Two Fatal Cessna 150 Airplane Crash Filmed From Cockpit

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  • čas přidán 5. 08. 2012
  • www.stevewilsonblog.com/tag/ai...
    Pilot and passenger are killed from ground impact after a low altitude stall from pitching up to clear power lines.
    NTSB Report FTW94FA140
    A video camera with a tape inside was recovered from the accident site. The video showed the progression of portions of the flight, including the last moments prior to impact. The tape contained audio as well as video recordings. The recording began at the beginning of the cassette. All of the following times were measured in minutes and seconds from the beginning of the tape. Between video tape time 00:00 and 01:37, the tape contained various shots of the ramp area at the Brownsville airport. There were two brief views of the accident airplane during this segment. Between 01:38 and 03:29, there were shots taken outside the right window. The airplane was at altitude in a level cruise attitude over flat terrain and engine noises could be heard in the background. At 03:29, the camera panned onto the instrument 03:58. From 03:58 until 04:22, there was footage of a grass fire on the ground, a decrease in power was heard, along with a comment "call fire department."
    Starting at 04:22 and running to 04:34, there was a view of a downwind approach to the fire shot from the right side of the airplane. Altitude at this time was estimated as being between 10 and 20 feet AGL. The engine noise decreased slightly during this sequence. Between 04:34 and 05:02, the tape showed the airplane banking left, still at low altitude and at 04:58, the comment "crop duster style" was heard. At 05:02, the airplane overflew a canal with brush on either side and an unidentifiable sound is heard from the bottom of the airplane.
    At 05:03, the tape shows the airplane straight and level at low altitude over a field. At 05:08, a set of power lines is visible out the front windshield and at 05:14, the comment "under or over" is heard, followed at 05:16, by the comment "over." Between 05:14 and 05:29, the camera showed a view of the airplane entering a steep pull up, followed by laughter and screaming. At 05:25, the stall warning horn activated and a left bank is discernable. This was followed by an expletive at 05:28, and another unintelligible comment at 05:29, and a vertical field of view of the cultivated field. The portion of the video tape that ran between 05:26 and 05:29, was damaged. At various points during the video, the engine instruments were visible. All of the engine power instruments were within high cruise power setting parameters throughout the taped sequences.
    Similar scenario twenty years later: www.usatoday.com/story/news/na...
    More: stevewilsonblog.com/2012/08/07...

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @chrisnelson3691
    @chrisnelson3691 Před 4 lety +1991

    You know what makes a pilot look really cool? One that can fly safely and by the book, one that performs every safety check, one that never puts anyone's life at risk and most of all doesn't feel the need to impress anyone, flying a plane safely is impressive enough.

    • @ZioStalin
      @ZioStalin Před 3 lety +20

      Ok sissy! If everyone had that mind we wouldn't even have invented heavier-than-air flight. xD

    • @DualBark
      @DualBark Před 3 lety +6

      @@ZioStalin all pilots do you dumb fuck

    • @DualBark
      @DualBark Před 3 lety +2

      @@fdzaviation you are dead right

    • @Eructation1
      @Eructation1 Před 3 lety +79

      As a pilot I totally agree with you Chris.

    • @clashwithmoi8926
      @clashwithmoi8926 Před 3 lety +2

      @@fdzaviation like banished from the kingdom??

  • @davidgapp1457
    @davidgapp1457 Před rokem +651

    When I was learning to fly a Cessna 152 and doing cross country solos, my favorite aircraft began exhibiting odd characteristics. Namely, every couple of weeks the aircraft pulled to one side. This resulted in considerable aircraft maintenance which the mechanics described as 're-rigging'. The aircraft then flew fine... until the next time. I liked the aircraft because the engine was strong and never gave any problems - returned a good rate of climb and behaved well at higher altitudes (such as when flying over the mountains around Flagstaff, Arizona). The aircraft tail number, according to my log book, was 6471L
    Anyhow, one day I came in to Deer Valley, Phoenix to rent the aircraft and found it missing. Turns out the aircraft was being flown by another student who met up with a friend to engage in 'simulated combat maneuvers' (according to his log book). Anyhow, he exceeded limits and the horizontal stabiliser folded up (backwards) and the aircraft went into a dive and cratered. With hindsight, he was doing this on a regular basis.
    It was frightening to realize I had been flying an aircraft that was routinely being stressed beyond its limits. I am guessing the student pilot chose the aircraft for the same reason I did - the strong engine. Either way, I count myself lucky that I didn't become an unwitting victim like the complete morons in this video.

    • @jasperjenkins3789
      @jasperjenkins3789 Před rokem +39

      Simulated combat maneuvers.. wow. You can guaranteed people will beat on a rental car but a rental plane, did he know the aircraft wasn’t designed for that and did it anyway?

    • @davidgapp1457
      @davidgapp1457 Před rokem +30

      @@jasperjenkins3789 I never met the individual concerned, but I would guess he was young and considered himself invulnerable.The C152 is a decent enough machine although not cleared for aerobatics. That said, we used the beefier Aerobat version for spin recovery training. I hate to imagine what he was doing when the empennage folded up.

    • @jasperjenkins3789
      @jasperjenkins3789 Před rokem +9

      @@davidgapp1457 thank you for sharing, God bless.

    • @timapple6586
      @timapple6586 Před rokem

      If you undertake to fly that puppy, then you take it upon your own shoulders to accept 100% of the responsibility. Don't be such a cholicky infant! What is wrong with you!?!? Do the World a favor and stay out of the skies and off the streets!

    • @davidgapp1457
      @davidgapp1457 Před rokem

      @@timapple6586 You are a sad troll. I pray you are not a pilot because your attitude is beyond ridiculous. Please don't be a pilot - you're not bright enough or 'responsible enough' to be one.

  • @unclelar53
    @unclelar53 Před rokem +178

    My instructor's first words to me were, "A pilots license is a license to learn, no matter how long you fly, or how many hours and ratings you have in your logbook, it is still only a license to learn." Some pilots learn the hard way.

    • @palindrome1959
      @palindrome1959 Před 8 měsíci +4

      If the Vice-President of the AOPA, who was as experienced as any pilot could possibly be can get caught out making the impossible turn. and lose his life, imagine plebes like us who only have our PPL. I remember my Dad telling me how many times he taxied a plane back to the ramp because a magneto check was borderline. Unlike a car, you can't just pull over. Safety always comes first ... PERIOD.

    • @MovieMakingMan
      @MovieMakingMan Před 7 měsíci +3

      Those were my instructor’s words to me. But they can be true for almost anything. But I’m flying it’s critical.

    • @cal4625
      @cal4625 Před 7 měsíci +1

      The problem with flying an airplane is you don't always get a second chance to learn from your mistakes. .

    • @unclelar53
      @unclelar53 Před 7 měsíci

      Roger that. Like Chuck Yeager said, aviation is not inherently dangerous, it is just very unforgiving of mistakes. @@cal4625

    • @jllee9189
      @jllee9189 Před 6 měsíci +1

      My friend I have been flying over 50 years (started flying the tomahawk as a student pilot, then in the military the B-52, and in the airlines I started flying the 727 and ended my career in the 787), along my long career I never stopped learning how to fly. You have or had a very wise instructor!

  • @nor_cal_trailrides9990
    @nor_cal_trailrides9990 Před 3 lety +113

    I owned a 1977 Cessna 150 and flew it safely for several hundred hours before moving on to a 182. Aviation can be as safe or dangerous as you want to make it. Horrible judgement, unsafe practices and FAR violations aside, this is is a colossal betrayal of trust on the part of the pilot.

    • @thomasmcintosh543
      @thomasmcintosh543 Před rokem +8

      Thank you, for you have said it well. There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but not very many old, bold pilots.

    • @chupacabra1765
      @chupacabra1765 Před rokem +4

      You can be safe as much as you can and still be a victim of circumstance.

    • @Watankatanka
      @Watankatanka Před 6 měsíci

      True, but rarely.......@@chupacabra1765

  • @android584
    @android584 Před 15 dny +9

    The title makes it sound like two Cessna 150s collided.
    From the comments it's more like one Cessna flew too low and struck an object.

