"MAYDAY!"- Deadstick over the Rockies! 12 Oct 2023

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  • Опубліковано 1 лис 2023
  • Finally a GOOD outcome on the Blancolirio Channel!
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 981

  • @bdog111
    @bdog111 8 місяців тому +490

    "Oh for God sakes I do" was the best part! The absolute relief in that man's voice!

    • @baomao7243
      @baomao7243 8 місяців тому +37

      Yeah, i caught that too.
      He saw his life un-flash before his eyes and suddenly thought, “I could conceivably walk away from this…”

    • @byronharano2391
      @byronharano2391 8 місяців тому +7

      Yes!!!

    • @eltomas3634
      @eltomas3634 8 місяців тому +27

      A dead stick situation will have even the most stubborn Atheists talking to God all of the sudden.

    • @washoe4827
      @washoe4827 8 місяців тому

      But he's too busy slaughtering 2740 innocent children from starvation, hunger-related diseases and contaminated water, EVERY DAY to bother with a silly pilot...@@eltomas3634

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy 8 місяців тому +10

      @@eltomas3634 - Old habits are hard to break. Doesn't mean they suddenly believe in god. Chance favors the prepared. Glad it all worked out well for him.

  • @Slingshotgixxer
    @Slingshotgixxer 8 місяців тому +664

    That relief in his voice when he realized how close aspen was , kinda choked me up a bit actually

    • @rogerdixon3700
      @rogerdixon3700 8 місяців тому +9

      Yeah, me too.

    • @georgemartin1436
      @georgemartin1436 8 місяців тому +8

      AGREE!

    • @nitehawk86
      @nitehawk86 8 місяців тому +25

      That is maybe the best aircraft to atc transmission I have ever heard. :)

    • @hyperverbal
      @hyperverbal 8 місяців тому +4

      Same!

    • @calburnIII
      @calburnIII 8 місяців тому +31

      Even knowing he made it OK, I felt a feeling of relief when he said, “thank God” in reference to seeing the airport.
      I’ve flown over the Rockies a number of times in my 63 P172D, but rather than direct, I have to fly the passes, because getting much above 14,000’ is a real strain, even with the increased power of my 180hp Lycoming. Having had a total engine failure myself soon after I bought my airplane almost 20 years ago, I tend to spend more time looking for places to set down than many pilots do. Yes, the rocks are inhospitable, but there are a surprising number of survivable landing sites-might not be able to use the airplane again, but that’s secondary to survival.

  • @peepa47
    @peepa47 8 місяців тому +257

    Engine failure 4NM from an airport, in the middle of high mountains, that sure is lucky timing 🙂

    • @jamescollier3
      @jamescollier3 8 місяців тому +12

      yeah very lucky!!

    • @baomao7243
      @baomao7243 8 місяців тому +17

      He is the 1-in-X of the statistics on engine outs over comparable terrain. As the “1”
      it was 100% survivable. As for all the others in singles, sadly, it doesn’t end well.

    • @rustyneuron
      @rustyneuron 8 місяців тому +8

      Yep. Actually lived to share those pictures.

    • @williampotter2098
      @williampotter2098 8 місяців тому +3

      @@rustyneuron
      This guy had brass balls to handle the emergency and then take a video. I think I would have made the airport but wouldn't be thinking about videos.

    • @Lando62
      @Lando62 8 місяців тому +2

      If he was "lucky" his engine would not have failed. He was unlucky to have a failure. but no so unlucky as to not have an airport handy.

  • @pauledwards1157
    @pauledwards1157 8 місяців тому +100

    I get a little choked up listening to him say “This is my shot. I’m going for it.” Glad to hear everything turned out fine for Chris.

    • @stay_at_home_astronaut
      @stay_at_home_astronaut 8 місяців тому +3

      Yeah, you are right, but I think it was him verbalizing that he had decided not to make another turn away from the threshold to get rid of more altitude. He was still high (1,000 feet) on final, so he made his decision to quit playing sailplane and announced it.

  • @lordhogarth
    @lordhogarth 8 місяців тому +17

    Flying a single engine plane over the Colorado Rockies is always a chancy proposition, even in the summer and with an operable engine. He was very lucky.

