jb747
Enthusiast
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- Mar 9, 2010
- Posts
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Very sad. I don't know a lot about this sort of thing, but I imagine the pilot reduced the loss of life by not crash landing on the freeway or into houses.
I expect that he had very little say in where it ended.
My understanding the pilot was turning back.
Why do you think that? Because it had turned away from the runway direction?
Procedurally, cleaning up and accelerating straight ahead is the best solution. Turning will always give a reduced, and perhaps negative, rate of climb.
Catastrophic failure - both engines failed?
The term 'catastrophic engine failure' doesn't mean "the engine failed, so now we have a catastrophe". It means the engine has failed in such a way that the ENGINE is destroyed...nothing else.
Dont need both engines to fail to cause this...
https://www.ntsb.gov/_layouts/ntsb.aviation/brief.aspx?ev_id=20141030X24112&key=1
More on the same event: The Kathryn Report: Beechcraft B200 Super King Air, N52SZ: Fatal accident occurred October 30, 2014 in Wichita, Kansas
And much closer to home: http://aviationcollection.org/Advance Airlines/802-1017.pdf