  • @stewartj3407
    @stewartj3407 Před 3 lety +106

    Feel bad for the passenger. Poor guy had no clue the danger he was in, until about 2 seconds before his death.

  • @mikewood1566
    @mikewood1566 Před rokem +48

    Reminds me of Del Rio, TX (1986ish). Two USAF O-1 student pilots took two local high school senior girls on a thrill flight around Lake Amistad in a 172. They were doing low altitude hammerhead stalls and a bunch of other reckless hotdogging. End result was 4 lost souls and a smoldering wad of wreckage among canyon rocks. I remember seeing the younger sister of one of the deceased girls just a week or so later and trying to imagine the emotions she was going through. Quite an impressionable event for my 9th grade self at the time. This video prompted that Del Rio memory.

    • @maubunky1
      @maubunky1 Před rokem +5

      Would that have been the Funk family? I knew a professor at an aviation school in 1990 or 1991 who told this story about losing a child in this manner. It was a sobering moment to hear him scare straight a whole classroom of flight students by recounting this story that hit him so close to home, but I can't help but think he saved a few lives over the years. There was an occasional hot dogging student at that school...I can only hope he made them think twice about pulling stunts like that.

    • @charlescampa3363
      @charlescampa3363 Před rokem +6

      I believe there was video of that incident and it is not available to the public but given to the USAF by the family. It is shown to each UPT class as one of the first lessons. I am a loadmaster on C5s in San Antonio, Texas and I remember 1 of our new pilots telling me about it.

    • @AllinGold2
      @AllinGold2 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@maubunky1 Yes, one of the girls was Dana Funk. The other was her roommate. Sadly, Dana's brother was killed in a T-38 crash in 2008.

    • @gonebabygone4116
      @gonebabygone4116 Před měsícem +3

      The plane went down in a lake.

  • @pcgenie-la
    @pcgenie-la Před rokem +118

    As a low time pilot, I always remember what Michael Bloomberg (who flies his own helicopter) said: "I like aviation because if you don't follow the rules, you die." For that reason, I maintain a healthy fear of flying. It's useful.

    • @westerlywinds5684
      @westerlywinds5684 Před rokem +9

      Fear is your friend, not your enemy.

    • @timothycampbell495
      @timothycampbell495 Před rokem +5

      Never allow yourself to simultaneously run out of airspeed, altitude, and ideas.

    • @johnkerr4645
      @johnkerr4645 Před rokem +8

      The air is like the sea, not inherently dangerous, but terribly unforgiving of any mistakes.

    • @sidviscous5959
      @sidviscous5959 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@johnkerr4645 Back when I worked in aviation, someone had a poster of a biplane that had "augured in" with this caption on it.

    • @6milesup
      @6milesup Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@westerlywinds5684 That is crap. Respect is your friend. Fear causes irrational decisions. Professional pilot... now retired. Zero accidents or incidents after 30 years.

  • @klk1900
    @klk1900 Před 2 lety +116

    This is absolutely sickening. I was sent this link by friends. I do agriculture in a 502 & 602. I started out flying RW. Before we apply product we make several circles and usually I visit every site on the ground before I spray/seed. Why some amateur would fly that low is absolutely insane. And I say amateur because nobody with experience would ever fly anywhere that low they haven’t been before and visited on the ground threw the flight path. Your never surprised because you have it mapped out. I print out a aerial of the properties and mark with red lines where every powerline is. I have digital systems but my grandfather is who started agriculture in the family and years back he would take aerial photos and label it himself. So that’s what I grew up around and that’s what makes me comfortable is having a physical piece of paper with the aerial & obstructions marked. That poor kid was straight up murdered in my book

    • @christopherraish1469
      @christopherraish1469 Před 11 měsíci +9

      Especially trying to pull nose up that hard in a 150 with weakened horsepower. Some kids don't understand that flying is not driving. In a level and horizontal rate a v6 motor will increase and accelerate at a gentle rate of speed with normal compression and power. If you immediately increase the angle of ascent on a grade you slow down. Same thing in a small plane. A jet has equivalent = v8motor power and can increase & maintain. But dumb choices and not understanding that the ascent rate in a small motored plane with immediate pitch up is like hitting a brick wall with weights on. Immediate STALL 😟

    • @gavinvalentino6002
      @gavinvalentino6002 Před měsícem

      There is so much tragedy in your failure to grasp eggcorns and contractions.
      Please stop.

    • @danstermeister
      @danstermeister Před měsícem +2

      @@gavinvalentino6002 They don't pay him for good grammar. What do they pay you for?

    • @45CaliberCure
      @45CaliberCure Před 23 dny +4

      @@gavinvalentino6002 Dude, you're not going to out-cool a crop duster with grammar lessons. I could watch them for hours. I think 20 seconds would be a stretch for observing you at your job, if you have one, Foghorn Eggcorn.

    • @calvinballew5411
      @calvinballew5411 Před 9 dny

      Youre lost​@@gavinvalentino6002

  • @pauljdowney
    @pauljdowney Před 2 lety +273

    Before seeing the video I could not understand how you could kill yourself in a C-150. I was curious. At the start of the video I thought it must be a mid air collision. If they lost the engine the landing speed would be plenty slow enough to walk away. They then started flying really low which is incredibly dangerous and they thought it was fun. They were completely not risk aware. In 28000 hours I never flew a general aviation plane under 1000 agl or a class B or C limit except for take off or landing. It just was unwarranted risk. I should mention that in the military I flew the F-111 for 3 years. We flew very very low and high subsonic to supersonic speeds day and night. It was completely different. We were highly trained, the plane had terrain following computer systems and was designed for this and every inch of the route was carefully analyzed. I've been flying over 50 years. Flying can still be fun if you are meticulous and risk adverse.

    • @sullybiker6520
      @sullybiker6520 Před rokem +12

      And it'll kill you stone dead if you give it a chance. I remember practicing engine failures and my instructor not wanting to go below 500' AGL; he told me such low altitudes made him nervous as your options narrow so much.

    • @pauljames5914
      @pauljames5914 Před rokem +12

      A young man in my city was soloing doing touch and gos. On the last leg he forgot to raise the flaps on takeoff (full flaps) He couldn't gain speed, stalled and crashed into a back yard. Lost his life but at least didn't hit the house. He was flying a C 152.

    • @michaelrunnels7660
      @michaelrunnels7660 Před rokem

      Remember that a Cessna 150 will barely kill you.

    • @johnbasiglone1219
      @johnbasiglone1219 Před rokem +6

      How IN THE HELL could you not understand how one could kill themselves in a Cessna 150/152?
      Seriously, what rock did you crawl out from underneath?

    • @oceanhome2023
      @oceanhome2023 Před rokem +11

      @@johnbasiglone1219
      The real John Basiglone would not put up with your NEGATIVE attitude for one second ! Nobody likes it !!

  • @flytz1
    @flytz1 Před 10 lety +56

    I like the way people say "fake" if it's something they don't understand or haven't seen themselves.
    To you people I say - Get out more

    • @gfinnstrom
      @gfinnstrom Před 3 lety +4

      They do not like reality

    • @davefandango1303
      @davefandango1303 Před měsícem +2

      I assume it is real. However, there are some oddities, and the most being that the film corrupts just at the point it does.

    • @danlhart
      @danlhart Před 19 dny

      Likely filmed using magnetic tape. The part of the tape in, or near the mechanism would be more prone to damage.

  • @paulfarmer1276
    @paulfarmer1276 Před 9 lety +179

    Aircraft are a leveraged investment; a little training, knowledge and respect will earn you a lifetime of joy. A few seconds of stupidity will take your life from you.

    • @denieledwards6893
      @denieledwards6893 Před 3 lety

      THOUSANDS OF CRASHES ON YOU TUBE ...THANKS BUT NO THANKS.

    • @denieledwards6893
      @denieledwards6893 Před 3 lety +2

      I AGREE BUT I DON'T TRUST AND PILOT OF ANY PLANE. IT'S JUST ME.

    • @DaesoTheOne
      @DaesoTheOne Před 3 lety

      Plane crashes are very rare. Most pilots are trained and are just trying to have a good time. You will be fine going into a single engine piston plane

    • @DENIEL381
      @DENIEL381 Před 3 lety

      @@DaesoTheOne RARE ???????? THOUSANDS ON CZcams JUST A ACCIDENT WAITING TO HAPPEN. NO WAY JOSE.

