight carrying skydivers I didn't realize that i had left the prop at 2100 RPM while landing.
I heard the engine rev up, then slow down as the governer kicked in. I very foolishly decided to continue the take off, even though I thought something was wrong.
As we barelled past the point where we should have lifted off, I was franticly trying to figure out what was wrong. Now we didn't have enough room to stop and had to continue. The mixture controll would have about 1/2" gap when pushed to full rich, and I thought the prop should too.
I lifted off and BARELY cleared the fence at the far end of the feild. I looked UP at some scrub oaks.
Finaly, I pushed all the controlls foward just to try something, anything! The engine reved right up, and we started to climb.
That's the most scared I've ever been in an airplane, and the closest I've ever come to crashing.
The point of my long and somewhat embaressing story is,
If something is wrong on take off, ABORT!
Later, with several more flights under my belt (but never forgeting that first one) I was taking off with myself and four jumpers. Two of the jumpers weight added up to an extra body and almost certianly put us over grosse. I started the take off roll, and didn't get airborne at the point I useually did.
Just as I cut the throttle, the plane lifted off. I realized i had made a mistake, but I had no choice. I had to continue the abort. I held the flared attitude and landed again bouncing down the runway and applied full brakes to get my very heavy plane to a stop. I stoped about 50 ft from the ditch at the far end.
The second point of my long and somewhat embaressing story is,
Once you make a Go/Nogo decision about a take off (or landing roll) you MUST stick with it.
If I had tried to continue the take off after I cut the throttle, I wouldn't have cleared the power lines at the far end of the field.
Rember,
"Smart people learn from their mistakes, Really smart people learn from other people's mistakes."