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EMAproducts(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Sat Sep 15, 2007 8:20 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Quote: | Attending a flight safety conference in Germany, last year, we were told
Quote: | that light aircraft should rather try to land on tree tops than attempt to
make a sharp manoeuvre to reach an open field, at the risk of not being
able to do it and end in a wall or another hard surface. Personally, I
think that, if the forest is dense enough, a Kitfox would simply land on
the top of the trees and rescue would come with a fire brigade ladder. I
am not sure but I still feel I stand a better chance to survive a aircraft
crash landing if it is a very light one. After all, a 30 feet wide, 900
pounds heavy object moving at 40 MPH shouldn't need much to come to a
stop.
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Michel,
I have an example of this in my shop. About 25 years ago a pilot had fuel contamination and the engine quit in a Funk B-85 C. He ended up about 100' up in the Cedar tree he landed on. He was rescued by Hook & Ladder truck from Fire Dept. More damage was done to aircraft removing from tree with a huge crane than was done in landing there. I'm slowly restoring that plane. Still has cable marks on door post aluminum cover where the cable wrapped around to remove. Windshield, all windows & airframe not damaged except for wings & doors which were totaled by time aircraft was removed from tree. Two of my friends heard engine quit and ran to where they heard the noise of crash, couldn't find plane till pilot yelled at them from above!
Elbie Mendenhall,
Restoring the "Cedar Tree Funk" N-77705
Make AOL Your Homepage.
[quote][b]
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Michel
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 966 Location: Norway
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Posted: Sat Sep 15, 2007 11:41 pm Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Well, Elbie and Marwynne, it goes to show that the German instructor
knew what he was talking about!
Cheers,
Michel Verheughe
Norway
Kitfox 3 - Jabiru 2200
Do not archive
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marwynne(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 3:49 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Michel
I am not sure what you are talking about. What did the German
instructor say ?
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av8rps(at)tznet.com Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 4:18 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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All,
I once attended a forum where a military officer talked about surviving crashes. He was prompted to talk more about this after surviving a crash in a F-14 (?) due to complete engine failure. The best part was that it was right after takeoff, at night, and in a mountain range! Oh yeah, the best part, they went in at 150 knots! It was a very interesting forum, and I learned a lot about crash survivability from what he had to say.
Ironically, one of the things discussed was the dispute about whether to try and land a light airplane in the tree tops or not. According to him (and a short video clip from Bob Hoover on the same subject), they both said NOT to land in the tree tops. Rather, fly as far into the crash as possible. Meaning, maintain as much control of the direction of the aircraft as long as possible. They said that trying to land in the tree tops generally indicates stalling just above the tree tops. But doing so will limit your directional control. So if the airplane doesn't land softly in the tree tops like you thought it would, you just might hit a 3 foot oak tree trunk head on instead of that nice soft umbrella you were aiming for. Plus, even if you could land in the umbrella, it is very likely no one will find you there. And if you are injured, it's more likely you will bleed to death before anyone can get to you. AND, if no one saw you go into the tree tops, and you can't wait any longer for fear of dying of injuries, exposure or thirst, you are just as dead if you decide to try and climb down, and fall from a 70 foot tall tree. Not many of us are all that good at climbing (down) trees, especially if injured.
All that said, if I had NO choice I would put down in the umbrella of trees. But it would be one of my very last choices. I personally have had 5 engine failures in airplanes, 3 on takeoff. And I am here to write about them mostly because I (instictively more than anything else) flew the airplane to the ground in a controlled glide. And yes, there were large obstacles I could have hit during those emergency off airport landings. But because I was able to maintain aircraft directional control, I was able to avoid hitting any of them. So I am a firm believer in "Fly The Airplane" as far into the crash as possible.
But that's just my opinion. I do realize that every situation isn't the same and sometimes you just have to do what you have to do. However, I'm a firm believer if you just focus all of your attention on "flying the airplane", you will have the highest chance of survivability.
The ultralight group has a famous saying I like; "You Hav'ta Afta" . Which means "you have to always fly the airplane". I think that says it all, and is the best advice any of us can follow.
Paul Seehafer
Kitfox IV 912 ul amphib
ps - I have a wrecked airplane sitting in my hangar that landed in treetops in a stalled attitude. It now has a 10 inch hole between the rudder pedals in the firewall where a large branch came into the cockpit, just missing the pilot. Had it been inches one way or another, I'd guess it would have been fatal. In this case, after he hit the tops of the trees it fell tail first backwards, landing against a large tree trunk. Pilot walked away with only minor injuries. But I think someone was looking out for this guy that day...
[quote] ---
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Michel
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 966 Location: Norway
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Posted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 4:30 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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On Sep 16, 2007, at 1:48 PM, Marwynne Kuhn wrote:
Quote: | Michel
I am not sure what you are talking about. What did the German
instructor say ?
