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Published byJagger Knoop Modified over 9 years ago
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Authored by N.P. Norris - USAF Modified by Lt Colonel Fred Blundell TX-129 Fort Worth Senior Squadron For Local Training Only Rev 5.0 02-Jan-2014
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This Training Slide Show is a project undertaken by Lt Colonel Fred Blundell of the TX-129 Fort Worth Senior Squadron, Fort Worth, TX for local use to assist those CAP Members interested in advancing their skills. The information contained herein is for CAP Member’s personal use and is not intended to replace or be a substitute for any of the CAP National Training Programs. Users should review the presentation’s Revision Number at the end of each file name to ensure that they have the most current publication.
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Situation 1 21 Jul 02, C-182R, Runway 35, wind 030/09 Training while returning from SAREX Pilot flying an ILS under the hood - CFI was safety pilot Everything looked good at 300’ AGL Bounced, became airborne, drifted off left side of runway Pilot added power and asked CFI to take over CFI brought aircraft back to runway and landed Nose and LMG collapsed – departed left side of runway Damaged left wing, gear, tail and prop NTSB investigation continues 3
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4 The Results
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Lessons Learned IPs – How far is too far? Trend analysis Proficiency – professional volunteers 5
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Situation 2 12 Aug 02, C-182, ELT mission, VMC conditions Pilot, 75-years-old, Commercial Instrument, 4800 flight hours Observer, 73-years-old Planned a short field approach and landing Collided with approach lighting short of runway Added power and made it to the runway Left horizontal stabilizer and nose wheel pant damaged No injuries NTSB investigation continues 6
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Lessons Learned Fly the aircraft Crew coordination Ask 7
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Situation 3 31 Aug 02, Cadet Orientation mission, C-182, VMC Pilot, 45-years-old, Commercial/CFI, 985 flight hours Full-flap approach, 60 knots, stall horn, sink rate Power added – Too little, too late Landed hard, 40’ short of runway No injuries Landing gear, prop and firewall damaged NTSB investigation continues 8
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9 The Results
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Lessons Learned Landing proficiency is important! 10
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Situation 4 10 Sep 02, CAPF5 checkride, VMC 68-year-old private pilot (examinee) with 398 hours 47-year-old CFI (check pilot) with 971 hours Forced landing practice to a touch & go landing Direct crosswind 10-14 knots on 2943’ x 50’ runway Steep approach, long landing Trees listed as hazards on both ends of runway Witnesses say aircraft stalled and collided with trees Aircraft substantially damaged – pilots seriously injured NTSB investigation continues 11
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12 The Result
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Lessons Learned Judgment Go-arounds – a great option ROE during instruction or checkride 13
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Questions? Always Think Safety! 14
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