SpiraMirabilis
Possible Subversive
So asking someone to prove somthing that they say they can is being a jerk?
Are you mrflier's new account?
So asking someone to prove somthing that they say they can is being a jerk?
Are you mrflier's new account?
I'm a pilot at the same company and I can confirm everything in his story. He is fortunate to be alive, and should not have to justify his actions to anyone.
BTW your statements about icing may be accurate in the north, but down here it can be different. What he likely encountered was freezing rain on a airframe that was already below freezing, which can put a LOT of ice on in minutes. None of this was forecast by anyone, nor had any other airplane in the area reported anything.
This is simply another example that despite taking every precaution and doing everything correctly, this is still a dangerous business.
On the internet? Yes. If I were him, I wouldn't be posting pictures anywhere of anything. Whether or not some random internet under-bridge-dweller believes what I say on here is of little interest to me, likewise whether they believe someone else. Now put that thing back in your pants.
Are you mrflier's new account?
I was wrong and did not mean to come off like a jerk I was just doubted the accuracy of the story.
I would still love to see the pics
Fair enough. Call off the dogpile!![]()
:yeahthat::yeahthat: BTW good job on getting down safe.So, uhhhhhh, you weren't there, and you don't know. You can be an ass, or you can take the guy at face value. Your choice. I'll believe him. Metars don't mean a damn thing and you know it. I've been on the approach to an airport with 10SM CLR, and not broken out at all and gone missed. As for "this kind of ice is usually only a few hundred feet thick," again, you weren't there and you don't know. Stop second guessing the guy and give him a pat on the back, he's alive. Even if it was the most ice he'd ever seen, and even if it wasn't 4", it still scared him enough to write about it. Don't be a tool.
So, uhhhhhh, you weren't there, and you don't know. You can be an ass, or you can take the guy at face value. Your choice. I'll believe him. Metars don't mean a damn thing and you know it. I've been on the approach to an airport with 10SM CLR, and not broken out at all and gone missed. As for "this kind of ice is usually only a few hundred feet thick," again, you weren't there and you don't know. Stop second guessing the guy and give him a pat on the back, he's alive. Even if it was the most ice he'd ever seen, and even if it wasn't 4", it still scared him enough to write about it. Don't be a tool.
So, uhhhhhh, you weren't there, and you don't know. You can be an ass, or you can take the guy at face value. Your choice. I'll believe him. Metars don't mean a damn thing and you know it. I've been on the approach to an airport with 10SM CLR, and not broken out at all and gone missed. As for "this kind of ice is usually only a few hundred feet thick," again, you weren't there and you don't know. Stop second guessing the guy and give him a pat on the back, he's alive. Even if it was the most ice he'd ever seen, and even if it wasn't 4", it still scared him enough to write about it. Don't be a tool.
B model, 600hp
First and foremost, congratulations on surviving your flight. Thanks for sharing your recount of the events. Concise and gripping at the same time. I appreciate what you went through.
From a learning standpoint, is there anything that you could have done differently (short of being clairvoyant) to avoid the situation?
I have been following this post and have wondered the same thing as well. What are the things we can take away from this situation to better prepare and avoid these types of extreme occurences? Being the low-time, little ice experience pilot I am, I like to know what I can learn from others experiences.