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Last year, I was at a fly-in for PocketFMS in Germany. That evening we
had a German instructor/inspector ... sorry, I don't remember all his
qualifications (they were impressive) but he was very friendly and his
safety lecture was very interesting. Anyway, he took the example of an
actual airfield and discussed the possible recoveries of an engine stop
at climb out. In the course of that, he made it clear that in many
cases it would be better to land on the top of the trees in a nearby
park, than trying to do a desperate manoeuvre to get back on the
runway. He said: "Once the proverbial s**t hits the fan, your aircraft
is only a pillow between you and mother earth. Landing on the trees may
be the best alternative to preserve your and your passengers' life."
To be true, his example airfield was close to a town with no open
fields nearby. The alternatives were: back to the runway or airfield
area, in the buildings, or in the park.
Cheers,
Michel Verheughe
Norway
Kitfox 3 - Jabiru 2200
do not archive
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Michel
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 966 Location: Norway
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Posted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 4:46 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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On Sep 16, 2007, at 2:17 PM, Paul Seehafer wrote:
Quote: | So I am a firm believer in "Fly The Airplane" as far into the crash as
possible.
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Of course, Paul, this is also my (and everyone else's, I guess)
opinion. The question is: What are the alternatives? In the Norwegian
mountains there are two: Forest or solid granite rock. I'd go for the
softer one.
Years ago, a Japanese sailor wanted to sail from Japan to the US in a
19 feet sailboat. He had to launch his boat at night, with no
witnesses, because the authorities refused to see him taking the risks.
A few weeks later he was in a bad storm alone in the Pacific. Feeling
depressed, he looked through the porthole and saw ... a light bulb
floating! Probably coming from rubbish thrown overboard by a passing
vessel. Then he thought: My tiny sailboat is fragile but entirely
watertight, just like that light bulb. If it can survive this storm, so
can I! ... and he did since I read his book!
As I have sailed a lot, I kept remembering that water (at least, at
that speed) is too soft to damage a very light boat (mine is 27 feet
long) that will float like a cork. As long as one stays away from the
nasty rocks along the shore, it's just a matter of waiting.
Which brings me back to the beginning of the discussion: I feel that a
light aircraft doing a somewhat soft landing, stands a better chance of
survival than a heavier one.
Cheers,
Michel Verheughe
Norway
Kitfox 3 - Jabiru 2200
Do not archive
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marwynne(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 9:15 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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I have to agree with him.. The only alternative I had was to stall the
plane in a tight turn from 300 feet.
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av8rps(at)tznet.com Guest
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Posted: Sun Sep 16, 2007 3:44 pm Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Michel,
One would think it could be assumed everyone will fly the airplane in the
case of an emergency. But unfortunately that isn't the case. The accident
records will prove that many don't fly the airplane as they should in the
event of an inflight emergency. Our FAA reminds us of this at safety
seminars, occasionally showing us pictures of accident scenes where the
pilot lost control before the crash, when there were no obvious reasons he
couldn't have just glided it in.
I don't disagree with you, or the german safety expert. I was just
restating thoughts and opinions from other safety experts that might make
pilots more aware of the potential pitfalls of landing in the tree tops. I
agree your flying environment doesn't provide for many options. But most of
us aren't subjected to terrain like that on a regular basis. So I didn't
want pilots here thinking landing in the trees is pretty much a safe
bet,when they might have other (better?) options possibly.
And fwiw, I agree 100% that a light aircraft has a much higher chance of
survivabilty than would a heavier one. Especially if built out of chromoly
steel like our Kitfoxes are!
Paul Seehafer
Kitfox IV 912ul Amphib
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MichaelGibbs(at)cox.net Guest
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Posted: Mon Sep 17, 2007 7:40 pm Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Paul sez:
Quote: | I agree 100% that a light aircraft has a much higher chance of
survivabilty than would a heavier one.
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After my accident, I told my partners that I wished the accident had
happened in our Piper because the insurance company could just buy us
a new one rather than my having to build another one. One of my
Kitfox buddies assured me that I probably would not have survived in
that faster, heavier airplane.
Mike G.
N728KF
Phoenix, AZ
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Bob
Joined: 24 Oct 2006 Posts: 89 Location: Damascus, Maryland, USA
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 4:13 am Post subject: Re: Landing in Treetops |
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Hi all -
Been away doing the work, kids, and rest of life for the summer and saw this so thought I'd throw in my 2-cents.