    • @DaesoTheOne
      @DaesoTheOne Před 3 lety +1

      ERIC EDMUND Yes it’s rare. Have you ever seen one?

  • @pmh1nic
    @pmh1nic Před rokem +57

    I always felt the responsibility of having others that entrusted their safety to me every time I had a passenger on board. If you want to be reckless with your own life have at it but to put someone else in danger like that is unforgivable.

    • @palindrome1959
      @palindrome1959 Před 8 měsíci +4

      I've done questionable things in my car with my wife next to me and she was pissed. I take her flying with me sometimes and she asked me why I'm safely conscious to the point of being pedantic and my reply is I don't want to die ... lol ... and nothing would shatter my life more than to do something stupid flying, have an incident where I make it but my passengers don't. You have responsibility when you take passengers up to ensure they make it home. Safely always first.

    • @Yosetime
      @Yosetime Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@palindrome1959 Duh! Your wife is trying to tell you that she would also prefer not to die in a car crash either. Given that people always say you are more likely to get into a car crash than an airplane crash, this would be why. So I do hope you took her words to heart and also applied safety to driving your car. Any vehicle is a deadly weapon. And the driver/pilot is the one aiming said deadly weapon. Think about it.

  • @douggraham5082
    @douggraham5082 Před 2 lety +202

    I have watched this video many times. The recklessness and stupidity on display are truly breathtaking. I am not the most experienced pilot in the world, but at the time of this writing I have about 300 landings to my credit. I cannot imagine what my instructor(s) would have said and done had I even considered doing something this foolish. I am sorry these people died but this is an object lesson in exactly what not to do in an airplane.

    • @timapple6586
      @timapple6586 Před rokem +10

      Imagine a college where acceptance into the program was entirely predicated upon the sheer wealth of you parents and had zero whatsoever to do with your personal aptitude or academic standing. What could POSSIBLY go wrong?

    • @dalereed3950
      @dalereed3950 Před rokem +19

      Tim Apple, you just described Trump and his father.

    • @lostagain2992
      @lostagain2992 Před rokem

      @@dalereed3950 For the first time in America we have no president, just a weak and frail puppet, not elected, but installed by a criminally corrupt political system!!!

    • @Progneto
      @Progneto Před rokem

      @@dalereed3950 Ahh yes, good ol' Trump! The ONLY President who did things FOR this country and not for himself and his wicked cronies in Washington!

    • @cornfilledscreamer614
      @cornfilledscreamer614 Před rokem

      @@dalereed3950 Why do liberals like you allow Trump to run your little lives? He hasn't been President in over 2 years, yet he lives in your dome so much that you feel compelled to bring his name up in something like this?
      Seek help immediately. You're an obsessed, sick puppy.

  • @paulquince5470
    @paulquince5470 Před 10 lety +525

    The passengers voice near the end, he sounds so young like a teen, is absolutely chilling. Heart breaking, as not his fault and he was someone's son who put his trust in the pilot. It's not big or clever being cold and nasty, some of the comments here are crass and utterly heartless. Who brought you up, a drone? RIP.

    • @tomperkins5657
      @tomperkins5657 Před 3 lety +18

      They are adolescents or young "men" who do not have children.

    • @wonkyeyewilly4575
      @wonkyeyewilly4575 Před 3 lety +7

      people die all the time. being stupid or smert about it changes nothing. respect or not, still deed. its you who places so much value in this death, video, person who did a dumb thing and died from his death. stop caring. life gets easier.

    • @WHATSAHANDLEIDKIDK
      @WHATSAHANDLEIDKIDK Před 3 lety +11

      @@wonkyeyewilly4575 *smart

    • @markl2322
      @markl2322 Před 2 lety +30

      @@wonkyeyewilly4575 Um.....WHAT??

    • @royharper9472
      @royharper9472 Před 2 lety +6

      Very well said thank you

  • @CiscoWes
    @CiscoWes Před rokem +11

    I think the pilot was caught by surprise when he came up to the power lines so he climbed too steep, and they’re laughing, he’s playing along like he meant to do that, then the plane stalled and that was it. Just my opinion.

  • @nathanielgirma8265
    @nathanielgirma8265 Před 4 lety +264

    I always come back to this, from absolute elation 5:18 to death 5:31 its fantastic how fragile an existence we live. Definitely saved this to my flight training playlist.

    • @sherwinjoseph3737
      @sherwinjoseph3737 Před rokem +7

      Yes, this is a great training tool much like Red Asphalt was for new automotive drivers in the 70's and 80's. God bless whoever was in that craft. I hope to always be a very boring pilot. If i ever finish.

    • @eoinmorganj
      @eoinmorganj Před rokem +2

      @@sherwinjoseph3737 how did the crash happened?

    • @sherwinjoseph3737
      @sherwinjoseph3737 Před rokem +13

      @@eoinmorganj I believe if you listen to the video without distraction you will hear the stall horn go off. This is most likely because he/she was too low and slow and tried to increase power at that point to no avail. Also he probably pulled the nose up and increased the stall possibility

    • @hamhocksandflipflopsfarms
      @hamhocksandflipflopsfarms Před rokem +7

      @@sherwinjoseph3737 That what was I was thinking. Wasn't sure if it was the stall warning or the tape. My best guess as a pilot was they were trying to get a closer look at the fire and was too low. Flying through the smoke, got a little anxious and pulled up too fast. Again, just a guess.

    • @TitaniumTurbine
      @TitaniumTurbine Před rokem +21

      @@hamhocksandflipflopsfarms According to the NTSB report, it appears there was a bit of showboating going on here. The pilot did fly low to get a good view of the fire - but stayed low (10 feet AGL). One of the two (probably the passenger) says “Crop duster style!”. Eventually they saw power lines in the distance and the passenger says “Under or over?”.. The pilot says “Over”, pulling up and subsequently stalling the plane. If you look close, you can actually see the power lines in the distance before the rapid ascent.

  • @youraloser4192
    @youraloser4192 Před 10 lety +95

    Screams during the last seconds..
    Horrifying

    • @officergregorystevens5765
      @officergregorystevens5765 Před 6 lety +4

      If you mean the second video I hear them screaming a sort of "cheering on" type thing like celebrating this ridiculous manouver. Were they trying to do that?

    • @drewborger2585
      @drewborger2585 Před 5 lety

      yep

    • @dabking9454
      @dabking9454 Před 5 lety +8

      Yup.
      Pilot: "Fuck!"
      Passenger: Oh SHIT, SHIT!
      *Lights Out*

    • @premiumuser507
      @premiumuser507 Před 4 lety

      I felt joy in those seconds

    • @ChodeMaster
      @ChodeMaster Před 4 lety +23

      @@premiumuser507 degenerate

  • @crooked-halo
    @crooked-halo Před 5 lety +47

    Damn, this is like something I did! It doesn't surprise me, but it should, that this pilot had a commercial certificate with an instrument rating. When my commercial/instrument was new, I also did some showing off, flying 3 friends inside the small valley containing the Brazos River from Lake Whitney, Texas to Waco. I thought it was cool to be below ground level and 20 feet above the river. Suddenly, my roommate next to me pointed forward & said "are those power lines?" I don't cuss, but said "SHIT" loudly! A cluster of 3 or 4 power lines stretched across the river valley in front of us. I yanked the yoke into my belly and will never forget the sight of power lines rushing under our Cessna 172 at 100 MPH with _maybe_ 10 feet of clearance. Showing off for friends in an airplane. It almost killed all four of us, just like it took the lives of the two young men in this video. I'm 51 now & still fly for fun (work on F-35s for a living) but I don't do stupid stuff while flying anymore. My showing off is a good landing and an enjoyable, safe flight. Young pilots, PLEASE don't show off in the cockpit!

  • @mossman8787
    @mossman8787 Před 11 lety +32

    Last two seconds of audio is kind of haunting

    • @GR-bn3xj
      @GR-bn3xj Před měsícem +1

      It's crazy how similar to laughing and screaming are

  • @rickey5353
    @rickey5353 Před 11 lety +54

    The older I get, the more safety conscious I become. You can still get all the enjoyment and while operating safely .

