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Bill Vincent
Joined: 30 Jan 2006 Posts: 84
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 3:26 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Hi Gang
If I remember correctly, a few of you on the list have had engine
failures and had to land in the water.
At times the only open area I fly above is water; what is the proper
procedure for an engine out landing in water with a Firestar II?
Do I unbuckle my seat beat? Should I get the plane a few inches above
the water then stall it in? Does it want to turn upside down when the
front wheels hit the water?
Thank you in advance
Bill Vincent
Firestar II
Upper Peninsula of Michigan
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_________________ Bill Vincent
Firestar II
Upper Peninsula of Michigan |
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ElleryWeld(at)AOL.COM Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 4:13 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Bill
Install floats First land second
If I was flying over water all the time and that nervous of a engine
out I would replace the wheels with Floats
I got a second set of floats if your interested
Ellery in firestar
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wcm(at)tampabay.rr.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 4:30 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Ellery,
Do you have any pictures of a Firestar on floats.
If you do would you please post then on or off list.
Thanks
Chris Mallory
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ElleryWeld(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 4:34 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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I think all I have for pictures of a firestar on floats might be one in my
shop I will look around and see if I can come up with something for you to look
at
Ellery
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ElleryWeld(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 4:38 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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these are not to good but it gives you an idea
Ellery
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David.Lehman
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 265 Location: "Lovely" Fresno CA
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 4:55 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Look here at Steve Boetto's beautiful Firefly on floats, it's the
inspiration for my Firestar on floats...
http://www.skyshops.org/FLOATSHOME/floats%20kob%20firefly.htm
David
On 5/21/06, ElleryWeld(at)aol.com <ElleryWeld(at)aol.com> wrote:
Quote: |
these are not to good but it gives you an idea
Ellery
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--
"Ultralight flying isn't about transportation; it's about the ma
gic of
pure, simple flight." - Scott Wilcox
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_________________ ô¿ô
"Both optimists and pessimists contribute to the society. The optimist invents the aeroplane, the pessimist the parachute."
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wcm(at)tampabay.rr.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 4:56 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Thanks
Chris Mallory
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ElleryWeld(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 5:00 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Yea I have seen Steve Boettos firefly on floats
Ellery
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kfackler(at)ameritech.net Guest
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Posted: Sun May 21, 2006 5:03 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Are there not some floatplane instructors in your area with whom you could
consult?
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-Ken Fackler
Kolb Mark II / A722KWF
Rochester MI
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George Myers
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 76 Location: San Marcos, Texas
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Posted: Mon May 22, 2006 7:22 am Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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The following is from the archives:
Unbuckling your harness before you hit might be a bit uncomfortable, but
then again it depends on which window your body is ejected through.
But, if you're forced to make a water landing, here are some things to keep
in mind.
The trick is not to panic and no - I not telling you do die calmly.
And that is probably the most least-likely-to-be-followed advice you'll
ever been given.
1. Take a deep breath before you hit, you'll be under water very soon, and
won't be coming back up for at least a few seconds. It helps to count, you
know, " 1 Mississippi, 2 Mississippi, etc. It's nice to know how long
you're really under, it might seem a lot longer than it really is.
2. Don't try for shallow water (of course, your in the "Channel" - so I
suppose that won't be a problem). When the wheels grab, the nose will
dolphin, just like Flipper, and dive about 6 feet before the wings stop the
momentum of the plane. Actually it's a rush; kind of like being hit by an
airbag in a car. It only takes a second to go from 40 mph to 0. Don't know
how many Gs that is. It also only takes a second for the cockpit to
completely fill with water.
3. The worst part is that it feels like the plane is sinking, it's not.
You're only a few feet under water, and the plane is actually slowly coming
up.
4. The rest is pretty simple, unbuckle your harness, leave your helmet on
but pull the wires loose from the radios, etc. Not having anything to
judge this against, I supposed I was doing rather well until the shoulder
harness tangled in my helmet/earphones. Just a noted this, because I could
not remember how to unbuckle my helmet. Had to pull it off from the back -
over my head. Perhaps it was the oxygen deprivation, but I was rather lost
in my own little world for a while - about 10 seconds, I think.
5. If you have a full enclosure, it probably will still be locked, so
unlock it or kick it out. By this time the plane will be floating, but you
will still be under water.
6. Now just climb out onto the wings and wave down someone to pick you up,
you've got about 10 minutes before the plane sinks. I was in a FireStar,
and yours may act completely different. We've had a two-seater like yours
go in since my adventure. It touched one wheel down and did kind of a
half-turn and proceed to sink, neither of us flipped over.
Quote: | At times the only open area I fly above is water; what is the proper
procedure for an engine out landing in water with a Firestar II?
