FlyingNole said:He's not a pilot, can't get it quite yet.....What I thought was kinda funny/ironic, was how the mother was already freakin out in the front seat before the engine even started
FlyingNole said:He's not a pilot, can't get it quite yet.....What I thought was kinda funny/ironic, was how the mother was already freakin out in the front seat before the engine even started
FlyingNole said:He's not a pilot, can't get it quite yet.....What I thought was kinda funny/ironic, was how the mother was already freakin out in the front seat before the engine even started
Airdale said:You know this kind of thing is a shame, it really is, but what an idiot. Not doing W&B is one thing, but to really push the issue of getting airborne was a deadly mistake. I could tell when that nose wheel was in the air for about 5 secs and the mains were still down that he wasn't flying anywhere except into the ground. And right after she finally did get airborne, he had a wicked drift. I guess nobody ever taught him the importance of an aborted take-off before and after rotation.
jrh said:I'm not saying you're wrong, but in defense of the pilot...
If you're flying in the jungles of Columbia, you've probably been around the block a couple times in the world of aviation. Bush pilots in third world countries are generally experienced and constantly working on the fringes of what pilots in the mainland U.S. would consider acceptable. He'd probably been in similar heavily loaded/unimproved strip conditions before and made it out fine.
It's easy to say he should've done this or that, but he was probably a lot more comfortable pushing the limits of the plane than most of us would be. Maybe he was an idiot, maybe not. Without flying in his shoes for a while, I'd hesitate to judge one way or the other based on a single video.