    • @gertnood
      @gertnood Před 2 lety +1

      And you can do it again another day..

    • @unbearifiedbear1885
      @unbearifiedbear1885 Před měsícem +1

      lol so true! I used to be a pretty good skateboarder as a kid.. now 38 with a family and a carpentry business, my nephew asked me to show him some tricks on his board and I seriously had to weigh my whole current life up before getting on it 😂

  • @RyanFlyinHigh
    @RyanFlyinHigh Před 11 lety +25

    as they say, there are old pilots and there are bold pilots but there are no old and bold pilots

  • @garyvale8347
    @garyvale8347 Před 10 lety +30

    @ Stephen W.....thank you for posting this, along with the NTSB report...shows just how quickly things can go bad, when there is not enough altitude to recover from a stall....

    • @RobertBoiteau
      @RobertBoiteau Před 3 měsíci

      Things went bad from the start of the flight

  • @delano62
    @delano62 Před 11 měsíci +5

    He was thinking. "I'll never fly with this guy again".
    He was right.

  • @PETEZORRILLA
    @PETEZORRILLA Před 11 lety +22

    This video, while graphic, serves as a reminder to keep a level head when flying. Have fun but know the limits.

  • @BakedCd
    @BakedCd Před 10 lety +42

    "There are old pilots and there are bold pilots, but there are no old bold pilots."
    This video really does show how much truth there is to that saying.

    • @MaluluKeleGuiSila
      @MaluluKeleGuiSila Před 3 lety

      Old = wise
      Bold = dumb

    • @tarheelenigma
      @tarheelenigma Před rokem +1

      Literally half the air force pilots around the world: "I'm about to end this dude's whole career."

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před rokem +2

      actually, bold pilots are the ones with greatest success. It's a gross oversimplification of what is really at play. The real differentiator is discretion. Knowing when to play it safe, and when to make a move.

    • @MaxwellEdison-it4rf
      @MaxwellEdison-it4rf Před rokem

      @@SoloRenegade Actually, actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually actually

  • @javiEmma
    @javiEmma Před 11 lety +29

    From having fun to pure terror in a second

  • @favrerules04
    @favrerules04 Před 10 lety +64

    You want to impress me? Land your plane safely!

    • @sayloltothetroll6806
      @sayloltothetroll6806 Před 2 lety +1

      They wanted to show off their genius.

    • @jamesnichols7693
      @jamesnichols7693 Před měsícem

      Absolutely. Those who land fly another day. These two are just a learning video for perpetuity now. Such an unnecessary waste of life.

  • @gmccord1970
    @gmccord1970 Před 9 lety +21

    At 5:25 you can hear the stall warning buzzer if you listen closely.

    • @danielgregory3295
      @danielgregory3295 Před 3 měsíci +2

      More of a whistle on the 150..but clearly audible!😮😢

  • @cceclark
    @cceclark Před 11 lety +163

    It didn't matter if he had full power or not. When you pull up abruptly, you change the angle of attack of the wind and the wing and the wing no longer produces lift and you stall. You have to lower the attitude of the wing to produce lift but you lose altitude when you do that at too low an airspeed and he did. You can stall at any speed or power setting.

    • @SuperPhunThyme9
      @SuperPhunThyme9 Před rokem +1

      ​@@michaelbigelow3255 I would agree with the OP if it wasn't a 150.....
      Maybe if you modified the elevators to be 3x the size so it flew like a fighter jet, then yeah, wouldn't want to get too abrupt with that lol

    • @pikachu6031
      @pikachu6031 Před rokem +5

      @@SuperPhunThyme9 You couldn’t possibly do that. The elevators would be so over effective, you’d pull the wings off the aeroplane with the slightest pull at speed! You’d also pitch up so much on rotation, you’d stall anyway.

    • @pehotanoo5981
      @pehotanoo5981 Před rokem

      You can’t stall going mach 5

    • @pikachu6031
      @pikachu6031 Před rokem +13

      @@pehotanoo5981 Yes you can actually. Have you never heard of the condition called “Departure”? Look up the High Speed Stall!

    • @StoneCoolds
      @StoneCoolds Před rokem +1

      Specially in a shitty cessna with a piston engine, that thing suffers to fly lvl let alone pretending it to be a clean f16 working for the Thunderbirds...

  • @rayamanelly
    @rayamanelly Před 3 lety +11

    The nervous laugh was haunting because he thought they would be in the clear.

  • @RJ9mech
    @RJ9mech Před 11 lety +15

    An unfortunate accident caused by poor judgement. Aviation is brutally unforgiving. May these gentlemen rest in peace.

  • @raoulcruz4404
    @raoulcruz4404 Před rokem +35

    Many years ago I knew of a promising young lad starting a career in aviation. A really bright and well mannered fella. He was attending Embry-Riddle. On a break from school, he and another classmate rented an airplane. His classmate wanted to buzz his parent’s house. Witnesses at the departure airport said the airplane flew off into the distance, never more than 100 feet off the ground. I guess the pilot forgot about the high tension power lines near his parents’ house.

    • @thejackbox
      @thejackbox Před rokem +11

      Seemingly forgot about the law too. Flying 100 ft in altitude over buildings will get you in deep shit.

    • @SuperPhunThyme9
      @SuperPhunThyme9 Před rokem +3

      ​@@thejackbox well duh

    • @Code_Fly_Repeat
      @Code_Fly_Repeat Před rokem +1

      @@thejackbox It's not a Law its a regulation. Meaning You don't have to be found guilty the FAA just tells you that you are guilty.

    • @thejackbox
      @thejackbox Před rokem +2

      @@Code_Fly_Repeat cool.

    • @kentduryea7109
      @kentduryea7109 Před rokem +2

      What a thrilling thing to see stupid go down in flames and horror. Stupidity-- the most abundant element in the universe.
      Forgive me. My love for horror movies. We all go to see things like this on Tv or the theatres. So it must be normal.

  • @circa326
    @circa326 Před 5 lety +33

    It's funny how when you get complacent flying RC planes you tend to destroy them. It's scary how complacency in a real air craft provides the same result. Complacency kills

  • @tisoy909
    @tisoy909 Před 4 lety +62

    That was messing around. Don't mess around!

    • @billybatson5736
      @billybatson5736 Před 3 lety +5

      Quit screwing around, you screw around to much.

    • @Watcher3223
      @Watcher3223 Před 3 lety +2

      If you're gonna mess around, do it like Ray Charles, not like that Cessna pilot.

  • @Watcher3223
    @Watcher3223 Před 10 lety +164

    The problem with being a hot dog is that, sooner or later, you will get cooked.

    • @TheClassyArchitect
      @TheClassyArchitect Před 3 lety +2

      And you know what they say, if all pork chops were perfect, we wouldn’t have hot dogs.

    • @house9850
      @house9850 Před 3 lety +1

      This is chilling and changed my mind about wanting to get my license. John Denver had over 2400 hours flying and was distracted and lost control. It can happen to anyone but after reading the report, this guy was flying reckless. "go over or under the power lines" would not even be a question in my mind.

    • @trumpisaconfirmedcuck5840
      @trumpisaconfirmedcuck5840 Před 3 lety

      There are old pilots. There are bold pilots. There are no old and bold pilots.

    • @SuperPhunThyme9
      @SuperPhunThyme9 Před 2 lety

      @@house9850 yeah no question at all....always under the lines!
      .....right?

    • @SuperPhunThyme9
      @SuperPhunThyme9 Před 2 lety

      @@house9850 wait I meant over

  • @TheTruthKiwi
    @TheTruthKiwi Před 6 měsíci +3

    From elation to pure terror in a second. Chilling indeed.

  • @docskyhook2
    @docskyhook2 Před 11 lety +45

    This is a sad lesson for us all. The video reminds those of us who love aviation that we can never be too cautious.

    • @stevemarks9360
      @stevemarks9360 Před rokem

      It reminds us to fly the way we were taught, and not to do idiotic things whilst piloting!

    • @eoinmorganj
      @eoinmorganj Před rokem

      @@stevemarks9360 what caused the plane to crash?

