YAK 52 Crash in Poland

Check out the second video posted. Is it just me or is the rudder not opposite of the spin along with the yoke fully aft? Either way, those inputs won't get you out of a spin, but then again I wasn't there in the cockpit to see if something else was wrong with the airplane.

www.liveleak.com/e/sdOCx_1560594379

Another video:


You can see him stop the spin and almost pull out of it at the end. RIP
 
Love how the people on the shore are all mad they got wet. Not like hey did that guy live? Does he need help?
 
The fact that a stranger invited you to their (poop) show doesn’t mean you’re obligated to attend.

What exactly might one do, do you think, without extrication tools, SCUBA, a boat from which to work ... apart from sink with the plane, once you swim out and arrived exhausted in your clingy wet clothes, without a PFD?

Of course, s/he needs help. Except in the most rare of circumstances, it’s almost certain you’re not equipped to give it, though, and there are two bodies to recover now instead of one.

Firefighters and cops, EMS workers and HELP/tow truck drivers are killed in significant numbers while 20-ton fire trucks block roadways, and a thousand emergency lights flash their warning - because asses can’t drive safely-by the scene of a car accident or disabled vehicle, while those responders try to help someone as trained and equipped professionals.

This (poop) isn’t as simple as you might imagine.
 
And no-one rushes to help.

What are they going to do? No PFDs, no boat, no extrication tools, wet and clingy clothes if you swim out. The odds are more than likely you won’t be going home, either. You become a second victim, and NO ONE gets the appropriate help needed as already thinly-spread resources, first on scene, have to focus on two emergencies rather than one.

Professional and volunteer responders die, even when properly equipped, trained and with “back-up.” Rescues, with this kind of mechanism-of-impact and injury, are not simple things with which to deal.

The smart civilians didn’t rush to help. They overwhelmed the 911 system with dozens of phone calls, and went home to live another day.
 
What are they going to do? No PFDs, no boat, no extrication tools, wet and clingy clothes if you swim out. The odds are more than likely you won’t be going home, either. You become a second victim, and NO ONE gets the appropriate help needed as already thinly-spread resources, first on scene, have to focus on two emergencies rather than one.

Professional and volunteer responders die, even when properly equipped, trained and with “back-up.” Rescues, with this kind of mechanism-of-impact and injury, are not simple things with which to deal.

The smart civilians didn’t rush to help. They overwhelmed the 911 system with dozens of phone calls, and went home to live another day.

But imagine the likes, follows and shares when their attempt hits social media ?

Sadly, thinking about 15 minutes of fame influences too many decisions. #doitforthegram
 
Not that cynical, personally. Film away, but stay out of the damned water, as far as I’m concerned. Don’t make a bad problem worse by one’s complicating presence.

I share pictures of wildlife: raccoons, fox, coyote and others who come to visit. Tame and boring enough, to most. Been filmed/recorded at difficult emergency scenes by people who never before experienced the unusual circumstance in which they found themselves. Got people in my department who wear a helmet cam into working structure fires. I don’t, but sure don’t care that they choose to do.

It’s the world in which we live, liking it or not.

IDK, just don’t get the angst.

“They didn’t do anything.” Well, they shouldn’t have. They were smart, or cowardly ... but they went home.

“They recorded the event.” Well, so? Most people, fortunately, don’t deal with this crap. It is astounding to them, unique, and they record it. Like I do the rare bear that wanders by, or the nightly raccoons who are part of my life, or the kid’s first steps.

“What if it were YOUR family?” Well, I’d deal with it, probably not choosing to watch the video should I happen across it.

I’m gonna’ die (probably sooner than most of you). My children will, and grandsons, and everyone reading these words. I’d have done a better job with the design, repair and longevity of the make/model had I been asked. It’s just the way it is, though. We only rarely roll back the tide of eternity for a relative few (and not for that much longer, in any case), and generally don’t change the popular morays of mankind as a whole.

Film away, I say, those things which (by choice or circumstance) grab the “moments” of your life, often unbidden. And stay out of the damned water. Make sure you go home.
 
And no-one rushes to help.
Love how the people on the shore are all mad they got wet. Not like hey did that guy live? Does he need help?
I mean I can't swim, so, am I going to jump in and die? We don't know their situation or how dangerous it looked to approach the aircraft. I was clipped by a wrong way driver with no lights on the other night(left front tire twisted about 90 degrees going about 65MPH and the suspension and axel droped), then they went head on with the car behind me as I limped from the fast lane to the emergency lane as the other cars flipped and rolled across the freeway. I was uninjured thanks to getting out of the way JUST in time, but my white ass stayed right in the car with my seatbelt/hazards on waiting for rescue after of course calling 911 and AAA. Hell no I didn't run across the lanes of debris and CHP/Fire were very appreciative that I did so as other people pulled over and ran across the lanes of traffic with other drivers swerving around them and the wreckage without traffic blocked and it made the scene much more chaotic. It isn't always safe to get involved with a rescue. I admire bravery, but don't get yourself hurt/killed or become yet another rescue victim for the first responders. So I really don't see a problem here and I don't think we should put the idea in people's heads to jump in and help IF it looks especially dangerous to do so and they aren't trained to handle it. That is advice I have gotten from several first responders.
 
Last edited:
I mean I can't swim, so, am I going to jump in and die? We don't know their situation or how dangerous it looked to approach the aircraft. I was clipped by a wrong way driver with no lights on the other night(left front tire twisted about 90 degrees going about 65MPH and the suspension and axel droped), then they went head on with the car behind me as I limped from the fast lane to the emergency lane as the other cars flipped and rolled across the freeway. I was uninjured thanks to getting out of the way JUST in time, but my white ass stayed right in the car with my seatbelt/hazards on waiting for rescue after of course calling 911 and AAA. Hell no I didn't run across the lanes of debris and CHP/Fire were very appreciative that I did so as other people pulled over and ran across the lanes of traffic with other drivers swerving around them and the wreckage without traffic blocked and it made the scene much more chaotic. It isn't always safe to get involved with a rescue. I admire bravery, but don't get yourself hurt/killed or become yet another rescue victim for the first responders. So I really don't see a problem here and I don't think we should put the idea in people's heads to jump in and help IF it looks especially dangerous to do so and they aren't trained to handle it. That is advice I have gotten from several first responders.

Don’t loop me into this. My comment was way different
 
Back
Top