The Fatal Stall. An Aviation Blog by Owen Zupp.

Owen Zupp - Monday, January 23, 2012

There are a lot of aviation videos circulating on the internet these days. Some of them funny, some of them dramatic and some of them just have to be seen to be believed. One that always sits at the fore of my mind does so because it is absolutely chilling and the story behind it is equally sobering. Please watch this and then read on....

 

These were the final moments of an L19 Bird Dog and its occupants, captured by the ill-fated passenger. The aircraft, a single-engined Cessna was being used by the Forestry Department and lay undisturbed for a number of years following the crash, at which time the occupants and this footage were found. The family withheld the release of the footage for two decades before they generously allowed it to be shown so that others may learn. And yes, there is much to learn.

Firstly, the aircraft was operating on a summer's day in Colorado where the hills are high and the air is thin. Consequently, the ability of the aircraft to climb at this 'density altitude' is degraded in comparison to if it was flying along the coast on a cool day. The efficiency of both the wing to produce lift and the engine to produce power is reduced when it is hot, high and humid. A potentially lethal combination in the wrong circumstances.

Secondly, as the video evolves, the subtle killer of rising terrain begins to loom ominously. Towering mountains are easily spotted, but the approaching ridges of gently rising slopes is far less dramatic. At first, there seems to be little issue, but slowly and surely terrain is climbing towards the Cessna L19 at a greater rate than its performance can cope with. Ultimately the pilot realises that he can no longer out climb the ground below and the situation deteriorates rapidly.

The wing of the aircraft is now at such an angle to the passing airflow that the air is finding it difficult to continue to flow smoothly over the upper surface. This smooth flowing of the air is critical in the production of lift and the ability of an aircraft to fly. If you can imagine placing a paddle 'edge on' into a flowing river; the water flows past with minimal disturbance. If that paddle is then rotated with its flat face to the water-flow, the water no longer passes easily and disturbed 'eddies' bubble in its wake. In very simple terms, the air over a wing can behave similarly if it is inclined at too great an angle to the passing air. This is known as the stall.

Contrary to the average media reporting of an aircraft accident, 'stalling' has nothing to do with the engine spluttering. It is all about the wing's ability to produce 'lift' and keep it airborne. If the airflow cannot pass by easily and breaks into 'eddies' behind the wing, it can reach a point where it stalls. Lift is lost and the wing ceases to fly. The condition can be worsened by other contributing factors that we can discuss another time, but in this video, the pilot endeavours to turn the aircraft away from the hills and this actually accelerates the onset of the stall. The warning horn can be heard 'beeping' in the background advising the pilot of the impending stall and loss of lift. Sickeningly the aircraft begins to 'porpoise' as its nose goes up and down on the threshold of the stall until the combination of factors leads to one fatal flick and spin into the tree-line and the hopeless call of the pilot to his passenger of, ・Damn! Hang on Ronnie!・

Stall training and recovery is part of the training syllabus for pilots. However, it is often a manoeuvre that is either only briefly taught and/or only flown in copybook scenarios. Training of fully developed spins beyond the stall has also gone by the wayside for many training institutions outside of the military. As a consequence, stalling an aeroplane is touched upon in the early days of a student pilot and too often not revisited. As this video graphically demonstrates, the onset of a stall need not be a copybook or dramatic event, but a killer slowly creeping and lurking as it boxes the unknowing pilot into a corner.

This blog is only a thumbnail sketch of a very substantial and fundamental aspect of aerodynamics. Yet this video serves to demonstrate the potentially insidious nature of the stall. The families of the victims should be thanked for allowing this footage to be shared, for it truly is a graphic training aid for the instructors amongst us. That being said, flight is not inherently dangerous, but it can be brutally unforgiving. It is not the place of mere mortals like me to judge any aspect of this tragedy, but I hope that I have learned something of value. Otherwise, there but for the grace of God go I.

Please watch this one more time........