    • @tigerflyer4285
      @tigerflyer4285 7 місяців тому +2

      So is driving I-70 over the Rockies. You can get hit by another car during a snowstorm. You can collide with deer and elk. Get hit by a runaway truck. Fall asleep from the low oxygen at altitude. Be shoved down a mountainside in an avalanche. Hit by a rockslide. It's all just various risks mitigated by common sense, careful driving, good conditions, preparation, planning, training, "cockpit cool," and choosing when not to travel. Good pilots and drivers do this all the time. I've done both many times in my single engine airplane and my Subaru. Luck is sometimes a factor when all else isn't working.

  • @cageordie
    @cageordie 8 місяців тому +118

    Wow! Aspen isn't a great place to land with a working engine. Great initial call. A very rare example of someone who follows FAA procedure for emergency communications. I bet he was on top of the world when he stepped out of the aircraft... unless he was already working out what it was going to cost to fix.

  • @davem7378
    @davem7378 8 місяців тому +166

    As a pilot, that gave me chills. Sure glad everything turned out alright. Thanks Juan. Another great video.

    • @mhubbell9409
      @mhubbell9409 8 місяців тому +7

      Same. Things really could have gone pear shaped for him.

  • @ronframe387
    @ronframe387 8 місяців тому +187

    I know very little about flying but always assumed dead stick meant control stick wouldn't react to inputs. I learn something new from every video. Thanks

    • @donadams8345
      @donadams8345 8 місяців тому +28

      The control stick works fine and you can control the aircraft but the engine doesn't work. Dead stick means the propeller blades are not moving. I made a dead stick into an airport many years ago due to a carburetor problem. Both the aircraft and me survived with no damage.

    • @JohnBare747
      @JohnBare747 8 місяців тому +14

      The guy should have hopped right out of the plane and bought a lotto ticket, his lucky day for sure.

    • @Spinner1987CH
      @Spinner1987CH 8 місяців тому +6

      @@silasmarner7586dead stick not desk stick ;)

    • @cheddar2648
      @cheddar2648 8 місяців тому +9

      Never lost all four cylinders, but I did lose one cylinder in a rotorcraft once. Fan kept turning, but a lot of vibration.

    • @theaustralianconundrum
      @theaustralianconundrum 8 місяців тому

      I just simulated this in FS 2020 and all went well. @@donadams8345

  • @upalaska
    @upalaska 8 місяців тому +38

    Evening, Commercial pilot from Reno, NV here. Thanks for posting this. The "positive outcome" videos do a great job of showing that not every MAYDAY ends in tragedy. Keep it up, it's good for moralle.

  • @UPNORTHWOODS
    @UPNORTHWOODS 8 місяців тому +19

    We were being vectored for the approach when this happened. We had just overflown the airport and it was completely overcast. In the time he went from our right to left a hole opened up. We shot the approach and missed minutes after he landed. N4EA. This was a miracle for sure.

  • @GaryMCurran
    @GaryMCurran 8 місяців тому +52

    You know, we hear so much about airplane crashes that shouldn't have happened. I'm sure this guy may still be looking for his seat cushion because of the pucker factor, but he handled it so well. He did exactly what he needed to do. He flew the airplane, he communicated the issue and he continued to fly the airplane, enough so that he could pull that 'Bob Hoover' style of landing and taxi. He did it perfectly right! Congrats, Chris, job well done!

  • @tomcoryell
    @tomcoryell 8 місяців тому +66

    My brother flies A 210T in that area. I took a big gulp of air when I heard 210T dead stick into Aspen. Glad you made it Chris! Well done!

  • @mountainmama1951
    @mountainmama1951 8 місяців тому +113

    The relief in his voice when he saw Aspen was tangible! We've flown over this terrain in the past (in a normally aspirated 210). Without that nearby runway, the odds of a happy ending were slim. Well done!

  • @MrMaxeemum
    @MrMaxeemum 8 місяців тому +159

    Always good to hear of these successful outcomes and the teamwork involved to get them down safely, wallets can't fix dead people but they can fix dead planes. Well done to everyone involved.

    • @chicketychina8447
      @chicketychina8447 5 місяців тому +2

      Big shout to the controller .
      Real professional ...
      Guys on the money

  • @cottydry
    @cottydry 8 місяців тому +98

    Chris sounded so calm and collected and 100% focused on what needed to be done. Not many Plan B options to choose from!