Trying to land in treetops has been done, but it has become a myth and is far more hazardous than controlling your impact. Go into the NTSB records (www.ntsb.gov) and it's easy to find records like these:
"The airplane dipped to the left, struck the trees and fell to the ground."
or
"the plane hit the tree tops and tumbled through the trees"
or a survivable one in a 172:
"The airplane clipped the tops of the trees, then plunged down nose-first. Both wings were bent by the impact."
There are two reasons that the odds are against a successful tree-top landing. The first is that after the first contact, you have absolutely no control of what's next. One of those long wings is going to hit a tree first (or the gear will) and things are going to pivot on that point. And that first impact will be the fastest one.
I'd rather control where the impact with the most energy is going to happen. One of the things instructors teach is that when performing a forced landing in a short field, landing short or hitting trees at the near end with more speed is going to do a lot more damage than controlling where you roll into them while slower at the far end.
The second reason that tree-top landings don't generally work out well is that gravity still rules. For every photo that you've probably seen of a plane in the trees, I'll bet you can think of two where the airplane is nose down at the base of some trees. If you don't truly snag enough tree branches to keep you up, the airplane is going to fall. With the engine up front and that tail snagging branches at the back, the nose is going to go straight down. Here's where you need to think of survivability. Would you be willing to hang your plane by the tail at the height of whatever tree, strap in, and then cut the strap? That's about what happens in these situations and there just isn't that much crushable material in front of you to break your fall.
There is an upside in that the statitstics show that the Kitfox and Avid series have an amazingly good survivability rate and it's largely due to the slow stall speeds. The overall accident rate for experimentals is much higher than the certified airplanes, largely due to fuel and other systems installations. However, the 'Foxes and Avids land slow (less energy to dissipate) and deform structure in a way that absorbs energy around the central cockpit area, as long as it's not a full frontal impact. Keeping from having a full frontal impact is something that you can control.
Bob
A&P, Aero Eng
Vixen (part-built)
Damascus, MD
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Fox5flyer Guest
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 5:50 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Good logical and common sense thoughts.
Thanks,
Deke Morisse
Mikado Michigan
S5/Subaru/CAP 355+ TT
do not archive
Quote: |
Hi all -
Been away doing the work, kids, and rest of life for the summer and saw
this so thought I'd throw in my 2-cents.
|
Quote: |
Trying to land in treetops has been done, but it has become a myth and is
far more hazardous than controlling your impact. Go into the NTSB records
|
(www.ntsb.gov) and it's easy to find records like these:
Quote: |
"The airplane dipped to the left, struck the trees and fell to the
ground."
|
Quote: | or
"the plane hit the tree tops and tumbled through the trees"
or a survivable one in a 172:
"The airplane clipped the tops of the trees, then plunged down nose-first.
Both wings were bent by the impact."
|
Quote: |
There are two reasons that the odds are against a successful tree-top
landing. The first is that after the first contact, you have absolutely no
|
control of what's next. One of those long wings is going to hit a tree
first (or the gear will) and things are going to pivot on that point. And
that first impact will be the fastest one.
Quote: |
I'd rather control where the impact with the most energy is going to
happen. One of the things instructors teach is that when performing a
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forced landing in a short field, landing short or hitting trees at the near
end with more speed is going to do a lot more damage than controlling where
you roll into them while slower at the far end.
Quote: |
The second reason that tree-top landings don't generally work out well is
that gravity still rules. For every photo that you've probably seen of a
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plane in the trees, I'll bet you can think of two where the airplane is nose
down at the base of some trees. If you don't truly snag enough tree
branches to keep you up, the airplane is going to fall. With the engine up
front and that tail snagging branches at the back, the nose is going to go
straight down. Here's where you need to think of survivability. Would you
be willing to hang your plane by the tail at the height of whatever tree,
strap in, and then cut the strap? That's about what happens in these
situations and there just isn't that much crushable material in front of you
to break your fall.
Quote: |
There is an upside in that the statitstics show that the Kitfox and Avid
series have an amazingly good survivability rate and it's largely due to the
|
slow stall speeds. The overall accident rate for experimentals is much
higher than the certified airplanes, largely due to fuel and other systems
installations. However, the 'Foxes and Avids land slow (less energy to
dissipate) and deform structure in a way that absorbs energy around the
central cockpit area, as long as it's not a full frontal impact. Keeping
from having a full frontal impact is something that you can control.
Quote: |
Bob
A&P, Aero Eng
Vixen (part-built)
Damascus, MD
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dave
Joined: 22 Sep 2006 Posts: 1382
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 6:03 am Post subject: Re: Landing in Treetops |
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My feeling is you are better to be able to be in control into the trees than falling into them. If you have airspeed then you have better control than you will when you run out of airspeed.
