Backcountry Pilot • Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Debrief, share, and hopefully learn from the mistakes of others.
25 postsPage 1 of 21, 2

Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

1 killed, 1 hurt. Don't know these guys, but hate to see this. It's a small and special community of pilots who do this kind of flying. Thoughts and prayers to their families.

https://pitchengine.com/reboot/2016/12/08/fatal-plane-crash-involved-usda-wildlife-serv/002519210751188599698
RanchPilot offline
User avatar
Posts: 974
Joined: Mon Jan 24, 2011 5:18 pm
Location: Wyoming
Experience is the knowledge that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.

RanchPilot Facebook Community: http://www.facebook.com/ranchpilot777

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Sigh...

So what makes this type of flying different?
ExperimentalAviator offline
User avatar
Posts: 677
Joined: Tue Apr 15, 2014 8:02 am
Location: Plains

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

So many variables, so close to the ground. The target is always moving, the terrain is always different and often rising, the wind can play hell, you're flying to within shotgun range for the pass, you and the gunner both have all the adrenaline of hunting and flying low, you're hanging on the motor down in dirty rough terrain, and even if the pilot does everything right the gunner can still shoot you down.

Doing this kind of flying day in and day out definitely makes you sharper, but you're always pushing the odds that something could go wrong.
RanchPilot offline
User avatar
Posts: 974
Joined: Mon Jan 24, 2011 5:18 pm
Location: Wyoming
Experience is the knowledge that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.

RanchPilot Facebook Community: http://www.facebook.com/ranchpilot777

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

In the late 70s, a young son of the Evans family died flying a Super Cub on a coyote hunt in New Mexico. I was at their crop duster school at Slaton, Texas just after. My instructor, Marshall Eugene Harrison, and I wondered why the tactics used hunting animals were so different than hurting humans.

Gene wrote "A Lonely Kind of War " about his tour flying Broncos as a FAC in Vietnam and Cambodia. We wondered why energy management turns and wind management were not used in animal hunts to the extensive extent they are used both in air/ground gunnery and crop dusting. Continuous gravity thrust while on the gun run tremendously increases safety as does an upwind energy and wind management return to target. We just have to always be aware of our position in reference to wind direction and to always, when practicable, fall off the target downwind. These simple techniques are very basic in both gunnery and crop dusting.
contactflying offline
Posts: 4972
Joined: Wed Apr 03, 2013 7:36 pm
Location: Aurora, Missouri 2H2
Download my free "https://tinyurl.com/Safe-Maneuvering" e-book.

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Those techniques are used whenever possible but, at the end of the day, you're trying to make a slow enough pass to give a guy with a shotgun the best window to hit a running coyote--and even the best pass is nothing more than a snapshot. You're always riding the razor's edge between conserving as much potential energy as you can in both altitude and airspeed to convert it into the turn when you come off target, versus slowing down and flying low enough to actually have a chance at the target in the first place. Those two objectives are almost always at odds, since an extra 5 mph or 20 feet agl makes a big difference in being able to turn around or outclimb rising terrain, but also makes a big difference in terms of getting an effective shot. Easier to do on flat ground, where terrain is not a factor and you can make a pass from any direction and factor in wind. Harder to do when the terrain dictates a one-way solution, harder still when the wind and the terrain dictate opposite one-way solutions.

I'm definitely not trying to compare it to the complexities of hunting targets on the ground who can shoot back--I've got nothing but respect for you guys who do or have done that. In its own way, though, predator flying is one of the most dynamic/close to the ground types of flying out there, other than the low level aerobatic and/or Red Bull type guys. It's different from crop dusting in the sense that everything happens spontaneously, and all of a sudden. It doesn't take much of a lapse in concentration for things to go south in a hurry.
RanchPilot offline
User avatar
Posts: 974
Joined: Mon Jan 24, 2011 5:18 pm
Location: Wyoming
Experience is the knowledge that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.

RanchPilot Facebook Community: http://www.facebook.com/ranchpilot777

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

There are more than a few guys out there that fly and shoot themselves :shock: I was never able to do that with any success. Just to many things happening all at the same time. #-o Muzzle control was my big worry with a gunner. It was to easy to shoot the prop or strut or worse yet shoot the pilot with a accidental discharge. [-X There has been a few cases in Alaska where this has happened.
DonC offline
Contributing author
User avatar
Posts: 816
Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2008 6:52 pm
Location: Twin Falls, Idaho
Keep the shiney side up and the dirty side down...

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Very sorry to hear this, prayers for the family and friends.
Skalywag offline
User avatar
Posts: 783
Joined: Sat Jun 30, 2012 12:52 pm
Location: Big Bend, TX

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Don Sheldon in Alaska during the early days. Had mounted shotguns on wing for wolf hunting. 8) Bob Curtis said he had a shotgun mounted on top of his cub in the old days. Said he could load it without landing thru a hole in the greenhouse :wink:


Image
DonC offline
Contributing author
User avatar
Posts: 816
Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2008 6:52 pm
Location: Twin Falls, Idaho
Keep the shiney side up and the dirty side down...

