Oh man that gives me chills. Hard to tell but it sounded like the engines were lowered up there.
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Sounds like they are screaming at WFO to me. Same engine design as a Lear31, right?
Oh man that gives me chills. Hard to tell but it sounded like the engines were lowered up there.
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Sounds like they are screaming at WFO to me. Same engine design as a Lear31, right?
UPS crashed on an instrument approach at Birmingham. Not exactly a bottom feeder, although a contractor of some. Seepage?No judgement on the crew at all, I was aiming more at the operating culture of the company. Gotta wonder how a business jet crashes on an instrument approach though.
WFO? You're saying the power was up? Sounds like approach power. The plane hit the house next door so I figured it just seemed loud.
Sounded low power to me, but I'm sure these sort of details will get cleared up in time.
Yeah, it's hard to tell.
Ummm... it was recorded as a SNAP CHAT VIDEO. Of course it's hard to tell. This isn't Bell Labs we are talking about.
Like Boris said, lets at least let the bodies cool before we start trying to be acoustic engineers.
Unless of course somebody is an acoustic engineer and then by all means, tell us how there is no way in hell to discern power setting through a snap chat recorded video taken from inside a solid structure 100 feet away.
I'm not trying to lynch the crew here. Just making an observation. I'm not sure how you got that from my post.
Holy crap.
Horrible, but at the same time I couldn't help to chuckle at how such a crazy piece of footage starts out so stupidly.
Last radar hit shows them 0.24NM northeast of AK-LOM at 2,900. Altitude over the AK-LOM as charted is 2,300. The chart for the LOC-25 says the G/P to TCH of 50' is 3.09°.
By my calculations, from that distance and altitude, to achieve 50' TCH, the descent angle would have to be 4.42°
The ground speed on the last radar position shows 127 kts. This would make for a rate of descent of -936 FPM, if my calculations are correct-ish.
3.7 miles from AK to the MAP, plus their 0.24 east of it, makes for a distance to travel of 3.94 NMs to the MAP.
If the weather was at the Cat C straight-in minimums, and if you were on the 3.09° GP from AK, you would break-out and see the runway 1.5 NMs out, at basically 500' above field elevation.
The address where they crashed is 1.74NMs from the end of the runway.
Weather was as follows:
22 minutes before the crash:
SPECI KAKR 101931Z AUTO 25008KT 1 1/2SM BR OVC005 11/09 A2995
RMK AO2 CIG 003V009 T01110094=
1 Minute after the crash:
METAR KAKR 101954Z AUTO 24007KT 1 1/2SM BR BKN004 OVC009
11/09 A2995 RMK AO2 SLP142 T01060094=
The weather was below minimums for the LOC-25 22 minutes before the crash and improved slightly, as in just enough, to make the approach possibly legal, (if ASOS was reporting).
Regardless, from the point of the last radar hit, to the point of impact is a distance of 2.11 NMs. That's 2.11 NMs to lose 1360', to reach MDA, from 2900'. With the ground speed of 127, you would cover that distance in 59 seconds. Let's call it one minute. So one minute to descend from 2900' to ground elevation at crash sight of 1097', that makes for a rate of descent of 1803' FPM.
Without any indicators of navigation equipment malfunction, or other mechanical troubles, I can't help but to come to a conclusion that this crew flew this airplane into the ground attempting an approach which was marginal at best, according to the available weather reports.
CAK is only 7.4NM from AKR and has 4 ILS approaches. The crew should have elected to go into CAK.
RIP to all.