Crash near me

Flying in dense fog at night often isn't a good idea. That's all the more true if operating VFR. RIP as best one can.
 
It should not have been a surprise. Here was the Tue afternoon AFD.

"AVIATION...MVFR/IFR CIGS FOR MUCH OF PERIOD WITH LOCAL LIFR OVERNIGHT/EARLY WED MORNING IN MESSY/UNSETTLED WX PATTERN. PLENTIFUL MOISTURE TO PROMOTE FOG DEVELOPMENT OVERNIGHT/EARLY WED MORNING."
 
Yea, had a couple people die near me last year - one on the same grass strip. Easy to ignore when it is "over there". Hard to ignore when you've shared an overdone hamburger or two with the person.

RIP..
 
That's possible but how much check out do you need to fly a 150. the numbers just don't make sense and why would she have had the keys.

Thinking there is Paul Harvey side here, but we will likely never know.

Condolences to her family and friends for their loss.
 
420 hours and not able to fly a 150 solo?

I don't think that should be a factor at all.

Actually I was listed as a named pilot on a friend's 152 insurance some time back. The open pilot clause on that policy was very... open. "Anyone with a PP certificate or higher"
 
Flying a plane she's not checked out in, at night, in dense fog?

Um, there's more to this story.
 
Doesn't make sense,with over 400 hours,she should be able to handle a150. Sure there is more to the story.
 
I've always known that GA has a less than perfect record, but not until joining this forum, did I realize how bad it is.
 
I've always known that GA has a less than perfect record, but not until joining this forum, did I realize how bad it is.
What have you read on this forum that convinces you that GA is unsafe? Is it the fact that we talk about almost every accident and try to dissect what went wrong? How do you think that would work on a nationwide automobile forum.

This accident says nothing about how safe or unsafe GA is. But it does say a lot about how people making bad decisions are unsafe, whether they are holding a yoke, a steering wheel, a rudder or a handgun.
 
Doesn't make sense,with over 400 hours,she should be able to handle a150. Sure there is more to the story.

Why? Just because she had 420 hours and an IR and flew bigger planes she could still suffer spatial disorientation. Doesn't matter whether its a Centurion or a 152.
 
Part of my preflight is to read the most recent NTSB reports.
I often work hard to not just say; I would never do something that stupid. I want to learn from others mistakes so I can see when I am putting together the chain of decisions that lead to an aviation NTSB report.
Living near the Pacific coast I have had to divert for fog more than once even on a 20 nautical mile flight.
It is good that she knew enough to ask for help.
It is a shame it didn’t work out.
I have seen too many pilots imagine because they got away with something demonstrating poor aviation decision making that they are such good pilots that it was actually safe for them.
With over 400 hours on the Florida coast I suspect she had encountered fog before and had it work out because she was lucky.
 
What have you read on this forum that convinces you that GA is unsafe? Is it the fact that we talk about almost every accident and try to dissect what went wrong? How do you think that would work on a nationwide automobile forum.

This accident says nothing about how safe or unsafe GA is. But it does say a lot about how people making bad decisions are unsafe, whether they are holding a yoke, a steering wheel, a rudder or a handgun.


Hmmm, don't remember saying it was unsafe. Just didn't realize there was so many accidents.
 
RIP but ...

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that is so sad. I imagine it was a horrible feeling to realize you painted yourself into a corner and were unsure if you could get back to safety.
 
I've always known that GA has a less than perfect record, but not until joining this forum, did I realize how bad it is.

Overall, light GA has a safety record on par with the safety record for motorcycle riding.

That's not very good. But consider motorcycle riding for a minute. Most riders are wearing protective gear and riding conservatively, right? But you still see retards riding crotch rockets FAST while wearing shorts and a wife beater. I see that on a regular basis.

Those retards are bringing the overall safety record way down for motorcyclists. Of the two riders, you would definitely agree the guy speeding on the crotch rocket with no protective gear is exponentially more likely to die in a motorcycle accident, that the guy wearing his gear and obeying the laws.

The same thing happens with light GA. I won't go calling pilots retards, but ask any active CFI and they will tell you, there are a lot of rusty pilots flying out there. Some with very questionable decision making skills, and a general apathy towards improving their stick and rudder skills or weather knowledge. 95% of the regular POA members do not belong in this group

If you look at most light plane crashes, probably 80% of them stem from a lack of currency or training. Read some NTSB reports and ask yourself if the pilot had been flying a part 25 airplane, with all its technology and performance advantages, would he still have crashed? The answer in most cases is YES.

You still get some freak accidents once in awhile. But this particular crash does not sound like one of those.
 
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that is so sad. I imagine it was a horrible feeling to realize you painted yourself into a corner and were unsure if you could get back to safety.