    • @arleighburke9095
      @arleighburke9095 Před rokem

      ​@@eoinmorganj STUPIDITY

  • @tomharris3486
    @tomharris3486 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for sharing this..
    I hope others will learn from this tragic event.

  • @brian1988
    @brian1988 Před rokem +6

    Cessna 152's are like the VW Bug of aircraft. I remember the ones I flew for my flight training would always have the door pop open on takeoff or in flight. It wasn't a big deal, but it did leave me with a lasting feeling of "I hope the wings don't fold up on me!" Power-on stall training sessions were like a Hail Mary prayer recital, but to their credit the Cessna held together. When I transitioned to a low-wing Piper Warrior, it felt like I had transitioned from a VW Bug to the Starship Enterprise and gave me a lot more confidence in build quality and handling.

  • @consciouscookiemonster8364

    Damn just imagine if that brush fire wouldn’t have happened they wouldn’t be flying so low and would still be alive today with grandkids of their own by now. Aviation will humble you quick

  • @SunsetSpecter
    @SunsetSpecter Před rokem +4

    I'd never even heard of this incident before, or read the NTSB report on it. However when I saw the low flight over the fields after the brush fire my first thought was 'they're going to hit lines'. Sure enough...

  • @Burnsengine
    @Burnsengine Před 11 lety +73

    Several years ago, during one of my bi-annuals, I was with some "hot shot" instructor who decided to show me what the 182 could actually do... and he pulled something similar. We flew off the deck at max speed... he pulled up into a nose-up attitude... stalled it... and recovered about 500 feet agl. I was NEVER so angry in all of my life. I told him to land the plane because he and I were going to have a go!!!! He was apologetic.. but I don't think he knows just how close he cut it.

    • @Burnsengine
      @Burnsengine Před 3 lety +4

      @DesignatedEagle F I should have. I remember thinking at the time that the flight school was rather new and I didn't want to see them go under. the good news is: he was gone not long after I did my check ride with him. But I honestly don't know what became of him. My check ride was back in 2001 I think. Right before 9_11

    • @Ryan-zc1tz
      @Ryan-zc1tz Před rokem

      Looks like we gotta badass over here

    • @hosseinhosseini4194
      @hosseinhosseini4194 Před rokem +11

      There are always "pilots" who believe they can outlive their stupidity

    • @hosseinhosseini4194
      @hosseinhosseini4194 Před rokem +6

      And carelessness

    • @thetechnicanwithaheart1682
      @thetechnicanwithaheart1682 Před rokem +5

      Now you don't do that unless you have quite a bit of altitude for recovery

  • @mopauly
    @mopauly Před 11 lety +21

    as a student pilot, these type videos are quite educational.

    • @HondoSauce
      @HondoSauce Před 2 lety +8

      As an aspiring pilot, this scares the shit out of me.

    • @amanjotkaur4753
      @amanjotkaur4753 Před rokem +1

      @@HondoSauce me too. I was too close to the power line while taking off today. Would have just died.

  • @namibgtv6
    @namibgtv6 Před 11 lety +7

    The pilots last sentence before he said "oh shit!!"is a true manifest of his attiude and commitment towards regulations and the safety of the airplane, his passenger, and those on the ground below.. Just as the powerlines appear into view, he entertainingly asks his passenger "OVER OR UNDER?! OVER OR UNDER?!!" This also shows that he planned this ridiculously stupid manuevre. A show-off is a dangerous kind of pilot, easily recognised by real, safe pilots who excercise good judgement..

  • @RRRIBEYE
    @RRRIBEYE Před 6 měsíci +5

    I was trained to fly by my CFII, who, along with his sons, owned a crop dusting operation in the midwest. I also worked as a mixer/loader for them during spraying season and often got rides (and logged time) in some nice high performance aircraft. Anyway, it was a different type of learning to fly and my instructor wanted me to learn to crop dust and I was all eager about that! I built many hours during those summers and didn't think twice when approaching a power line to just stay low (of course seeing there was no vehicles on the gravel roads coming!) and I'd easily buzz right under the wires. When this pilot asked his lady friend "over or under?" and she said OVER! - mistake #1. It didn't sound like he was very sure of himself and he decided too late and stalled. Pity. Stall avoidance is critical at low altitude...for obvious reasons, lol.

  • @Shmey
    @Shmey Před 10 lety +77

    "It's not how close you get to the ground, but how precise can you fly the airplane..."
    - Bob Hoover

    • @allenelswick6961
      @allenelswick6961 Před 2 lety

      I don't know the 150's are a low powered plane and the dead air drops combined with that close to the ground is so dangerous to get out of.

    • @Shmey
      @Shmey Před 2 lety

      @@allenelswick6961 I agree. I think I was trying to be funny. The pilot had no business trying to be hot-dogging in an airplane like that so close to the ground. I get the impression he did quite a wing-over and lost too much airspeed.

    • @androidwazko9795
      @androidwazko9795 Před rokem +1

      Precise grammar would be "...but how precisely you can fly the airplane..."

  • @paulwiles2961
    @paulwiles2961 Před 8 lety +21

    They were being silly, probably very young, and they paid the ultimate price. Rest in peace, condolences to the family

  • @ProChoiceJesus
    @ProChoiceJesus Před 11 lety +40

    I've landed a C-150, C-152 and C-172 on dirt and grass many times. That sound, in my opinion, is very consistent with the sound of a small Cessna's wheels contacting and rolling on dirt or gravel. Grass sounds similar, but a little different. I believe they rolled on the ground where it rose up a bit. This makes it quite amazing that they did not crash then and/or flip over.

    • @stanktail
      @stanktail Před 3 lety +7

      I heard stall horn then death

    • @kellik5453
      @kellik5453 Před 2 lety +20

      @@stanktail He was referring to the sound from the undercarriage when they flew over the canal.

    • @Bertrand146
      @Bertrand146 Před rokem

      @@kellik5453 That was humor Kelly...

    • @crooked-halo
      @crooked-halo Před rokem +4

      Oh wow! At 5:02! Yes, they rolled on the ground going over that road/canal! I don't think that was just hitting grass! Holy shit! How did they not eat the field then? This also shows more poor judgement on the part of this pilot! Damn.

    • @robertclary1718
      @robertclary1718 Před rokem +1

      ​@@stanktail absolutely heard stall warning.

  • @sends2aaron
    @sends2aaron Před 10 lety +19

    The spookiest part of this video, for me, was their screams in the last couple of seconds...

    • @theflanman420420
      @theflanman420420 Před 4 lety +2

      Well yeah... the part where they died was the “spookiest” part...

    • @sends2aaron
      @sends2aaron Před 4 lety +2

      @@theflanman420420 I'd been trying to find this video again, on and off, for 6 years. Thanks for commenting.

    • @xfactor1236
      @xfactor1236 Před 3 lety

      @@sends2aaron wow you actually are here after 6 years

  • @RaoufHasan
    @RaoufHasan Před 11 lety +32

    when he laughed is when the pilot pulled up, we was literaly going straight up. so i think almost anyone would laugh at that point. then the plane dropped, and he realized (with commentary) : "shit" :)

    • @petermendoza1170
      @petermendoza1170 Před rokem

      Yea so sad! That instructor was a jerk and if the kid had any knowledge about flying,he probably would have been screaming instead of laughing. 😔

  • @windage
    @windage Před 11 lety +9

    I stand corrected, I went to that site found the incident report. Even found our old 150 we sold in 76 crashed by the new owner in 78, non-fatal..thank you for good info.

  • @Yerushalaim46
    @Yerushalaim46 Před 11 lety +23

    Very sad to see young lives such as these two end like that. I highly recommend young and old
    pilots to attend safety meetings by the AOPA Air Safety Institute which show this tragedies so
    that we get to learn from other peoples' mistakes. Low level flights, showing off, has proven for
    many years how dangerous this kind of flying is. I try to instill this fundamental of safety to all my
    students, the young ones in particular, early in the learning process.

    • @charlesfaure1189
      @charlesfaure1189 Před rokem +2

      No amount of instruction will cure bad character. These two people didn't die from pilot ignorance. They died from the pilot's lack of concern for his own and his passenger's safety.

