Posted on 09/02/2006 9:22:29 AM PDT by stm
A very bizarre aviation mishap involving a Cessna Citation on a downwind approach to a wet runway, a recipe for a disaster. It's a miracle this thing did not flip or come apart when it ran out of pavement. To make matters worse the #2 engine seems to run awqy on them, water taxiing through the bay. Not for dialup freepers, it is pretty large.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V06LBgfuxgA&mode=related&search=
His gear didn't look like it was down either...
I bet the cab stinks from all of the passengers crapping themselves.
ROFLMAO!
Great video. I love Youtube!
Amazing footage, one for the record.
ping
Bookmarked for hubby.
I just saw this on another site...amazing the engine re-fired and took off on its little tour of the bay.
You gotta see this...
(((PING)))
Accident
languages: Status: Final
Date: 15 MAY 2005
Time: 15:48
Type: Cessna 525A CitationJet 2
Operator: Weibel Scientific
Registration: OY-JET
C/n / msn: 525A-0089
First flight:
Total airframe hrs: 360
Engines: 2 Williams International FJ44-2C
Crew: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 1
Passengers: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 3
Total: Fatalities: 0 / Occupants: 4
Airplane damage: Written off
Location: Atlantic City-Bader Field, NJ (AIY) (United States of America)
Phase: Landing
Nature: Executive
Departure airport: Burlington International Airport, VT (BTV/KBTV), United States of America
Destination airport: Atlantic City-Bader Field, NJ (AIY), United States of America
Narrative:
The CitationJet departed Burlington (BTV) around 14:45 on a routine flight to Atlantic City (AIY). The pilot first made a low pass down runway 29 and then return to land on runway 11. After touchdown the airplane failed to stop and overran the runway and into the Intercoastal Waterway. The occupants were rescued by a boat.
According to the Cessna 525A Landing Distance Chart, an airplane with a landing weight of 11,000 pounds required 2,930 feet of landing distance, in a no wind situation. With a 10 knot tailwind, which was the approx wind at the time of the accident, the airplane required 3,500 feet of landing distance. Runway 11 at Bader Field is a 2,948 foot-long, 100 foot-wide, asphalt runway. Bader Field is normally closed to jet traffic.
PROBABLE CAUSE: "The pilot's improper decision to plan a flight to a runway of insufficient length, his improper in-flight decision to land on that inadequate runway with a tailwind, and his failure to obtain the proper touchdown point. A factor in the accident was the tailwind condition."
Events:
Landing/takeoff - Landing - Late, far down rwy
Result - Came to rest off rwy - in water
http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=20050515-0&lang=en
I could not get your link to work...but here is one that does;
http://www.glumbert.com/media/planecrash.html
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