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1958 Cessna 182 Makes Emergency Landing on Pennsylvania Highway
C182 based at Smoketown (S37) in Lancaster, PA. Track earlier flight to Portsmouth (PSM) on Monday. Was enroute to S37 from PSM when pilot reported "engine failure" at 4,000-feet. Made emergency landing on US422 WB in Exeter, Berks Cty, PA at approx. 2145 local (0245Z). Pilot managed to weave around traffic and land safely, only striking one car. (www.wgal.com) 更多...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
this pilot know can tell anyone about how much more focus and concentration he had, more than he suspected he ever had. He had some good flight instruction, and was pleased to note that with little or no power, the cessna 182 needs very little solid surface to come to a complete stop.
Yes, his instructor should be proud. The 182 I flew had a Horton STOL kit and we could get in to some really small fields with that kit.
The previous post was sent by accident before i could finish it.1 reason i don't like to reply on a phone .
What i was saying though was that when this subject came up most said it helped show that a young pilot with less experience handled the situation and put the aircraft on the ground .Then everyone i had talked to laughed and said besides that it would likely not happen twice to any pilot . But Rpalmqui has the most likely reason. The 182 i've flown quite a few times and it was my 1st High Performance aircraft i fleq.Going from the. 152 to the 182 ? That bird scared the heck out of me and is a beast when on the 1st flight . Glad i was still using my 1st instructor ..
Happy to see a good outcome here too.
What i was saying though was that when this subject came up most said it helped show that a young pilot with less experience handled the situation and put the aircraft on the ground .Then everyone i had talked to laughed and said besides that it would likely not happen twice to any pilot . But Rpalmqui has the most likely reason. The 182 i've flown quite a few times and it was my 1st High Performance aircraft i fleq.Going from the. 152 to the 182 ? That bird scared the heck out of me and is a beast when on the 1st flight . Glad i was still using my 1st instructor ..
Happy to see a good outcome here too.
That's a good point, Rick. Regardless of whether he made a fuel calc error, he did an incredible job of getting that bird down safely. It's even more impressive that he did it in traffic and at night. And he picked a stretch of road with no wires overhead (1/2-mile further and he wouldn't have been so lucky). And that highway has lots of traffic most hours of the day or night. The local press is calling him "Exeter Sully" and a hero. I don't know that I'd call him a hero, I'd call him a calm, clear-thinking, and competent pilot in an emergency. I'll take that over a "hero" any day in a plane. The 182P (1972) that I flew had a range of about 500nm. This was a 182B so, if it was me, on the return from PSM I would have planned a fuel stop in the Nyack, NY or Pocono area on the return because of the prevailing winds. Again, regardless, he's shown good crisis skills.
One large keep to making an emergency landing is to stay Calm and Cool... Having to do an Emergency Landing at night, the cars may have actually helped him see the road in the first place... I doubt from 4000 feet with no traffic he would have been able to see the road to even attempt a decent approach... He did a good job landing the plane. The news article isn't much, but any incident you walk away from with minimal plane damage is good...
I noticed the Pilots side door is off... that part is courious!
I noticed the Pilots side door is off... that part is courious!
I know the passenger side door was a "flip-up" door because the plane was configured for sky diving. Might have had a similar door on the pilot's side with a quick-release. Don't know for sure.
In the picture, it showed the pilots side door laying flat on the ground is the reason that I noticed it.