  • @smaze1782
    @smaze1782 Před 10 lety +65

    Jeez…talk about a completely avoidable crash. Wtf was this guy thinking?

    • @jrayner21679
      @jrayner21679 Před 5 lety +5

      SMaze17 he was thinking "I should’ve went under. I’m about to soil myself." Both true, you enjoy one last dump (as long as you hadn’t taken a shit right before) when you die. If he survived he would’ve still soiled himself.

    • @tylerprufer7066
      @tylerprufer7066 Před 4 lety +15

      @@jrayner21679 You are a complete tit.

    • @ChodeMaster
      @ChodeMaster Před 4 lety +10

      @@jrayner21679 degenerate

    • @jamesporter6288
      @jamesporter6288 Před 4 lety +6

      He was thinking "I'm gonna show off"

    • @douglascolby2908
      @douglascolby2908 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ChodeMaster
      Why would you even guess as to who that guy is? Does feces exit your body when you die? Most likely, unless of course, you took a dump the night before. If it were me, I'd defecate. Dude's comment isn't bad people, it's the truth. That's the problem with Earth. Humans want everything sugar-coated and half-assed. The guy spoke the truth and you people decided it was a good time to call names and be typical humans. Stand out, be original, and keep scrolling. Just because you can bully other people online easier, doesn't make it right. Name calling is bullying too. Stop being a bully ..cyber-type

  • @dalelinsey9350
    @dalelinsey9350 Před 6 měsíci +2

    My Good old flight instructor always said to me this :
    "There are old pilots and bold pilots, but no old, bold pilots".

  • @firstielasty1162
    @firstielasty1162 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I believe I saw an antenna at 5:17. Can't tell if it was a factor. He was not flying slowly, maybe even over maneuvering speed. Meaning that nearing stall AOA can result in structural damage before a stall occurs. He was moving right along, ground effect probably helping a little.
    Depending on what was nearby but not visible, he didn't bust minimum safe altitude, it doesn't apply over water or sparsely populated areas. Although doing so within 500 ft of that antenna is a problem.
    "Careless or reckless operation" ? Hard to deny that when you crash, regardless of why.
    Yes, the fear heard at the end is sad to listen to.

  • @thegoingthing
    @thegoingthing Před 11 lety +8

    I cannot believe this. Being a GFPT going on PPL, I was squirming at the low altitude. Raising the nose into a steep climb was only going to end one way. The sight of that left wing drop, knowing the plane was so low made me shudder. Bloody shame.

  • @jacob16421
    @jacob16421 Před 10 lety +31

    That burning fire on the ground should have been a warning.

    • @VendPrekmurec
      @VendPrekmurec Před 3 lety +1

      A final destination, chaos approaching...there is mathematically more chaos around the area than just one spot... This is how the Universe works i guess... this is part of so called Physics of Chaos.

    • @patrikpass2962
      @patrikpass2962 Před 3 lety

      @@VendPrekmurec we could also call it "the ignorance of the human mind"

    • @VendPrekmurec
      @VendPrekmurec Před 3 lety

      @@patrikpass2962 Ignorance creates more chaos indeed.

    • @patrikpass2962
      @patrikpass2962 Před 3 lety

      @@VendPrekmurec Chaos is a subjective word, there is no physics of chaos, its just physics...

    • @VendPrekmurec
      @VendPrekmurec Před 3 lety +1

      @@patrikpass2962 You do not know what you are talking about. Have you ever heard about Theory of Chaos in Physics? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_theory It is part of Physics, just like Special or General Relativity or Quantum Physics.

  • @UTCM
    @UTCM Před 11 měsíci +2

    My first instructor told me a private pilots lic was only a piece of paper to prove to the FAA that one time in your life you could fly a plane safe . I went on the get coomercial , IFR , and CFI rating . Was learning still when I stopped flying .

  • @cupwithhandles
    @cupwithhandles Před 11 lety +23

    "Altitude above, runway behind, fuel at the pump station: Three most useless things for a pilot." This was an adage my flight instructor recited regularly to the new students.

  • @micknielsen7102
    @micknielsen7102 Před rokem +3

    A video every new pilot should watch, a lot of good comments and wisdom here.

  • @paulcoleman2554
    @paulcoleman2554 Před 6 měsíci +3

    I'm sorry, condolences. I remember first training in a 152 basically the same as a 150, my instructor said something odd. "This is a very forgiving aircraft, you have to work hard to crash one of these."😢

  • @user-wz2qe2pv6r
    @user-wz2qe2pv6r Před 4 měsíci +1

    There you go.... This vid needs to be played in every briefing room in the country on a loop.

    • @GR-bn3xj
      @GR-bn3xj Před měsícem

      Oh it does but There was still people saying I won't happen to me, No matter how many videos they watch

  • @norcaliguycalifornia1950
    @norcaliguycalifornia1950 Před 6 měsíci +2

    One thing I learned about flying 150's. Never over. They can barely keep themselves in the air with that 100hp engine.
    The 150 I soloed in 531M crashed after a bird strike through the windshield. The drag of the hole in the windshield was too much even at full throttle. Crashed just shy of the runway in a tomato field. Instructor got hit with shrapnel and the plants caught the nose wheel and made it flip. The student only had minor injuries.

  • @SeaMonkey137
    @SeaMonkey137 Před rokem +4

    The 150/152s are the hardest of all aircraft to crash. But it can be done in the right hands.

  • @styxxmann
    @styxxmann Před 5 lety +3

    What alarms me is that the rental club allowed him to fly one of their aircraft on what appears to be a 7 year old medical certificate. Today, they're good for 3 years, but back in 1987 they were only good for two. Even so.... seven years? And nobody checked on that?

  • @user-xz9hu4rd2v
    @user-xz9hu4rd2v Před rokem +2

    The superior pilot uses his superior knowledge to avoid situations that require his superior skills.

  • @mcgavin098
    @mcgavin098 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I was 11 years old and had enough sense to tell my grandfather pilot that planes were meant to fly way up in the sky and not too close to the ground. I read through my older brother's training book.

  • @johnifly
    @johnifly Před 10 lety +11

    Sounds like young pilot and passenger on board and they thought it was so cool toward the end until that stall warning sounded and they suddenly stalled out. It was too late then! I was a student pilot back in the 80's and the first thing I learned was that you needed at LEAST 1,000 feet to recover from a stall, as that's a maneuver that all prospective pilots must learn, to stall the airplane and to recover from the stall. This poor pilot and his passenger didn't have a chance thanks to what seemed to me that he wanted to make a big impression. What a senseless tragedy!

    • @BTUvsCAL
      @BTUvsCAL Před 10 lety +2

      200 feet is plenty to recover from a stall but it is not recommend to practice stalls 1500` AGL for solo flights

    • @ConvairDart106
      @ConvairDart106 Před 10 lety +3

      Emery Board Also, he has poor flying skills. Anyone who has learned aerobatics, (most don't) know that you cannot stall at 0g. It looks as though he pulls up nearly vertical and loses speed faster than he expected. An aggressive push to 0g and we would not be watching this film today. He had to have gained the 200 feet in the high speed pull up before the stall/spin. I have no doubt that just a touch of skill would have saved the day. Bet he had full aileron in as well which causes adverse yaw and helps tremendously with the spin entry! Ailerons are a no-no when below the stall speed. You need rudder to lift the low wing. This is exactly why airshow pilots need waivers to fly low. Supreme mastery of ones aircraft is required when operating low to the ground. I love aerobatics and am good at them however, I still like 3,000 feet between myself and terra firma just in case. I fly rental planes like this one, and you never know what stress the previous pilot put on it. I want room to use the parachute I am sitting on. I had a harness fail once that put my head through the skylight of a Cessna Aerobat at pattern altitude executing a four point hesitation roll. We almost died after falling inverted 700 feet! My legs were LAYING on the bottom of the yoke making it hard for my instructor (who suggested the maneuver right before landing) to roll the plane upright. Needless to say, we survived and we also got a new window to replace the old suncrazed skylight.

