mtv wrote:
A number of years ago, a T-34 at Pensacola was flying in one of their practice areas, and they hit a turkey vulture, which took out the canopy, and made a mess of the student pilot in the front seat, who was knocked unconcious. The instructor, in the back, got out and walked. Subsequently, the pre-solo student woke up, wiped the buzzard guts off his face, turned around and discovered that he was now on a solo flight. He flew the airplane back to base, or one of the aux fields, and landed safely.
MTV
maules.com wrote:One of my customers hit a turkey vulture on right side of the windshield near Flagstaff while bringing his new M8 back from the factory. The right windshield crossbrace was bent, the top of the glareshield squashed down and the panel buckled.
The bird ended up in the back and remains were subsequently weighed at nearly 14lbs and the head and one wing were missing, having been removed by the prop.
Lucky for Mitch it hit the right side or would have killed him.
If you meet a bird, go up as birds tend to go down I've been told.
Last summer a bird came through the right side of the windshield on a C150 and wacked the instructor on the head drawing blood while he and his student were on final. Somehow they landed safely.
If you 've seen that picture circulating last year of a goose strike that opened up the roof of a Bonanza you will note that it also was on the right.
Could it have something to do with the prop??
Jeremy
mtv wrote:AKGrouch and Lownslow,
Nope, you both missed it. It was an EC-121 AWACS airplane (modified Boeing 707), with 21 people aboard.
If the Air Force had not insisted on trying to make the areas alongside the runway look like a golf course, it never would have happened. They built great goose habitat right beside their runway.
That airplane lost the two left side engines, right after takeoff at MTOW, and had no hope of making it.
MTV
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests