Laura

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Laura
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Travel > Remembering My Dad
 

Remembering My Dad

Nine years ago this week my dad died when his small airplane crashed into the electric power plant in Amarillo, Texas. It was foggy and he came out of the low clouds right on top of the power plant. We think he might have thought the white strobe lights on the twin smokestacks were marking the edge of the runway at the airport he was heading for. He flew between them and crashed into a large conveyor structure that carries coal to the top of the power plant.

Here's the holes in the conveyor where the airplane hit, 284 feet off the ground.



This shows the repairs in progress after the crash. See the little tiny ant-size man just under that upper hole? It gives you an idea how large that conveyor is. The other large hole is where the airplane motor kept going after the initial impact and lodged in the power plant building. It didn't make that big a hole, they stripped off the damaged metal for the repairs.



From today's Las Vegas Review-Journal, here's a riveting account of an emergency landing in a small plane after engine failure. My dad's problem wasn't engine failure, and I may never fly in small plane again, but after reading the following account from today's Las Vegas Review-Journal, I think I know everything a person needs to do in order to land safely when the plane engine quits mid-flight.

I'm not a big proponent of pasting whole web stories into my blog, but I couldn't re-tell it any better:

Pilot survives crash landing in experimental plane

By Keith Rogers
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

When Air Force Maj. Tyrone Douglas took off Friday from North Las Vegas Airport in his privately owned experimental airplane, he didn't know that he would have a new war story to tell.

Instead of flying combat sorties in an F-16 over Iraq or steering a red-white-and-blue Thunderbirds jet in a daring "calypso" maneuver toward an opposing jet at more than 500 mph, this story is about how he fought to stay airborne over Lake Mead and barely made it to a level landing spot near Temple Bar Marina in Arizona.

"I was the most blessed man on the Earth that day," the 36-year-old former Thunderbirds pilot said about his brush with death. His plane's wreckage had just been hauled back to North Las Vegas Airport on a flatbed truck.

He had flown his amateur-built, single-engine Lancair 320 earlier in the day before he set out to fly it to a new home in Enid, Okla., near Vance Air Force Base. That is where Douglas had been transferred a year ago to be the top training jet instructor pilot after a stint as lead solo pilot with the Thunderbirds demonstration team at Nellis Air Force Base ended after the 2009 air show season.

He had bought the Lancair aircraft from a general several years ago and had last flown it in December before taking it out Friday.

Douglas was confident he could make it to his destination, stopping for fuel in Albuquerque, N.M. He has racked up more than 3,000 hours flying F-16 Fighting Falcons and 500 hours flying civilian aircraft.

Everything seemed to be working until 20 minutes after takeoff from North Las Vegas when he noticed the engine losing power high above the lake.

It was like driving a car and stepping on the gas but no acceleration occurs, he said.

"The engine was rolling back. There was no sputter."

Douglas was cruising about 200 mph and losing air speed. He was about four or five miles from the nearest airstrip, Temple Bar Airport, a sliver in the desert that he had seen many times flying over the area with the Thunderbirds.

Instinctively, he initiated his emergency landing procedure -- as it's known in aviation circles for propeller-driven planes -- or SFO, short for Simulated Flame Out landing, the phrase used by the jet set.

"Basically you know what speed your airplane glides, even though it doesn't go very far. You get yourself to that speed, then you start descending," Douglas said in an interview Tuesday.

The perfect glide speed for this airplane is 85 knots, about 98 mph. That meant he would decrease the power to half of the cruise speed. He pointed the nose downward on a 5-degree slope.

"I was looking for a road or anything flat to land on," he said. "The airstrip was a little too far away."

He said he didn't want to ditch the plane in the lake.

"With a prop-driven plane you could be in a world of hurt. It could flip over, and you'd get knocked out."

Then he saw the Temple Bar boat ramp.

"It's a curve and big hill on the west side. I didn't know if I could turn the airplane, so I aimed for the end of the boat ramp to head southeast into the dirt, flat area," he said.

Maintaining his glide speed, he maneuvered the plane so that the landing gear would briefly touch the surface of the asphalt ramp before rolling onto the flat stretch of desert.

"We call it 'putting it down on brick one,' " he said. "I landed, bounced one time and was rolling along the ground trying to get it stopped before it goes up that hill.

"The tires aren't biting to slow it down."

By the time he hit some rough ground, he was going about 40 mph.

Finally, the aircraft, or what was left of the two-seater, came to rest.

"I'm fuzzy for the next minute and half. I get unstrapped and get out of the airplane. I can tell I'm going into a little bit of daze from hitting the glare shield," he said.

When the plane bumped off the boat ramp road, his head hit the instrument panel.

A couple of workers at the marina ran to help him get away from the wreckage, where about 15 gallons of gasoline had leaked.

National Park Service medical responders gave him first aid. And, using a phone at the marina, he called his wife, a former Air Force aerospace physiologist, to tell her he was OK.

As a precaution, he was airlifted to a Las Vegas Valley hospital where doctors put eight stitches in his head, X-rayed a "pretty big bruise" on his arm and gave him a CT scan.

While transportation safety investigators try to determine what caused the engine power loss, Douglas said he's not sure whether he'll return to the cockpit of an experimental plane.

"Right now, my mind says stick with Air Force flying," he said.

"Machines break unexpectedly, but I still know my chances are higher of getting into a fatal accident in a car."

His advice to fellow pilots: "Practice your emergency landing procedures. Know what you're going to do if you lose an engine."

Douglas, who was on leave, said he intends to take a commercial flight to Oklahoma to reunite with his family.

posted on Apr 14, 2011 11:23 AM ()

Comments:

That is quite something there Laura.
So happy that he survived it.
comment by fredo on Apr 17, 2011 5:36 AM ()
I am glad he made it.
comment by elderjane on Apr 16, 2011 5:27 AM ()
There should be extra training required in order to fly one of those home-built airplanes.
reply by troutbend on Apr 16, 2011 12:58 PM ()
comment by jondude on Apr 14, 2011 1:15 PM ()
I like that putting it down on brick one idea.
reply by troutbend on Apr 14, 2011 2:08 PM ()

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