muddyboots wrote:
I can't believe they would put an inexperienced pilot in the cockpit of that hurri at an airshow. I'm willing to take his word as evidence that the brake failed.
Muddyboots, there is a HUGE difference between an experienced pilot and an experienced pilot in TYPE. That is what I was referring to. No one in their right mind, including Lone Star, would put an inexperienced, meaning low time pilot, in an extremely rare aircraft worth several million dollars. That just doesn't happen. I was referring to experience in type. That makes a big difference.
I don't know who the Hurricane pilot was, but based on the fact that this was a new restoration and the plane's first airshow appearance, he probably didn't have much time in Hurricane's. Most typical warbird display pilots flying for museums have mega hours in taildraggers and are checked out in several warbirds of similar design/performance.
The Hurricane pilot undoubtedly was no exception here. Unless he happened to also fly Jerry Yagen's, Tom Freidken's or Paul Allen's Hurricane's, I'm guessing that he probably was very inexperienced in Hurricane's. Was this a factor? I don't know, and that is up to the NTSB to determine. That was my whole point regarding experience level.
Regarding the brake, that is one pilot's viewpoint. I have researched many, many accidents where pilots have thought they did something "in the heat of battle" and in reality didn't. It doesn't matter about experience level and it can happen to anybody. Flying is a dangerous business, by default, and you must always bring your "A" game when you fly. Flying is nothing but risk analysis and mitigation. Sometimes pilots lose, and it can happen to anybody, regardless of experience level. If Chuck Yeager can run a perfectly good T-6 off a runway due to his own poor decisions, then nobody is immune.