What seems a good summary posted on Key by 'Canadair' - I don't recall it elsewhere, so I share it here:
Quote:
Just to add a comment regards trim and the effects on the course:
The racers are all trimmed prior to entering the course with a large nose up trim bias, the idea being as they approach the race speeds they can relax the push, as the trim will be correct for the speeds, 400 plus, so one less item to think about, in what would be a pretty intense environment.
The in flight speed range of GG would be about 140 kts to 500+ kts, so it is acceptable to preset a high speed trim, while still accelerating, compensating for the required push until on the course.
in racing, as opposed to most normal flying, the combination of the angle of bank and the need to fly a line with increasing speed means you are using bottom, not top rudder in turns, and you are pushing the nose down in a turn with rudder, and when straight with trim, (elevator) this is opposite to normal input but required for the course.
The downside is exactly what has now probably happened twice, if the trim lets go at speed, the now untrimmed elevator will bias due speed to where it would go if the trim was not applied, full TE up, (nose up effect), and this then creates a situation of "see what wins", with the options being, Flutter, control system structural failure, high speed stall, or full deflection, with resultant effect,
in this case it appears the elevator was powerful enough and mounted securely enough to force a rapid change of angle of attack, with the following effect,
1: 10+ G immediate pull, pilot goes to sleep
2: Tailwheel uplock failed (main gear hangs in there, stronger uplocks)
3: deformation of the rear fuselage
4: rapid climb uncontrolled with a slight angle of bank still induced (he was still in a slight LH turn)
5: its a laminar flow wing, so it describes a parabolic arc, comes over the top, and due the still applied bank, comes down the other side, as lift once again increases, it starts to pull out of its dive, but not enough and hits at about a 75 degree down line.
6: He may well have woken up during this, as there would have been at most 3-4 G at the top of the arc, but by then he was probably well below the canopy rails, definately confused, and since he does not appear to come back up, maybe his seat had broken, which would mean he could not really get back up to see where he was.
I am not in any way playing NTSB here, this is merely my thoughts, and just commenting on the evidence, both written and video shown to date.
I have I never flown an unlimited on the course at Reno.
(However I have raced at Reno in the Biplane class, so I have a small insight into the various factors on the course)
This is mainly intended to expand on the trim issue a little, as some have asked.
Last edited by Moggy C; 20th September 2011 at 11:00. Reason: Small correction of typo for sense.
http://forum.keypublishing.co.uk/showpo ... tcount=149Unfortunately new footage has alowed the news cycle to go around again, with a (in this case) sensationalist version of the events. Not so good.
Quote:
Terrifying new video shows the moment a plane slammed into a crowd of spectators has been released.
It comes as the death toll in last week's air show accident in Reno, Nevada, has risen to 10, the Las Vegas Sun reports.
The video was shot by a spectator and was shown on the NBC 'Today' show. It shows a World War II-era fighter plane crashed into a grandstand full of spectators who had come to see the National Championship Air Races and Air Show, held every September in Reno.
Many people were killed instantly and more then 70 were wounded by shrapnel wounds, with many losing limbs.
Spokeswoman Jamii Uboldi from Saint Mary's Regional Medical Centre told the media on Monday the latest seriously injured victim to die was a man, but she refused to identify him.
The audience had virtually no time to react before the plane ploughed into the stands at high speed, killing seven people outright and injuring dozens more.
The pilot of the P-51 Mustang, Jimmy Leeward, died on impact along with six spectators, and two other people died a few hours later at a nearby hospital.
Investigators are looking into a piece of plane tail that appears to have been snapped off.
They have recovered several key pieces of the plane, including the flight data recorders.
"There are a lot of photos of specific aspects of the tail," National Transportation Safety Board member Mark Rosekind told the New York Daily News. "We have found in the wreckage some parts of the tail from the accident aircraft. We have those photos."
http://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/-/worl ... oll-rises/