 

 

 

Recent Posts

Tags

Kitplane Ayers Rock CAC Boomerang Bert Hinkler Killed in Action the pilot air crash investigations Temora Aviation Museum pilot jobs ditching an airplae administration most poular aviation blog airliner flying flying kangaroo Se5a aviaton Bundaberg 737-300 sacrifice navigation training ambulance Neil Armstrong Cape Canaveral Bush Pilot Sydney second airport Turkish Airways 1951 going solo Airbus A380 forced landing aeroplane PFL aircraft pilot Hillary Clinton Jeppesen Queenstown New Zealand buying an aeroplane landing a jet baggy green writing Gen-X engines A320 airline Super Hornet MXS QANTAS Airbus A380 Space Shuttle Jatstar Airbus contra-rotating propeller building your own aeroplane manuscript student pilot International Cricket Hall of Fame Pathfinder aviation blog Seattle Yak Formation sport the bombing of Darwin coaxe Down to Earth Super King Air Red Tails 737 Australian Aviation magazine pre-flight briefing 400 John Fisher: airplane Mrigs field Douglas DC-3 joy of flight Otto Lilienthal Highlander airplane Singapore fatal stall flying careers memorial jabiru RAF RAAF Garmin ghost speaker pilot careers Boeing ballooning cost of flying Challenger tailwheel aviation journalist WW1 security RAA landing an aeroplane ditching an aircraft solo Steve Waugh USAF safer flying solar box-kites caribou careers in aviation Scouts air force Canberra Uluru Pump Up the Angels pilot licence Arthur Morris airport under threat 1942 open day aviation Stearman Wagga Wagga J230D Kenneth Butterworth McGlashan p Owen Zupp de Havilland Sir Donald Bradman Spitfire Flying Podcast EFATO DH Mosquito ATFV Cessna Caravan open cockpit night bombing warbirds speaking US Airways Flight 1549 McGrath Foundation simpler time in-flight diversion aviation author future engine failure Cathay Pacific Cargo airbus aerospace de Crespigny aviation image aviation photography boeing 737 Blackhawk 2012 Air France 447 England preflight briefing Great Depression Royal Flying Doctor Flight for Control Nancy Bird Walton Titanic sinking contrail soldier Matt Hall BAE Hawk metal detectors The Red Barn warbird QANTAS QF32 flight instruction ditching QANTAS A380: Nancy Bird plane crash top tips Dawn Service Australian War Memorial fly at Airliner design Montagnard Boeing SST QANTAS North American Harvard Pitts Mittagong Airfield QANTAS A380 short field Jabiru Aircraft Dunlirk RMS Titanic search Fate is the Hunter Boeing 737-800 DC-3 EFIS One Six Right C-47 HUD Tiger Moth crash luskintyre Beech King Air US Navy Bomber Command Super Jumbo airline collapse flight Phar Lap Southern Cross memory CRT learn to fly low flying 723 squadron aviation consultant NSW Ambulance Service flying school fling pilot blog Electronic Flight Bag QF32 2011 Cb Around Australia flight poppies commercial pilot license J170 Plane Crazy Down Under Glenn McGrath flight school aviation pioneer antique Australia cricket Keith Anderson FA-18 Hornet Bell 429 helicopter thunderstorm, weather radar buting an aeroplane raked wing-tip PCDU Harvard Canberra Airport STOL Queenstown first solo 9/11 speak Boeing Everett airfiald under threat Tiger Moth low pass aviation writer flight simulator found Mick Wilson flight blog bachelor of aviation Avro Lancaster trans-Pacific forced lending green technology VH-OQA P-51 Mustang aviation speaker X-15 737-400 aviaton blog Milford Sound Fokker Costa Concordia Bell 429 hang gliding EADI Charles Ulm formation flying kitplanes Chris Sperou Yak 52 Canberra Bomber Rotate flying blog owen zupp Airbus A330 Vung Tau Strategic Airlines learning to fly Sydney Airport Royal Australian Navy outback Grant McHerron Boeing Field