May 12, 20215 yr An SR-22 and Metroliner collide on final, chute deployed on SR-22 and landed. The metroliner landed with a big chunk out of the fuselage. Amazing there was no injuries! Footage of the SR-22 coming down under the chute included: https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/local-news/2-planes-collide-mid-air-over-cherry-creek-state-park-no-reported-injuries-officials-say
May 13, 20215 yr Wow! Glad no one was killed or seriously injured. I watched the videos in the story linked above, seems the local TV news reporters are trying their best to pillory Key Lime Air. I looked up Key Lime Air on Wikipedia and I did find this entry. Quote May 12, 2021 - Key Lime Air Swearingen SA-226-TC Metro N280KL, operating Flight KG970 from Salida Airport to Denver-Centennial Airport was involved in a mid-air collision with Cirrus SR-22 N416DJ near Centennial Airport. The aircraft made a safe landing. The Cirrus pilot activated the CAPS parachute system. No casualties occurred during this incident. ATC tapes suggest the pilot of the Cirrus aircraft overshot the approach course to runway 17R and entered into the path of the Metro, which was cleared to land on 17L. https://www.liveatc.net/recordings.php So it would seem that this incident has nothing to do with Key Lime Air's operations or their pilot. My computer: ABS Gladiator Gaming PC featuring an Intel 10700F CPU, EVGA CLC-240 AIO cooler (dead fans replaced with Noctua fans), Asus Tuf Gaming B460M Plus motherboard, 16GB DDR4-3000 RAM, 1 TB NVMe SSD, EVGA RTX3070 FTW3 video card, dead EVGA 750 watt power supply replaced with Antec 900 watt PSU.
May 13, 20215 yr According to first hand witnesses flying at the airport, tower had cleared both for landing, one on left parallel runway and one on right parallel runway. Cirrus appears to have been going fast and overshot turn to final, running into the other final approach space. ATC records seem to corroborate. Of course, this is all opinion at this point until full investigation complete. Edited May 13, 20215 yr by yurei My MSFS 2020 repaints: Flightsim.to - Profile of HStreet Working on MSFS 2024 versions.
May 13, 20215 yr Ouch, looks like both planes almost lose their tails... And something is not clear: was the Cirrus pilot doing his first solo flight? Best regards,Luis Hernández Main rig: self built, AMD Ryzen 7 5700X3D (with SMT off and CO -50 mV), 2x16 GB DDR4-3200 RAM, Nvidia RTX 5060Ti 16GB, 256 GB M.2 SSD (OS+apps) + 2x1 TB SATA III SSD (sims) + 1 TB 7200 rpm HDD (storage), ID-Cooling SE-224-XTS air cooler, Viewsonic VX2458-MHD 1920x1080@120-144 Hz (G-sync compatible), Windows 11. Running P3D v5.4 (with v4.5 scenery objects as an additional library, just in case), FSX-SE, MSFS2020, MSFS2024 and even FS9! Lossless Scaling for all my sims. What a godsend...Mobile rig: ASUS Zenbook UM425QA (AMD Ryzen 7 5800H APU @3.2 GHz and boost disabled, 1 TB M.2 SSD, 16 GB RAM, Windows 11 Pro). Running FS9 there .VKB Gladiator NXT Premium Left + GNX THQ as primary controllers. Xbox Series X|S wireless controller as standby/mobile.
May 13, 20215 yr 1 hour ago, Luis Hernandez said: Ouch, looks like both planes almost lose their tails... And something is not clear: was the Cirrus pilot doing his first solo flight? No, there was a Cessna pilot on his first solo that saw the Cirrus deploy his chute. He relayed information to ATC about where the Cirrus came down.
May 16, 20215 yr On 5/13/2021 at 12:28 AM, Chock said: bit of speed tape, couple of DMI's, put it in the book, that'll be fine, no problems Skipper, "Oi Bob, start boarding the punters, tell ops its good to go" Edited May 16, 20215 yr by fluffyflops
May 16, 20215 yr Just now, fluffyflops said: bit of speed tape, couple of DMI's, put it in the book, that'll be fine, no problems Skipper I'm fairly sure that will buff right out, but the Cirrus will will definitely need a bit of speedtape Edited May 16, 20215 yr by Chock Alan Bradbury Check out my youtube flight sim videos: Here
May 16, 20215 yr 3 minutes ago, Chock said: I'm fairly sure that will buff right out, but the Cirrus will will definitely need a bit of speedtape "yeah dont worry, they got some spares back at base we can swipe for that"
May 16, 20215 yr 6 minutes ago, Chock said: I'm fairly sure that will buff right out, but the Cirrus will will definitely need a bit of speedtape bet you miss Saturday night shifts on the bank holiday august weekend just as much as me Alan Edited May 16, 20215 yr by fluffyflops
May 16, 20215 yr 1 hour ago, fluffyflops said: bet you miss Saturday night shifts on the bank holiday august weekend just as much as me Alan To be honest, I tended to not be bothered about working Bank Holidays Christmas etc, and being like that it always got me plenty of stored up brownie points with the shift planners; that came in handy if I ever needed a day off at short notice as they were usually happy to oblige me knowing I'd not complain about working the days everyone wanted. The other thing about that is, it is often pretty quiet on those sorts of days, so you probably ended up doing less work overall. The thing I didn't like was if we had to unload aeroplanes which carried animals used for testing. Most of that is banned in the UK, but it still goes on for medical research, although the planes tend to be parked at remote stands and usually at night for such operations, and they have a police escort as well since it can attract protesters. I would do it, since it was the job and although I am not keen on the idea of animal testing, when it is for medical research it is perhaps the lesser of two evils, although most companies would allow you to refuse if you strongly objected to it. Coincidentally, the last time I unloaded one of those flights, it was a Metroliner. We had to hose down the belt loader afterwards and we threw most of our clothing away after doing that, which gives you an idea of how unpleasant the conditions can be for such flights. Definitely not my favourite experience in aviation. Edited May 16, 20215 yr by Chock Alan Bradbury Check out my youtube flight sim videos: Here
May 16, 20215 yr Moderator It's very fortunate that the control cables are routed under the deck and that the Cirrus only skimmed the top 2/3's of the fuselage, otherwise there would have been zero chance of a continued, controlled landing! Fr. Bill AOPA Member: 07141481 AARP Member: 3209010556 Avsim Board of Directors | Avsim Forums Moderator
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