Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #40132
From: Ed Anderson <eanderson@carolina.rr.com>
Subject: Re: [FlyRotary] Re: reason # 11
Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2007 08:37:30 -0400
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Great work, Bob!

Fly the Airplane!  That one phrase can do more to keeping body and spirit together in a tight situation than any other.  It keeps the mind focused on the absolutely most important aspect of the situation - if you don't do that - all else is moot.  In my 12 miles engine out glide - I had a lot of time to repeat that mantra.  Aviate, communicate and navigate!

Its a bonus to hear than even the aircraft did not have any serious damage.

Ed


----- Original Message ----- From: "Bob Tilley" <btilley@mchsi.com>
To: "Rotary motors in aircraft" <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2007 9:45 PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: reason # 11


Ok folks,

Here's the story!  Got signed off to fly my first short solo cross country! YEAH!!!!  Took off, got to altitude, leveled out, got speed  to 90 knots, everything was good in the world!  Then I picked up a  miss in the engine. OSH... (or something like that), thought my wife  is really going to get MAD. Then thought "Fly the Plane". Said to  myself, "no say it out loud", (a promise I made to myself during Paul  Connors investigation).  So aloud I said "FLY THE D... PLANE"  ;-).   Pulled Power back to around 1700 or so. Looked around to pick a spot  to ditch it. Decided it would probably glide back to the airport. Set  up best glide while making a 180. Looked at what was between me an  the airport and didn't get a calming felling in my stomach. Figured  it was probably better to head south to fly along a 4 lane road, back  to the airport. Had time to try to diagnose the problem. Felt to me I  had lost a cylinder. Tried one mag first, then the other to no avail.  Pulled carb heat, no luck, ran the same. Eased back on the mixture in  case the carb was dumping to much fuel, again no luck. Rechecked my  flight path and was concerned I would make the field. About this time  I lost another cylinder. Pucker factor!! So it became obvious I  wasn't going to make it back to that airport. But there was one about  2-3 miles due south. Took a left 90 degrees and headed for the east  end of the abandoned runway. Needed a little more power to insure I  would come in with enough alt. Since the engine was running worse, I  eased the power in to try to get 1500 rpm. Worked! Well for about  that long. Lost another cylinder. Now I at 900 to 1000 rpm and that  airfield is out of the question. Called Dawson unicom and notified  them of my intent to put it down in a field next to the Pecan VOR.  Turned left into the field, as apposed to right toward the pine trees  and the end of the runway I was not going to make. NOW THE ENGIINE  QUITS. I was at about 100 ft agl. and made the mistake of not putting  the rest of the flaps down. But that worked out OK. Dropped down to  just above the cotton, and held it off as long as I could. Then the  Pucker factor really kicked in!!!!! MY GOD LOOK HOW BIG THOSE TREES ARE!! And they are come real fast!!!  Finally it just dropped those  last 4 feet. I put on the brakes hard but not so hard as to flip me  over. Came to a rest 50 feet from the trees. Total distance from  touchdown to stop, 100 yards. LONG SIGH!!!!. Tried to radio the  airport I was down and OK to no avail. Walked 200 yds to the road and  waited to company to arrive. And boy did it ever. Airport had called  the Emergency rescue and every body else in the world.  TV station  came, etc.

I now KNOW what it feels like to ditch, that's a plus. There was NO damage to the plane, another plus. Except the engine of course. It  eat a valve in the #1 cylinder. Which probably cluttered up the rings  in the others, we will find out when we tear the engine down. Made  the 6:00 news, not what I had in mind for the day, but it was a good  report. WALKED away form the landing, a major plus. Cotton boles are  very hard and sharp!!  Not a plus. Will try to get the plane out of  the field in the next couple days. FAA wasn't to mad, another plus.

Safe landings all
Bob Tilley
Albany, Ga.

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