RyanShort1 wrote:
Without knowing more facts, it looks like an "almost" successful test flight, with the props losing pressure right before the landing, or during the landing, and he either didn't notice it in time to shut down the engine, was commited to landing anyway and didn't have time to react, or it just happened right there. A sudden loss of thrust from the props going feathered could also account for a loss of airspeed.
Ryan
I agree with the previous comments, I also find this thread extremely fascinating. I just wish we had more participation from warbird pilots, mechanics and anybody who is familiar with the Twin Mustang and/or the incident in question.
Ryan, that's entirely a plausible scenario. He might have lost the engine on short final, and had little time to react. Remember from the previous posts, losing the engine is a double whammy. First you lose half your power, then your stall speed increases by 5 mph. So, unless you react fast enough, you might be in a world of hurt very fast. It also has the potential of being a triple whammy. This part I don't know about and will defer to Larry so he can look up in the manual of what I'm about to say next.
I've flown a fair amount of multi-engines and in a lot of the ones I've flown, if you lose the engine on short final like that and intend to land without going around, you must very quickly raise the flaps to something less than the full flap or landing flap configuration. The reason is that with the loss of half your power, you won't be able to overcome the drag from your flaps. The idea is you want just enough flaps to provide increased lift and lower your approach/landing speed, but not too much as the added lift will be offset by the increased drag which you can't overcome on one engine. In other words, you want more lift than drag out of the flaps, prior to that "breakeven" point, so to speak. I don't know if the P-82 has that consideration. Is it possible that Ed was utilizing full landing flaps, lost the engine on short final/low altitude, and wasn't able to raise the flaps partially to lessen the drag while losing half his power? The result of all this would be a high sink rate right into the runway.
Calling Larry!