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Does anyone know what kind of airplane? Very sad....
G44 offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 2093
Joined: Thu Oct 27, 2011 10:46 am
Location: Michigan

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Sorry to hear that, real demanding and high risk flying for sure, lots of things to go wrong. High winds here, downwind, the last several days, couldn't have helped.
courierguy offline
User avatar
Posts: 4197
Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2005 6:52 pm
Location: Idaho
"Its easier to apologize then ask permission"
Tex McClatchy

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Assuming it was a Super Cub..
RanchPilot offline
User avatar
Posts: 974
Joined: Mon Jan 24, 2011 5:18 pm
Location: Wyoming
Experience is the knowledge that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.

RanchPilot Facebook Community: http://www.facebook.com/ranchpilot777

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

A Pawnee is cheaper than a Super Cub and would safely carry 300 rounds of 40mm grenades for a chunker (300 rounds per minute rate of fire). And the aircraft is designed to crash. If hunters can use AR-15s, the government ought to be able to use military technology in this work.
contactflying offline
Posts: 4972
Joined: Wed Apr 03, 2013 7:36 pm
Location: Aurora, Missouri 2H2
Download my free "https://tinyurl.com/Safe-Maneuvering" e-book.

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Prayers out to the friends and families.

With todays technology there has to a safer way of doing that job.
nefj40 offline
User avatar
Posts: 101
Joined: Fri Aug 20, 2010 12:42 pm
Location: Oral
Aircraft: 2016 cessna cub

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

With todays technology there has to a safer way of doing that job.


Maybe a drone with a gun, controlled by an operator sitting in a Supercub flying safely above. Launch from the Supercub struts when at the scene.
180Marty offline
Supporter
User avatar
Posts: 2313
Joined: Mon Jan 02, 2006 11:59 am
Location: Paullina IA

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Would there be any legal way to use a AirCam for this? Have the pilot in the back seat with the gunner in the front seat with no windscreen. You wouldn't have worry about the gunner shooting a strut, prop, wing or pilot.
ExperimentalAviator offline
User avatar
Posts: 677
Joined: Tue Apr 15, 2014 8:02 am
Location: Plains

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

ExperimentalAviator wrote:Would there be any legal way to use a AirCam for this? Have the pilot in the back seat with the gunner in the front seat with no windscreen. You wouldn't have worry about the gunner shooting a strut, prop, wing or pilot.


Had to lookup AirCam..... but sure looks like it would work 8) Might be a little chilly in winter :wink: Not much area for loading the animals after dispatching them. :cry: I am sure someone can get skis and big tires legal :mrgreen: You would need all the cold wx gear Flylow and MTV recommend in the cold wx thread :lol:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=maoHutUGv4U

Image
DonC offline
Contributing author
User avatar
Posts: 816
Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2008 6:52 pm
Location: Twin Falls, Idaho
Keep the shiney side up and the dirty side down...

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

Why is this sort of work not done with a helicopter in the U.S? Seems the obvious solution, all our aerial shooting work down here is helicopter platform based. Is it the extra cost or some sort of regulatory hurdle?


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
NZMaule offline
User avatar
Posts: 215
Joined: Sat May 07, 2011 2:23 pm
Location: New Zealand
Aircraft: Cessna A185F

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

NZMaule wrote:Why is this sort of work not done with a helicopter in the U.S? Seems the obvious solution, all our aerial shooting work down here is helicopter platform based. Is it the extra cost or some sort of regulatory hurdle?


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk


Helos?

Each US taxpayer owes $167K from .gov. We can't afford it.

Total US Debts over $19 trillion and rising...
http://www.usdebtclock.org

Image
8GCBC offline
User avatar
Posts: 4623
Joined: Thu Aug 05, 2010 11:55 pm
Location: Honolulu
Aircraft: 2018 R44
CFII, MEI, CFISES, ATPME, IA/AP, RPPL, Ski&Amphib ops, RHC mechanic cert, RHC SC— 3000TT

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

NZMaule wrote:Why is this sort of work not done with a helicopter in the U.S? Seems the obvious solution, all our aerial shooting work down here is helicopter platform based. Is it the extra cost or some sort of regulatory hurdle?


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk


Simple answer: $$$$$

That said, some APHIS crews do use helicopters, but most of this stuff is done with fixed wing.

MTV
mtv offline
Knowledge Base Author
User avatar
Posts: 10514
Joined: Sat Feb 25, 2006 1:47 am
Location: Bozeman

Re: Predator Crew Down In Wyoming

The Australian's used Cessna O-2 Skymaster for gunship over Bell 47 for scout as a hunter-killer team in Vietnam. Inexpensive but the scout was harder to pick up if shot down.
contactflying offline
Posts: 4972
Joined: Wed Apr 03, 2013 7:36 pm
Location: Aurora, Missouri 2H2
Download my free "https://tinyurl.com/Safe-Maneuvering" e-book.

DISPLAY OPTIONS

Next
25 postsPage 1 of 21, 2

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

Latest Features

Latest Knowledge Base