currency value WW2 wings Ricky Ponting aviation consulatant Cathay Pacific Avalon Air Show stalling GPS buying an airplane QANTAS pilots airliner crash aviation jobs sailor biplae flight deck Stanwell Park arospace P-51 canyoner Wright Brothers G-force QNH World War Two Boeing Stearman log book air australia Jetstar flying jobs there and back Ansett thunderstorm hang glider flight instructor aviator dogfight Nancy Bird-Bird Walton Howland Island cumulonimbus pilot academy Red Bull NTSB Chuck Yeager Boeing 737NG Charles Kingsford Smith helicopter L19 Crash Sleepless in Seattle ditching an airplane how to fly an airliner keynote speaker Piper terrorism CAC Wirraway Amelia Earhart CO2 emissions Duxford QANTAS pilot Hinkler pressurisation Shuttleworth Collection take-off addresses Nancy Bird Nancy Bird Walton: Distinguished Flying Cross Hong Kong Trader F2G Corsair pilot traininf rescue 16R Facebook Bulldog Pitts coastal flying Tuskegee Airmen Blue Angels K.I.A QANTAS engineers The Museum of Flight Bill Hitchcock CA18 Mustang DH82 coaxial Garmin G1000 aviation careers QANTAS half yearly report Coffee Royal Affair aviators plane crash Caboolture Paramedic ICAO Airbus A320 aerobatics Ponting Foundation bombing of Darwin ATIS DFC Lindbergh war Victorian Air Ambulance early flight New Zealand Trans-Tasman Defence Force Recruiting speaking engagements blog stalling an airplane Vandenberg airshow stalling an aeroplane Glass revolution A1 Skyraider National Press Club a aviation flight training Bradman Foundation Sullenberger Mach number Battle of Britain Apollo 1 Temora NASA glass cockpit Pacific Ocean aviaton author ANZAC Cove Lord of the Rings storm cells masters of aviation management Ice Pilots severe turbulence aircraft accident Fleet Air Arm GFC Puffin 0/11 Boeing 787 RNP Bradman 21st Century Boeing 747 Apollo 13 Hawker Hurricane X-planes five tips Spruce Goose HGS Concorde Practical Pilot airman flying career Boeing 747-8i Downham Market wings night Kenneth McGlashan Wallaby Airlines Cessna Red Baron firts solo Lest We Forget dreams RTFV army P.G. Taylor pilot air B-17 QANTAS Boeing 737-800 Flying Doctor airport security most popular aviation blog principles of flight sky Steve Cooke 737NG QANTAS announcement take off the Fatal Stall Flight 6231 Vietnam War Australian Army UAV Geoffrey DeHavilland pilot license SCAT Rolls Royce Merlin www.owenzupp.com flying training airlines tighar Ernest Gann Northwest Orient Lawrence Hargrave Air Ambulance airplane jet upset Ansett Australia biofuel Kirabati September 11 Steve Visscher New Zealand: QANTAS Impossible Airport skies P-40 Kittyhawk tail rotor popular aviation blog single-engined EFB Vietnam ANZAC Day 2012 737 classic Special Casualty Access Team FA18 Wallaby Flight aeroplane blog deCrespigny Terwilliger Productions aero club RFC 38 Squadron RAAF Kingsford Smith Gallipoli Flying Fortress bowral biplane choosing a flying school Yak 18T DH Comet Boeing 747-400 Smithy Steve Waugh Foundation 747-8F best aviation blog Commercial pilot licence Chino search for Amelia Earhart Owen Zupp, fly at Sydney Harbour Pathfinders ANZAC aviation degree V1 Hornet Boeing 747-8F Heathrow stick and rudder weather radar ditching an aeroplane airplane blog QF94 D-Day airmanship FA-18 Beechcraft airliner development jet upset recovery flying schoold QANTAS Formula One Grand Prix Karlene Pettit September 11th Air Force One pilot training interview Amy Johnson motivational FMC

Archive

© Owen Zupp. All rights Reserved.                                             Admin . Privacy . Disclaimer                                            Website by Shot to Pieces . Powered by Blackroom