I had a friend over 20 years ago faced this scenario while flying his Apache and losing one engine. With out being able to maintain altitude on single engine operations his Apache went into 130 foot tall trees . After it slowed , what was left of the fuselage and the 4 occupants suffered only minor injuries until gravity took over and they basically free fell over 100 feet to rock. They all suffered severe back injuries from that alone.
I have been PIC in 4 engine outs so far since I learned to fly nearly 30 years ago , one I landed at an airport the other 3 were all forced approaches off airport. Fortunately, none of the occupants ever had injuries nor did the aircraft. I feel lucky and also think that the training and practice I have had contributed to my luck. that being said i could have another forced approach today or tomorrow and if so I hope to handle as best as possible.
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Rex Hefferan
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 147 Location: Olney Springs, Colorado USA "NOT a Kitpig"
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 6:45 am Post subject: Re: Landing in Treetops |
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This may not be of much use to this discussion, but this famous photo is from a local airport and I just couldn't resist any longer.
http://www.meadowlakeairport.com/INDEX2.html
Scroll down to read complete story.
Do not archive
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marwynne(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:01 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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marwynne(at)verizon.net Guest
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 7:12 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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Everything that was said makes common since. The only issue that is
missing is if you have a choice of where to land. It is great to read a
document and second guess what should have been done. I know for a fact
that if I had just another minute of flight time that I could have made an
open field . In fact if I had another 50 feet of altitude , I could have
landed in an open field.
---
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Michel
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 966 Location: Norway
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Posted: Wed Sep 19, 2007 10:41 am Post subject: Landing in Treetops |
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On Sep 17, 2007, at 1:43 AM, Paul Seehafer wrote:
Quote: | So I didn't want pilots here thinking landing in the trees is pretty
much a safe bet,when they might have other (better?) options possibly.
|
You are absolutely right, Paul. I should not give advice as to what to
do in the case of an emergency landing and I wasn't either; I merely
quoted someone else.
On Sep 19, 2007, at 2:13 PM, Bob wrote:
Quote: | There are two reasons that the odds are against a successful tree-top
landing. The first is that after the first contact, you have
absolutely no control of what's next. One of those long wings is
going to hit a tree first (or the gear will) and things are going to
pivot on that point.
|
Two very good arguments, Bob. But remember that the choice in the given
example was: treetops or concrete buildings. The argument from the
German instructor was: Branches are softer than concrete.
On Sep 19, 2007, at 4:03 PM, dave wrote:
Quote: | My feeling is you are better to be able to be in control into the
trees than falling into them. If you have airspeed then you have
better control than you will when you run out of airspeed.
|
That makes sense, Dave. The German instructor never talked about
stalling above the trees. Incidentally, a few years ago, a pilot flew
in a row of trees nearby where I live. After take-off, with much load,
short field, high OAT, etc. he tried to avoid the treetops by flying
near the stall speed i.e. with too much induced drag and ended in the
high treetops and felt on the other side of the row. He survived but
his passenger was killed. Each situation demands a different handling.
I think the most important is to be prepared, i.e. always asking
oneself: What if ... e.g. the engine stops now?
On Sep 19, 2007, at 4:45 PM, Rex Hefferan wrote:
Quote: | This may not be of much use to this discussion, but this famous photo
is from a local airport and I just couldn't resist any longer.
http://www.meadowlakeairport.com/INDEX2.html Scroll down to read
complete story.
|
Thank you very much for the link, Rex. I got the first photo half a
year ago and I immediately saw that it was 'photoshoped' (retouched).
After talking with some friends, we agreed that the photo was a fake.
It turns out that it is not, only a few details have been changed to
make a better punch line.
On Sep 19, 2007, at 5:11 PM, Marwynne Kuhn wrote:
Quote: | Everything that was said makes common since. The only issue that is
missing is if you have a choice of where to land.
|
Exactly, Marwynne. The question is not: Should I land in the treetops,
but rather: What are the alternatives?
Cheers,
Michel Verheughe
Norway
Kitfox 3 - Jabiru 2200
Do not archive
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Bob
Joined: 24 Oct 2006 Posts: 89 Location: Damascus, Maryland, USA
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Posted: Thu Sep 20, 2007 7:11 pm Post subject: Re: Landing in Treetops |
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The alternative is the one left unspoken, and that is to leave yourself an "out." The fun of flying Kitfoxes is flying low for a lot of people. Unfortunately, they are combining that with home-spun fuel and electrical systems. If you're going to fly low enough to limit your choices, accept the potential consequences.
For most cases, the "out" is simply to have enough altitude to have a choice of where you're going to have a forced landing. Think of how far you can glide with an additional thousand feet of altitude. Or, if need be, with 2000 or even 5000 feet. It's like buying insurance in that it gives you gliding distance and the probability of SOME field increases by calculating the difference between the radius (your range) and the area of a circle (available landing sites).
Bob
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