Do I unbuckle my seat beat? Should I get the plane a few inches above
the water then stall it in? Does it want to turn upside down when the
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b1bookie(at)lycos.com Guest
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Posted: Mon May 22, 2006 7:07 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Hi Bill...........I don't post very often, but I can give you some insight on 'water-landings. First we need to understand that we are flying 'Anchors with Wings' and therefore we go down with the ship. My experience was in a Quicksilver returning from Ventura Ca. to Camarillo Airport. I was flying with a buddy who was just ahead of me and above me about 50 feet. I was doing approx 50 mph about 10 feet above the water having a great time when 'silence set in'. The shoreline was almost all rock clifts in that area. I had just enough time to say to my buddy "I'm going in Harold" and headed very gently for the shore to get to shallow water. I tried to flair as much as I could but going down wind it wasn't easy. All of a sudden there was a 'rush' of water and straight to the bottom I went. This Quicksilver had a pod in front which saved being fliped over on my back. No flotation at all. I was sitting on the bottom in eight ft. of water which was over my wings. I just sat there for a moment or so just trying to realize this really was happening. I got out of my seat belt and radio gear and floated to the top of the wing. Had a problem getting my helmet off but remained calm and tried to wave for help. The tide was now bring the plane closer to shore and I am standing in about 4 ft. of water. Finally, a young man jumps in to help me and is telling me I am going to loose my plane. I finally convinced him to help me drag the plane about a hundred yards to the west where there was a small beach area. To make this short, we were able to save the 'Bird' with a good fresh water bath and a few broken tubes. Earlier in the day I had been distracted while changing spark plugs and had only hand tightened them. It took about one hour for the plug to come out of its hole to bring the silence.
If you are in deep water, you can kiss the bird by-by, but you can save yourself if you have some kind of vest flotation available to you. The floats for your plane would be the best solution, but also practice emergency water landings so you will be ready if it were to happen.
Hope this helps your decision.
Do not archive
[quote] ---
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Masqqqqqqq(at)aol.com Guest
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Posted: Mon May 22, 2006 7:10 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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Landing on water is a scenario that I've gone through in my mind a
hundred times, but never actually done. If I know i'm going to be flying over
water, I always wear a lightweight kayaking life jacket.
I fly an UltraStar with no enclosure. One of the methods I've
considered is to unbuckle, toss my helmet, and just before the machine touches water,
just get out. Can't be much different than falling off water skis.
Another method, and probably the best idea, is to deploy the BRS. Won't
flip, cuz you're coming straight down. And the chute is going to be ruined by
the water anyway, might as well use it. And if the plane sinks, maybe all
those lines connected to it might aid recovery.
Of course, until it happens, if it happens, I'll never know how I'll
react.
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JetPilot
Joined: 10 Jan 2006 Posts: 1246
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Russ Kinne
Joined: 27 Jan 2006 Posts: 182
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Posted: Wed May 31, 2006 2:50 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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FWIW -- I have no experience w/Kolbs but suspect they'd overturn in a
water landing . Advice for Cessnas & such is to cinch the seatbelt
AND SHOULDER BELTS tight so you won't be bashed in to the panel &
mebbe unconscious -- open both doors so they won't jam shut; hold it
off as long as poss, full flaps, drag tail if you can. When you're
upside down, put an arm against the ceiling before you undo the
seatbelt, and get out. A Cessna will float 30-60 seconds, PLENTY of
time to get out with that much incentive. Climb on top of wing & wave
to rescue boat which hopefully is racing towards you!
Hope this is of some help.
Russ
On May 21, 2006, at 7:23 PM, Bill Vincent wrote:
Quote: |
<emailbill(at)chartermi.net>
Hi Gang
If I remember correctly, a few of you on the list have had engine
failures and had to land in the water.
At times the only open area I fly above is water; what is the proper
procedure for an engine out landing in water with a Firestar II?
Do I unbuckle my seat beat? Should I get the plane a few inches above
the water then stall it in? Does it want to turn upside down when the
front wheels hit the water?
Thank you in advance
Bill Vincent
Firestar II
Upper Peninsula of Michigan
Do Not Archive
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slyck(at)frontiernet.net Guest
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Posted: Wed May 31, 2006 5:07 pm Post subject: Emergency landing in water |
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A Kolb might flip but if the wings are sealed like mine -no
inspection holes - it should float.
-BB do not archive
On 31, May 2006, at 6:46 PM, russ kinne wrote:
Quote: |
FWIW -- I have no experience w/Kolbs but suspect they'd overturn in a
water landing . Advice for Cessnas & such is to cinch the seatbelt
AND SHOULDER BELTS tight so you won't be bashed in to the panel &
mebbe unconscious -- open both doors so they won't jam shut; hold it
off as long as poss, full flaps, drag tail if you can. When you're
upside down, put an arm against the ceiling before you undo the
seatbelt, and get out. A Cessna will float 30-60 seconds, PLENTY of
time to get out with that much incentive. Climb on top of wing & wave
to rescue boat which hopefully is racing towards you!
Hope this is of some help.
Russ
On May 21, 2006, at 7:23 PM, Bill Vincent wrote:
>
> <emailbill(at)chartermi.net>
>
> Hi Gang
> If I remember correctly, a few of you on the list have had engine
> failures and had to land in the water.
> At times the only open area I fly above is water; what is the proper
> procedure for an engine out landing in water with a Firestar II?
> Do I unbuckle my seat beat? Should I get the plane a few inches above
> the water then stall it in? Does it want to turn upside down when the
> front wheels hit the water?
> Thank you in advance
> Bill Vincent
> Firestar II
> Upper Peninsula of Michigan
>
> Do Not Archive
>
>
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