    • @jojosscooters
      @jojosscooters Před 10 lety +2

      ConvairDart106 I hope your instructor learned a lesson. Go find a different aerobatic instructor if you continue your flying education. The following from AOPA is worth thinking about: " There is a profound saying, not original, that two of the following are required: airspeed, altitude, or brains. Put another way, high and fast is safe while low or slow ups the risk equation significantly. Aerobatics conducted in the right kind of aircraft, with the right kind of training, with the right kind of altitude are done daily and with a high degree of safety. On a per-hour basis, I suspect the risk is somewhat higher than non-aerobatic flight, but certainly acceptable. Trouble starts when one of the three conditions isn't met. Leave out just one and the risk-o-meter pegs in the red zone."

    • @johnifly
      @johnifly Před 10 lety +1

      Jimmy Morris
      You hit it RIGHT on the head Jimmy!!

    • @johnifly
      @johnifly Před rokem

      @@michaelbigelow3255 First off, I'm NOT a pilot!! Second, I was a STUDENT pilot back in 1983 and flew on a Cherokee 140 low wing. single-prop plane! Three, when learning to do power-off, power-on and other stalls, the instructor told me that 1000 feet was used as a safety practice to do stalls and that's what I was informed!!
      As a safety window, 1,000 ft was used. It did NOT mean that 1,000 ft was the amount of feet needed to recover because obviously you would be dead! Remember, Cessna's are high-wing aircrafts and are "forgiving" when it comes to stalls while the plane I flew would "drop like a rock" and was a low-wing aircraft!
      I rode co-pilot in a Cessna back then and asked the pilot to do a power-off stall and he told me it was hard to stall it and he demonstrated it!! The nose "mushed." A power-on stall would have stalled it for sure which he didn't do!

  • @Polypropellor
    @Polypropellor Před 11 lety +12

    I flew low twice (excepting landings and TO), and both times nearly got killed- once chasing antelope, damn near collided with a fence, the other chasing jack rabbits and was surprised by a flood control dam- I cleared it by less than a few inches, and jamming the throttle forward, I nearly stalled the engine, very nearly crashing before it caught to full revs- that cured me of low flying for the rest of my twenty years flying private. People die in airplanes for screwing around!

  • @romantic340
    @romantic340 Před 3 lety +19

    My dad trained me to fly, i always remember him saying, altitude is like insurance, the more you have the safer you are, to bad these 2 didn't know that.

    • @skota7416
      @skota7416 Před 2 lety +5

      Same exact thing for me, but my dads advice was always "airspeed is life".. I thank God I have a father who loved aviation but also is a "by the book" guy.

    • @proudgrandma138
      @proudgrandma138 Před 2 lety +2

      The pilot knew. He had a commercial license. When he started to climb, the passenger tried to steady himself & grabbed the wheel by mistake- pulling it all the way back. Thats when he dropped the camcorder.

    • @Salas83149
      @Salas83149 Před 2 lety +1

      @@proudgrandma138 of this video?

  • @trumpsmessage7777
    @trumpsmessage7777 Před rokem +2

    We used to go to 3 thousand feet AGL north of Meacham Field in Ft Worth to do stalls. 200 feet AGL seems a bit low.

  • @TheNYgolfer
    @TheNYgolfer Před 10 lety +20

    As a CFI I am saddened by this tragedy for several reasons,
    1. A perfectly fine aircraft was destroyed
    2.Somewhere out there is an instructor who failed in his duty to teach this pilot responsibility and respect, often due to lack of proper example
    3.A trusting passenger paid the ultimate price

    • @FarmerFpv
      @FarmerFpv Před 4 lety +8

      Only his parents can teach him responsibility and respect, it has nothing to do with the instructor. A person can always fake responsibility and respect. Actually the only person to blame here is the pilot himself.
      The only thing I can agree with you on is that it's a tragedy and really sad what happened, :(.

    • @SoloRenegade
      @SoloRenegade Před rokem +3

      regardless of the CFI, some people simply lack the proper judgement to be a pilot, regardless of their physical ability.

    • @TitaniumTurbine
      @TitaniumTurbine Před rokem +2

      Nobody taught me respect and I’m the most respectable person I know. I’m tired of people saying that only someone’s “parents” or “the bible” can teach people manners, respect, morals, etc. This is complete BS. You can observe a situation and know how you should react. Empathy, silence, understanding, honesty - these are values that should come natural to most depending on the situation. We’re not programmed robots, well some of us are but not most.

  • @dazknight9326
    @dazknight9326 Před 8 lety +10

    No Cessna 150/152 can climb after that. Power on stall occured. Fly like a maniac, you end up hitting the ground.
    Also broke FAA rules flying under 500 AGL

    • @bgiesbrecht101
      @bgiesbrecht101 Před 8 lety +6

      +daz knight While it was stupid indeed, he actually did not break the rules flying under 500 AGL. That rule applies to "populated" areas, which this is not. Thus, this rule applies: "Over Open Water or Sparsely Populated Areas - an altitude allowing for a linear distance greater than 500 feet from any person, vessel, vehicle, or structure"...and..."Anywhere: an altitude allowing a safe emergency landing without undue hazard to person or property on the ground." I'd say generally both of those conditions were met in this video. Of course, the flying was still ridiculous, no disagreement there. Just wanted to clarify the rules, which vary depending on population density.

    • @jrayner21679
      @jrayner21679 Před 5 lety

      Hey why not tell us what the fucking rule is instead of making me Google it? Boob.

  • @user-th7gd7ge4p
    @user-th7gd7ge4p Před 3 měsíci +2

    from whoa-hoo!!! to aargh!!! in just 1.3 seconds...

  • @adotintheshark4848
    @adotintheshark4848 Před rokem +2

    Totally inexcusable. At least the plane didn't come down on a house with people inside.

  • @zigzagbigbag
    @zigzagbigbag Před 11 lety +6

    The passenger had complete faith in the pilot. When the pilot pulled up the passenger laughed and hooted.

  • @guyseeten2755
    @guyseeten2755 Před 9 měsíci +3

    That's how you can fly a fighter jet, not a Cessna 150.

  • @jimhiscott2918
    @jimhiscott2918 Před rokem

    Out of curiosity where did your keep the manifold pressure and AFR's mixtures at moderate altitudes, say at 10,000

  • @f.w.1318
    @f.w.1318 Před 11 lety +3

    the passenger/student dropped the video camera. when the pilot pulled out of the low pass at a 60 degree climb, as a reaction student reached over to grab on to something to hold on, student unfortunately grabbed the wheel as leverage causing the plane to climb to an almost 90 degree realizing what just happened student dropped the camera

  • @SpandexAttack
    @SpandexAttack Před 11 lety +32

    a great pilot once said, "It's not how close can you get to the ground, but how precise can you fly the airplane."

  • @briscoedarling3237
    @briscoedarling3237 Před rokem +9

    The Cessna 150 is one of the easiest planes to fly, being inherently stable when properly trimmed. I have spun that plane hundreds of times..to the right, to the left, power on, power off, etc. You almost have to force it into a stall or spin…and usually the quickest initial way out of either is forward yoke.

    • @jszlauko
      @jszlauko Před rokem +3

      I agree that Cessna planes need to be forced into a spin, but as for a stall, that's pretty easy to do. In the 172 I've flown, whether full power or idle, you just need to pull back on the yoke and don't let up. Eventually the speed drops to the point that the wings lose lift, and the aerodynamic stall occurs. Not that difficult to achieve. But yeah, forward yoke to recover, but also if the plane banks to the right or left during the stall, one must correct it with rudder input, and NOT ailerons! Using ailerons to correct the banking during a stall is how you end up putting it into a spin, as you now have one wing more stalled than the other.

    • @Stephen2846
      @Stephen2846 Před rokem

      Push the nose down, opposite rudder.

    • @kentduryea7109
      @kentduryea7109 Před rokem

      What a thrilling thing to see stupid go down in flames and horror. Stupidity-- the most abundant element in the universe.
      Forgive me. My love for horror movies. We all go to see things like this on Tv or the theatres. So it must be normal.

    • @Stephen2846
      @Stephen2846 Před rokem +1

      @@kentduryea7109 "Stupidity-- the most abundant element in the universe. Yet you seem to have the most of it.

    • @Stephen2846
      @Stephen2846 Před rokem

      @@kentduryea7109 "Stupidity-- the most abundant element in the universe. " And yet you seem to have the most of it!

