Airplane flips landing at Steamboat.
Debrief, share, and hopefully learn from the mistakes of others.
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29singlespeed offline
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Sat May 12, 2012 10:58 pm
They walked away from it so it's a good landing right?
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TrevDog offline

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I bet anyone experiencing a forced landing when there is no smooth surface to be landed on will be wishing they would have previously joined the " Fat Tire set".

I wouldn't trade my "fat tires" for all the pee-wee tires I could get for free! My "fun factor" would drop so low by the limitations of little tires that I would have to find a new hobby.
Steve
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taildrgfun offline
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Loving life and thankful for each day I am blessed with!
yep i agree... so far the best thing I've done over the years to my Maule....the fun factor and forgiving quality of the 29's far outweighs the speed loss and added weight....next I gotta do something about that pizza cutter tail wheel that keeps digging in....

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iceman offline

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Don't get your nickers in a twist. I'm a big fan of Fat tires. I just noticed that the plane had ABW's on it. Can't miss them sticking straight up in the air on the video. Thought it might be someone from the site.
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S-12Flyer offline

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"In a world full of people, only a few want to fly"
ABW's=no tread. Probably 29x10 airtracks
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flynbeekeeper offline
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Tom
This is so sad to see. It was such a meticulously built Moose...some of you will remember it from last summer's Marble get-together.
I was truly impressed by the workmanship. I think he may have mentioned that it took him (and his wife) something like 6 years to build. Here's to a good outcome for them.
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lesuther offline
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Sun May 13, 2012 10:23 am
I feel the pain of their loss as anyone would who puts more into their dream hobby than the checks they wrote to get there. So far Steamboat is the only airport I have been to that has two socks to watch. What's the recipe, land before you get to the second sock that might be disagreeing with the first or just be ready to roll the other correction?
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dirtstrip offline
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Lynn Sanderson (Dirtstrip) passed away from natural causes in May 2013. He was a great contributor and will be missed dearly.
Sun May 13, 2012 10:50 am
What a bummer. I echo what a lot of you have said...at least they walked away.
In my adult life, one of my most "slack-jawed" moments was visiting a newly completed Murphy Moose at the airport and talking with the pilot. I couldn't believe the workmanship and the huge nature of these planes, and to think it was built by one guy in this case.
Sorry to see his loss.
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SixTwoLeemer offline

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Altitude is Time…. Airspeed is Life!
Sun May 13, 2012 11:59 am
The two socks at my field disagree far too frequently than I would like. I dislike it even more when they are straight out and disagree. I sympathize with the owners and glad they are okay.
http://www.airport-data.com/aircraft/N223DH.html'Greg
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soyAnarchisto offline


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Sun May 13, 2012 12:39 pm
Interesting that getting on its back would do that much damage to the tail cone.....Makes you wonder about the structures...
MTV
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mtv offline


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I was thinking the exact same thing. Most taildraggers tend to fold the rudder, not the tail cone. The other way you could look at it is the rudder is incredibly overbuilt. The tail cone really completely failed on this one, not just wrinkled. I suspect a firm tail first 3 point could do damage.
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dogpilot offline
- Took ball and went home
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taildrgfun wrote: I wouldn't trade my "fat tires" for all the pee-wee tires I could get for free!
And somehow you're the only guy I know who manages to get big fatty 31's for free, too...

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Zzz offline


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Half a century spent proving “it is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.”
I'm beginning to think I'm some kind of jinx! Gary was parked west of me at Marble, the Moose was parked east of me, and now both have turned turtle. Ouch! Glad no one was hurt badly.
Cary
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Cary offline

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"I have slipped the surly bonds of earth..., put out my hand and touched the face of God." J.G. Magee
dirtstrip wrote:I feel the pain of their loss as anyone would who puts more into their dream hobby than the checks they wrote to get there. So far Steamboat is the only airport I have been to that has two socks to watch. What's the recipe, land before you get to the second sock that might be disagreeing with the first or just be ready to roll the other correction?
Remeber when we landed at SBS..there was a slight wind from the west, I was the last one of us to land and I landed short. The wind coming around the hill turned into a tail wind as I "plopped down". Landing a little long there with a west wind is maybe the best.
HC
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hicountry offline

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'05 7GCBC High Country Explorer
The faster I go , the farther behind I get.
Deja Voo...only this one hit a fence while taking off at St Francis KS from fuel starvation.

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hicountry offline

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'05 7GCBC High Country Explorer
The faster I go , the farther behind I get.
mtv wrote:Interesting that getting on its back would do that much damage to the tail cone.....Makes you wonder about the structures...
MTV
I was thinking the same... remember the one that suffered emmpenage damage from rudder flutter? As I recall they felt it once, and then continued on, how severe could that flutter have been?
viewtopic.php?f=47&t=6757&p=112423&hilit=flutter#p112423
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Rob offline


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Wow,
Glad no serious injuries to the occupants. I've flow in and out of there in B-757s. B-727s and MD-80s. Always enjoyed the experience. But this one sure spoils one's day.
Guess I am getting old. More and more beautiful little airplanes ending up this way. After 46 years of flying small airplanes into and out of challenging airports with a few close calls.....wondering if it is time to pack it in, count my blessings and relive the memories.
bob
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z3skybolt offline
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Living the Dream
Well that's terrible news. Glad all are okay.

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mountainmatt offline

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