  • @bearowen5480
    @bearowen5480 8 місяців тому +63

    Wow! Having flown fairly extensively in this mountainous area years ago in a partnership owned Rockwell 112TC single engine Turbo Commander, I can fully appreciate the pucker factor this pilot experienced when his engine seized! He was incredibly lucky it occurred exactly where it did within easy gliding altitude/ distance of Aspen, and without weather being a complicating factor. I also strongly concur with his decision to extend the gear earlier rather than later, because with a seized engine, he was limited to the remaining battery power with which to extend the complicated and power draining gear extension process. The terrain along this portion of his route from Boulder to Montrose is probably the most inhospitable to a situation like this in the high Rockies. Lady luck smiled and a competent pilot prevailed against Murphy. Well done!

    • @user-jh5fm7ci6o
      @user-jh5fm7ci6o 8 місяців тому +2

      Yea right. Great pilot, and the engine stopped at the best time. Whew!

  • @ronlokk
    @ronlokk 8 місяців тому +35

    Aspen, very tricky on a good day. Cool, calm, collected. I would fly with this guy. all the best.

  • @PCBill0622
    @PCBill0622 8 місяців тому +52

    When I moved to Colorado I took a mountain flying course. One of lessons taught you to always be looking for a valley where you could set it down. I flew between Aspen and Gunnison once and there were no valleys until past Crested Butte. I vowed never to fly over that are again. Another area like that is the Sawtooths north of Boise. I NEVER flew in or out of Aspen without getting kicked around with gusty winds so he was definitely was blessed with those conditions that day.

    • @paul_k_7351
      @paul_k_7351 8 місяців тому +5

      Just what I was thinking. This should be standard practice in single engined aeroplanes. The guy in the video did well but the airport being there shouldn’t have come as a surprise to him!

    • @PCBill0622
      @PCBill0622 8 місяців тому +4

      Remember that there was a cloud deck right over the airport. Mountain valleys are frequently covered with low clouds in the early morning hours if the wind is calm or light. Also he was flying a route that he had routinely flown before (I think). Sometimes routine can lead to complacency. In any case God was surely with him that day.

  • @reginaldgraves1684
    @reginaldgraves1684 8 місяців тому +1

    It always gives me a warm fussy feeling to hear professional pilotage, especially "Mayday mayday mayday" instead of "we have an emergency".

  • @FalcoGeorge
    @FalcoGeorge 8 місяців тому +13

    Great outcome. One thing I learnt from a previous engine failure (Someone else) was that when the engine is ceased, hitting the starter - "just to see" -is a REALLY BAD idea. Especially IFR or if you rely on electrical power as the current draw from the starter when it's stalled is very high and your battery will deplete very quickly. Something I hadn't previously thought of.

  • @judyjohn2248
    @judyjohn2248 8 місяців тому +69

    I imprinted on aviation early as my dad became a private pilot and bought a 182 Skylane while I was in middle school. We took a trip to Salem, Oregon from Phoenix Field, Fair Oaks. On the way back just over the mountains the engine sputtered and stopped. My sis and I in the backseat looked at each other eyes wide. Dad fiddled with knobs and got the engine going again telling mom in the passenger seat "turned it to the other tank and it started right up. I've got enough altitude to glide to Fair Oaks, let's see how she goes." Mom asked, "do you know what's wrong?" Dad said, " not really, but something is up with the fuel tank gauges." My mom said, "Land it, Phil". It took quite a while to come down from that altitude and land (I believe it was Marysville), and Dad was grumpy about it. It had never dawned on me until today, that my dad's (currently 93 years old) WILLINGNESS to accept the risk that he would be able to overcome any issue that arose midair was a sign that he was not a safe pilot. Once on the ground, he discovered that the fuel jockey had not replaced the cap on one of the tanks back in Salem. The fuel had escaped over time, but the fuel liner had buckled up against the float and was reading full for that tank. Dad thought it odd but continued to use that tank because of the full reading until it had completely run dry. The engine started back up after he switched to the other tank. Within 5 years, dad needed cash for a down payment on a commercial building and it was bye-bye Skylane. Even though I hated to see her go, I have a new understanding that it was probably for the best.

    • @26betsam
      @26betsam 8 місяців тому +1

      We lived 1/4 mile to the north of Phoenix field. Spent many a day on my bike watching airplanes.

