It appears a flat lander was in a hurry to get home per chance. My onion based on NTSB initial reports. Telluride is not all that difficult if one understands the surrounding terrain. Really a tragic result for a newly married couple.
MW

mtv wrote:Jim,
I’ve been in pass crossings where the most powerful piston engine wasn’t going to outclimb the “down”. So, you look for the “not so down”. And sometimes, available fuel suggests that another day might be a better choice.
That said, I teach a level “canyon turn”. If you’re dumb enough to let yourself get that slow, in that tight a canyon, you most likely don’t have enough air under you to let that nose come down. The key in this is to NEVER allow yourself to get so slow that you can’t do a safe level turn.
In my experience, if you’ve got so slow, in such a tight canyon you can’t do a level, high performance turn, you’ve already screwed the pooch. Many experienced Alaskan aviators have demonstrated that phenomenon.
NEVER let yourself get so deep and so slow into a canyon.
Your mileage may vary.
MTV
contactflying wrote:Water is one of the most powerful energy sources on earth. Because they lie in a fairly temperate zone, the Rocky Mountains produce a lot of gravity driven water, from snow melt, that cuts deep river valleys right up to almost pool table flat high passes.
This abundant vertical space, in the valley, makes approaching these high passes with limited excess engine thrust for climb somewhat safe. We lean our small engines (Stromberg carburetors were not the best) to get them to run properly at high density altitude. Limit the air (DA) and you have to limit the fuel, which reduces power. We need later in the day heat to produce needed wind energy, so we will often be operating at ceiling or less. This means that we will have a Vy pitch attitude in level cruise, other things being equal (which they are not.)
Prevailing westerly winds make west to east crossings a snap. We just have to closely ride the updraft producing ridge that is on the downwind side of the valley that goes up to our pass. Long engine climbs to get up going east waist this free wind energy. We just ride the ridge up and then stay up to benefit from the stronger tailwinds. The tailwinds are less down low and the tremendous reduction in ground speed climbing in open air will hurt more than will just following the terrain up. Of course we fly slow in updrafts and fast in downdrafts enroute to the valley ridge system.
Going east to west is the problem. If the wind is straight down a straight valley, we may be out of luck. We have to find a pass that has an approaching valley that is at some angle to the wind. We must use the ridge downwind of the valley that is going up to the pass. The lighter the wind, the closer we must fly to the ridge to get good updrafts. We also want some horizontal space between us and the ridge across the valley. The crux, as mountaineers call it, comes when we have ridden the downwind ridge to near the pass, the valley is closing in, less vertical space and less horizontal space is available, and we are now getting downdraft air from the high peak upwind of the pass. If our ridge will not get us safely to the pass or at least into the updraft air on the high peak downwind of the pass, we must use the energy management turn allowing the nose to fall naturally into the valley. There is no pull up here as the nose is already up and we are already slow. We just turn at whatever bank will miss the upwind ridge and let the nose fall through (don't pull back on the stick.) We are done. We either try another pass or just follow the valley until we can maneuver to lower ground going west.
If we make the pass, we need to stay low and get back down to lesser headwinds as soon as possible. Altitude is great, unless we can't make the next watering hole at this very slow ground speed.


Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests