Backcountry Pilot • Where'd the mountains go?

Where'd the mountains go?

Did you fly somewhere cool, take photos, and feel like telling the tale to make us drool from the confines of our offices? Post them up!
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Re: Where'd the mountains go?

Looks like a fun flight. I filmed an inversion recon flight of Mt. Jefferson a few years ago.
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Re: Where'd the mountains go?

Nosedragger wrote:Looks like a fun flight. I filmed an inversion recon flight of Mt. Jefferson a few years ago.


You revpilot on BCR?
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Re: Where'd the mountains go?

whee wrote:
Nosedragger wrote:Looks like a fun flight. I filmed an inversion recon flight of Mt. Jefferson a few years ago.


You revpilot on BCR?

affirmative
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Re: Where'd the mountains go?

Cool.
whee offline
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Re: Where'd the mountains go?

Cool video.

Cary
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Re: Where'd the mountains go?

I agree with Gump, and I nearly always choose good VMC on top in preference to "scud-running". If we didn't do either in Scotland, we wouldn't fly many days a year.

FAR 23.561 requires the airplane structure to protect the occupants from fatal injury up to 9 g deceleration. For a STOL airplane that means about six feet to decelerate from a minimum controllable airspeed of, say, 35 knots. It's a quadratic function, so double the speed requires four times the distance.

So, strategy taught here for engine failure while VMC on top:
1. If the cloud base is known to be at least a few hundred feet above ground, spiral to break cloud at the top of the green arc. The excess kinetic energy will allow a slightly wider choice of landing sites after breaking cloud.
2. If cloud/mist is down to ground level, configure he airplane for CFIT survival (minimum controllable airspeed) and hope to hit something with at least six feet of "give" and/or with a glancing blow. The last person I know who did that walked away without a bruise or scratch.

The key to CFIT survival is the "C" - maintaining control at minimum speed - as if for a backcountry landing.
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