Not sure that was the case here. A 420 hour pilot who is time building likely has an instrument rating. Most 152's have a six pack and transponder. Climb, confess, comply. A controller could have given her vectors to a field with better weather, or had her do a radar approach. Lots of options

Fly the plane
 
Not sure that was the case here. A 420 hour pilot who is time building likely has an instrument rating. Most 152's have a six pack and transponder. Climb, confess, comply. A controller could have given her vectors to a field with better weather, or had her do a radar approach. Lots of options

Fly the plane

Unless you don't want too...:dunno::confused:
 
Overall, light GA has a safety record on par with the safety record for motorcycle riding.

That's not very good. But consider motorcycle riding for a minute. Most riders are wearing protective gear and riding conservatively, right? But you still see retards riding crotch rockets FAST while wearing shorts and a wife beater. I see that on a regular basis.

Those retards are bringing the overall safety record way down for motorcyclists. Of the two riders, you would definitely agree the guy speeding on the crotch rocket with no protective gear is exponentially more likely to die in a motorcycle accident, that the guy wearing his gear and obeying the laws.

To be fair, while sport and supersport motorcycles are far more likely to crash than their slower and more sedate brethren, they are only a small percentage of all motorcycles. Almost half of all motorcycle fatalities involve alcohol, and the fastest raising demographic for years has been men over 40 riding liter bikes, mostly cruisers.

Moreover, the presence of a helmet (denigrated by the cruiser set but often worn by sport bike riders) rescues the chances of a fatality nearly a fold. My buddy's Harley doesn't even have a helmet lock, something present on every sport bike I've ever seen.
 
Waaaa? Where do you get that. She confessed to ATC she was having problems navigating and was asking for directions to the nearest field.

Sounds like a great way cover a suicide to make sure the family doesnt have guilt over it, or to make sure there is no hassle with a life insurance payout. Act like you are needing help, but crash to kill yourself anyways.
 
To be fair, while sport and supersport motorcycles are far more likely to crash than their slower and more sedate brethren, they are only a small percentage of all motorcycles.

That was my point.
 
Something doesn't seem right here.

“She was a time builder and she had not been checked out to fly the airplane by herself yet and she took it upon herself to go fly,” said Neil Ramphal, owner of Flight Time Building, which owns the plane.

Ramphal could not explain why the pilot was flying solo, other than to say she had the keys and it was an uncontrolled airport.

So she wasn't checked out but had the keys??????????????

Having said that if they have her log book that should give some more information like if she has flown this plane solo before.
 
Perhaps she paid the money, got keys and a time/date to show up for her checkout.
 
Why? Just because she had 420 hours and an IR and flew bigger planes she could still suffer spatial disorientation. Doesn't matter whether its a Centurion or a 152.

Doubt she was flying very large planes with 400hrs.

Still that's enough hours that this should not have happened
 
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Waaaa? Where do you get that. She confessed to ATC she was having problems navigating and was asking for directions to the nearest field.

Because some insurance policies don't pay out on suicide. Call ATC saying you are confused...auger it into the sea...

I'm not saying she did this. I'm just responding to AdamZ's comment nobody saying it was a suicide.

Edit: Josh beat me to it!
 
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It doesn't sound like suicide, but who knows.
I'll have to admit that I have never heard a rated pilot, of any nationality, call "hello? hello?" on the radio.
Definitely something weird going on for her to take off under those conditions with her skill level and language issues.
 
Something doesn't seem right here.





So she wasn't checked out but had the keys??????????????

Having said that if they have her log book that should give some more information like if she has flown this plane solo before.

Random guess: many FBOs leave the keys in a lockbox or the office for after-hours access. There's nothing preventing a club member from taking out an aircraft in which she's not checked out.

(...other than club rules, insurance company rules, common sense, good aeronautical decision making, and/or federal law)
 
To be fair, while sport and supersport motorcycles are far more likely to crash than their slower and more sedate brethren, they are only a small percentage of all motorcycles. Almost half of all motorcycle fatalities involve alcohol, and the fastest raising demographic for years has been men over 40 riding liter bikes, mostly cruisers.

Moreover, the presence of a helmet (denigrated by the cruiser set but often worn by sport bike riders) rescues the chances of a fatality nearly a fold. My buddy's Harley doesn't even have a helmet lock, something present on every sport bike I've ever seen.

The one that gets me down here is the menopausal women on Harleys, the worst being petite 50 year old women on a dressed Electra Glide. If the bike falls on them, they are screwed even if they aren't pinned. You shouldn't ride a bike you can't pick up and get back on.:nono:
 
It doesn't sound like suicide, but who knows.

I'll have to admit that I have never heard a rated pilot, of any nationality, call "hello? hello?" on the radio.

Definitely something weird going on for her to take off under those conditions with her skill level and language issues.




The audio you posted sure doesn't sound like someone with 400 hours. Sounded more like a student pilot to me.
 
Fear affects different people differently. I don't judge accident pilots. I wasn't there. Stuff happens.
 
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