Fri May 08, 2015 10:19 am
daviemax wrote:To those who did not like my post:
I am a certificated private pilot. I am very well aware of the risks associated with flying, and specifically of fire in flight.
I am also an historian, and I have researched many cases where B-17s flew very long distances while enduring a fire in flight. A good example is that of VB-17G 44-6975 which suffered a severe fire behind the firewall on number 4 engine but flew many miles until landing safely at Wright on 14 January 1954.
I certainly wasn't aboard Liberty Belle but I doubt those writing these posts were either. The purpose of my original post was not to criticize the decision of Belle's PIC. It was to point out the alternative, which I have every right to do.
Fri May 08, 2015 10:21 am
Sat May 09, 2015 1:56 am
Sat May 09, 2015 4:39 am
Sat May 09, 2015 4:57 pm
Sat May 09, 2015 8:30 pm
Sun May 10, 2015 9:24 am
Sun May 10, 2015 10:00 am
Sun May 10, 2015 11:05 am
daviemax wrote:To those who did not like my post:
I am a certificated private pilot. I am very well aware of the risks associated with flying, and specifically of fire in flight.
I am also an historian, and I have researched many cases where B-17s flew very long distances while enduring a fire in flight. A good example is that of VB-17G 44-6975 which suffered a severe fire behind the firewall on number 4 engine but flew many miles until landing safely at Wright on 14 January 1954.
I certainly wasn't aboard Liberty Belle but I doubt those writing these posts were either. The purpose of my original post was not to criticize the decision of Belle's PIC. It was to point out the alternative, which I have every right to do.
Sun May 10, 2015 11:08 am
Matt Gunsch wrote:and fire dept who let it burn.
Sun May 10, 2015 8:22 pm
Matt Gunsch wrote:If there is any blame to be placed in the loss of the Liberty Belle it should go to the mechanic who did the "repair" and fire dept who let it burn.
Mon May 11, 2015 6:56 am
Matt Gunsch wrote:I love all these monday morning quarterbacks who were not there, or have no idea what was going on, woulda, shoulda coulda all you want, you were not there, you did not make the call.
Mon May 11, 2015 7:41 am
Mon May 11, 2015 8:06 am
Tim Savage wrote:Interestingly, I was just having this discussion a few weeks ago with one of the guys who flies my A-26. It is my opinion for my operation when my butt and my son's butt are sitting in the airplane, that if we have a fire, and we aren't right over the top an airport and the fire suppression system doesn't work, we are putting it in the closest field.
My life or my child's life isn't worth the risk to save a piece of metal.
I don't care whether airplanes being operated by the military in World War Two or 1954 flew for long distances on fire. Different mission, different times.
I am sure no one that was watching the fire stream back on Liberty Belle from the inside of the airplane were all that anxious to try to get to an airport to potentially save the airplane as the risk of their own life. And even if they had made it the airport would the outcome have been much different? The vast majority of the airports in this country have no full time CFR in place...they are relying on the local fire department who may or may not have been equipped to fight this fire...they carry minimal foam from what I understand.
It is too easy for those who don't operate these airplanes to theorize what they would or wouldn't do....based on what they have read in a book. Let me tell you, it is a lot different when you have smoke in the cockpit etc. You are looking for a place to land. Right now.
Mon May 11, 2015 8:41 am