  • @cookingwithjesus
    @cookingwithjesus Před 3 lety +6

    In Canada we have to do spins and spirals on purpose as part of the training. Pull up, lose speed, then comes the stall horn as you start rocking and pitch over to the left most times. Engine to idle step on the rudder to kill the spin and pull out the dive. You lose about 1000 feet on average by the time you’re level again. I suspect they hit the ground before the initial rollover completed and hit the nose and left wing first.

    • @proudgrandma138
      @proudgrandma138 Před 2 lety +3

      Kind of like the motorcycle riding school I attended (SoCalif). Had ridden dirt bikes from birth but wanted a Harley. They taught us how to maneuver a "controlled crash", we had an obstacle course we had to maneuver that was timed (had to beat a certain time), also a controlled skid from 50mph keeping the skid straight. My husband utilized the crash maneuver early one morning on the freeway when we were traveling at 70mph. A large wheelbarrow fell off a truck & was bouncing all around. We hit it but didnt lose control bc of our teaching. We did pull over to assess damage to the bike, $1500. One handle tried to enter the rear wheel spokes, but hit the frame right behind my foot peg. Training pays off.

    • @sphort54
      @sphort54 Před rokem +1

      You forgot ‘Ailerons Neutral’….and ‘Nose Down’ (to break the stall).

    • @jdoe4983
      @jdoe4983 Před rokem +4

      Thanks for the lesson, but you aren't going to recover from a spin at 50ft agl.

  • @boeing737700
    @boeing737700 Před 11 lety +9

    Every pilot should watch this. An excellent example of how not to fly an airplane. Anyway, RIP to them.

  • @keithketola
    @keithketola Před rokem +3

    You were given a certificate. How did you veer that far from being a responsible, safe pilot?!

    • @DWCessna4130
      @DWCessna4130 Před 11 měsíci +1

      The level of recklessness encompasses some of these people after they obtain it. No different than how my cousin who’s been flying for 20 years no longer does pre-flights. He checks the oil AFTER he lands and just jumps right in and flys away the next flight and he does this between runs of Houston and Austin for his business. And I will also never fly with him as long as I live either. We jumped in my Cherokee one day for a $100 hamburger at a nearby airport and he made the comment “you actually do all that preflight nonsense”. I had already made the decision prior to this day that I would never fly with him again as a Second decision that he would never fly with me was made at that moment also. We never flew together again nor will we ever after that. He’s got over 1100 logged and somehow hasn’t killed himself yet. That’s YET.

  • @teampenske17
    @teampenske17 Před 11 lety +9

    This is what we mean by stalling at ANY airspeed!

  • @CG-kf5vh
    @CG-kf5vh Před rokem +1

    Experience is a fierce teacher. It will give you the test before the lesson. RIP

  • @fastfiddler1625
    @fastfiddler1625 Před 11 lety +1

    Not fake. I am a CFI and check pilot for a part 141 school. In this video, the pilot entered a stall and spin. Before the video cut out, as the airplane began to stall, you can see it break left into the beginning of a spin. It's no joke, the feelings and forces are intense, even when you're at 4000'. That, combined with the camera operator most likely flailing his VIDEO TAPE camera probably caused the video cut out. That and also potential damage to unreeled tape getting damaged in the crash.

  • @rsj9822
    @rsj9822 Před 9 měsíci +17

    This accident is simply mind blowing. Pulling back in the stick that hard at low altitude in a Cessna 150 will only have one fast inevitable outcome.

    • @palindrome1959
      @palindrome1959 Před 8 měsíci +3

      It looked like a stall but a pullup like that could really overstress the wings. Was there any determination as to what brought the plane down besides the crazy move by the pilot?

    • @tomcat061973
      @tomcat061973 Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@palindrome1959 you can hear the stall warning. Stalled, flipped, boom. Just what you would expect.

  • @po1ly414
    @po1ly414 Před rokem +4

    I know exactly what the pilot messed up, he didn’t push the nose over early enough after that climb. I sometimes fly a “victory takeoff” where I pick up speed low and then pull up to ~20-25 degrees for a split second, but I never, ever let the speed get below Vy. Not Vx, but Vy so that if I have a huge safety margin. I also only do this at one airport that had nothing but smooth feilds in front of the runway. He pitched up way too high, held it way too long, and used it to clear an obstacle, then likely didn’t recovered from the stall as well as he could have. Such a tragedy, so completely and totally avoidable, and a horrible example of complacency and poor judgment.

  • @tyreekmurillo4524
    @tyreekmurillo4524 Před rokem +1

    right before the footage gets all fuzzy u can see the clouds begin to slide across the windscreen to the right, indicating that the plane entered a left spin.

  • @ROCKSTARCRANE
    @ROCKSTARCRANE Před rokem +2

    As stupidly low as he was, he probably should have just tried to fly under the lines....

  • @xjcrossx
    @xjcrossx Před rokem +5

    This reminds me of all my friends driving their cars as fast as they could and me saying "is this little bit of fun worth the risk?" So careless.

    • @Gamerboy-gy1rl
      @Gamerboy-gy1rl Před rokem

      Cars are completely different

    • @TitaniumTurbine
      @TitaniumTurbine Před rokem +3

      @@Gamerboy-gy1rl I think you’re missing their point. Planes and cars can both crash from being irresponsible. If an idiot is being irresponsible, they might crash and die. Those are the risks of being a risk-driven idiot. Someone drifting at 60mph on residential cul-de-sacs in a car is the same as pitching full nose up and stalling because they decided to fly their plane “crop duster style” as the passenger in this video said.

    • @Gamerboy-gy1rl
      @Gamerboy-gy1rl Před rokem

      @@TitaniumTurbine no just no 😭

    • @xjcrossx
      @xjcrossx Před 9 měsíci

      @@TitaniumTurbine Yeah. He definitely missed my point. Taking a risk and "losing control" whether it be a plane or car is not worth it to get a little bit of a rush like these guys did.

  • @ILSRWY4
    @ILSRWY4 Před 2 lety +4

    @1:20 Look at the vertical lines of paint chips on the vertical stab along the stringers and also the paint chipped where it meets the tail of the fuselage. That shows some serious stress. I wonder what the top of the wings look like? obviously that pilot has been hot dogging this plane a lot... I'm an instructor pilot and teach my students to look for this stuff during pre-flight. Had I noticed that , on that day I would have NOT gotten in that plane or any plane with that pilot.

  • @Howie875
    @Howie875 Před rokem +2

    My Grandfather was a farmer in Indiana, but he also had a small airport and a plane. He also gave flying lessons to local residents. One of his students, on his first flight after getting his license, buzzed his girlfriend's house and crashed and killed himself. I love airplanes but besides not being able to afford private plane flight, I think it is a little too risky, I only fly remote control airplanes and a crash only hurts my ego and nothing else. This video was absolutely horrible in the end, but it was caused by the same behavior that killed my grandfathers student.

  • @FJBMAGAPatriotUSA1
    @FJBMAGAPatriotUSA1 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Death… sometimes the ONLY cure for stupid.💔😢

  • @akfox38
    @akfox38 Před 11 lety +3

    the joy of flying these smaller planes is that we do get to still fly the plane. No pilot wants everything to be automated for them and some things have a reason for not being automated. Computers fail as well. It's all about flying within your own limits and resisting the temptation to do something dangerous. Private Pilots take a check ride every two years, but there are always going to be people that push the limits too far.

  • @BlissBoo
    @BlissBoo Před 11 lety +8

    Okay, I reread the description and from what I can understand the pilot (I'm going to assume) was showing off by flying low in those fields (10 ft, WTF?!) then came across a power line, decided to go over, went too steep in his pull-up, a stall swiftly happened and then the crash. Is that basically it? What sane pilot would do something like that?

  • @westerlywinds5684
    @westerlywinds5684 Před rokem +1

    There are 3 things that are 100% irrelevant to any pilot:
    1) The amount of air in your fuel tank.
    2) The runway left behind.
    3) The altitude above you.
    Never too old to learn something that basic.

  • @keithhendrickson8522
    @keithhendrickson8522 Před měsícem

    Have been a pilot for 16 years now and am still learning every day. Superior judgment trumps superior skills.