General discussion for aviators

Watch Where You Land

Yesterday was soooo beautiful — a perfect day for flying. Some
friends from Atlanta called to say they would fly up to Knoxville
and take me to lunch if I would pick them up at the airport (DKX).

I was sitting on a bench in front of the FBO watching a moderate
amount of traffic, dreaming of how in my next life I would own a
hydroplane, a Mercedes 560 SEL, and an RV-6.

About that time, a Cessna 152 was landing on the grass at the far
side of the runway. "Strange," I thought. Suddenly, he bounced up
about 50 feet, came down again on the nose gear, and flipped over
onto his top.

What a lucky guy! He climbed out unhurt, but the plane was
substantially damaged. He was practicing landing on the grass or
so the story goes. He hit a ditch that he did not know was there.

The moral to the story: If you are going to practice on the grass
where people don’t usually land, it would probably be a good idea
to check it out first.

Sally

———
Sally A. Guthrie PP-ASEL
Ph.D.-to-be (a bezillion hours to go)
U.T. Communications
guthr…@utkvx.utk.edu
———

posted by admin in Uncategorized and have Comments (4)

4 Responses to “Watch Where You Land”

  1. admin says:

    Was that designated as a grass runway, or just some random grass that
    looked promissing?  At W66 we’ve got a grass runway to the right of
    Runway 6.  People don’t normally use it, but it is usable (sometimes
    people park their planes on it, not realizing it’s a runway).  However,
    I can’t believe someone would land on some random piece of grass that
    wasn’t supposed to be a runway.  There’s a lot of random stuff next
    to runways (windsocks, glide path indicators, lights, fences) that
    generally you would like to avoid in addition to a surface that’s
    not really usualble for tricycle landing gear.

    -Ron

  2. admin says:

    In response to the question about whether the grass where the
    Cessna 152 incident occurred — no, that is not a designated
    grass runway.

    Sally

    ——-
    Sally A. Guthrie PP-ASEL
    Ph.D.-to-be (a bezillion hours to go)
    U.T. Communications
    guthr…@utkvx.utk.edu
    ———-

  3. admin says:

    On reading Sally’s post about watching a plane "bend" when landing in
    the grass for practice……let me relate another "tale of woe".

    A flying club in the area with 3 full ifr singles in which they take
    great pride had just overhauled the engine on their C-182 and were proud
    of the "Black Max" three bladed prop that was also added to the A/C.

    Several days after the plane was back in service a member had landed at
    night at a cross country destination and, on seeing he’d missed a
    turnoff from the runway to the taxi way and not wanting to go the long
    distance to the next turnoff, and with the parallel taxiway lights
    visible temptingly close, decided to taxi off thru the grass, at night,
    at a strange field, to get to the taxi way.  

    The ditch was 8 feet deep.

    3 weeks, $18,000 later….the plane’s flying …..again.

    Nuff said.

    Jeff Dunkle

  4. admin says:

    Sally Guthrie (af…@yfn.ysu.edu) wrote:

    : About that time, a Cessna 152 was landing on the grass at the far
    : side of the runway. "Strange," I thought. Suddenly, he bounced up
    : about 50 feet, came down again on the nose gear, and flipped over
    : onto his top.

    [stuff deleted]

    : The moral to the story: If you are going to practice on the grass
    : where people don’t usually land, it would probably be a good idea
    : to check it out first.

    That goes for take-offs as well as landings.  One of the flight instructors
    at Guelph Air Park decided to demonstrate a soft-field takeoff to a student.
    The demonstration was conducted on the grass beside the runway.  This grass
    is often used by the classic aircraft that operate out of the airpark, but
    this time, the ground was wet and *soft*.  As the C172 accelerated, the
    wheels began to dig into the soft soil, and eventually the prop struck the
    ground.  No one was hurt, and after an expensive inspection and prop repair,
    not to mention down-time, the aircraft is back in operation.

    The moral to the story: same as above.

    Niels Ejvind Andersen          eande…@mach2.wlu.ca / 70511.2…@compuserve.com
    Information Systems                                  Phone: (519) 884-1970 x2760
    Wilfrid Laurier University                           Fax:         (519) 886-9351
    Waterloo, ON  N2L 3C5  Canada                                        … VFR NC4

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