    • @catherinenelson4162
      @catherinenelson4162 8 місяців тому +3

      Insightful. Sounds like selling the plane dodged a bullet for your dad and any passengers.

    • @rhymereason3449
      @rhymereason3449 7 місяців тому +11

      Good story... I'll never understand how some men will take such risks with their whole family on board. Over confidence and poor risk assessment are not good attributes for a pilot!

    • @davidlindgren7605
      @davidlindgren7605 6 місяців тому +7

      Good for that wife telling him to land! There is no margin for safety in a plane. You must always be very conservative in your judgment. It's no place to take chances with your safety. Even more so when you have three passengers.

    • @ValerieGriner
      @ValerieGriner 4 місяці тому +1

      Great story. Thanks for sharing.

  • @godfreylebron7078
    @godfreylebron7078 8 місяців тому +8

    Juan, he is blessed with the fact that the worst thing that happened was he had to write a check for a new engine. Nice to see a happy ending

  • @noelwade
    @noelwade 8 місяців тому +193

    Obligatory glider pilot in the comments, inviting all of you to come fly gliders with us. :-) Its fun, and it just might save your life someday!

    • @bryankane2626
      @bryankane2626 8 місяців тому +6

      Where are you based out of?

    • @vihai
      @vihai 8 місяців тому +8

      Hi, from another DG-300 owner, D-1891 here :)

    • @MichaelOfRohan
      @MichaelOfRohan 8 місяців тому +18

      Always thought gliders were pointless, not a dig at the hobby, just an observation. This changes things.

    • @haqvor
      @haqvor 8 місяців тому +6

      @@vihai the DG-300 Acro sure is a fun little plane!

    • @julesviolin
      @julesviolin 8 місяців тому +30

      ⚠️Absolutely.
      Engine failure is not an event in my books.
      I fly power and gliders.
      We train for power failure from day 1 of training.
      It is 2nd nature to lower the nose and look for somewhere to land ASAP.
      We have a foot in every field below 1000ft.
      If 20hrs gliding was compulsory before powered training I am convinced 1000's of lives would be saved

  • @saabpoppa
    @saabpoppa 8 місяців тому +3

    In the case of an engine failure you do.not. "have to get down as soon as possible", you want to stay up as long as possible in order to prepare for landing. You are coming down, that's a mathematical certainty; the more you hurry down the less time you have to configure, prepare yourself, adjust your ground track, etc... As a DPE, I commonly observe ASEL commercial applicants blending the steep spiral and engine failure maneuvers. The first task is to locate a safe place to land that's as close as possible - obvious here, get at best glide speed - minimizes descent rate and maximizes time aloft, and go through your flow and emergency checklist - all apparently done properly in this case. Awesome job by this pilot under scary circumstances.

  • @Joe_Not_A_Fed
    @Joe_Not_A_Fed 8 місяців тому +15

    Chris stayed cool and did everything right. Fly the plane, Mayday, used ATC as his copilot and cruised right in. Where the engine packed it in was lucky and he made the best of it. Good job, Chris and ATC.

  • @Vanilla0729
    @Vanilla0729 8 місяців тому +23

    One thing that was drilled into my private pilot training was engine out landings. It was something that happened to my instructor early in his training so he had me do more than 3 of my first 40 hours doing patterns where he would randomly pull the engine to idle and I'd have to dead-stick it. Sometimes he'd do that where he knew there was a little GA airport nearby but I'd have to look for it. Thank God I was in Ohio and not in the mountains!

    • @GlamorganManor
      @GlamorganManor 8 місяців тому +7

      I don't know why but this reminded me of something 40 years ago in driver's ed. There was a driveway going downhill at the high school that ended with a big cul de sac with no curbs in a grass field . Thr instructor had a creative bent and he said drive 20 mph and see if you can make the turn around it without using the brake. Then with no warning when almost there he reached over and shut off the engine. With no power steering I ended up in the grass obviously...it was great education know what it felt like. He also had us slam on the brakes and drive in a fast circle with rear wheel drive car in a snowy parking lot. Once I was in a stick shift car with a cocky gearhead and the instructor made him back down a boat ramp and said he'd fail if he let the tires get in the water lol. I don't imagine much of that kind of thing happens today. I was also lucky that my dad taught me to be aware at all times where I would go if that car coming towards me came over the center line. His older brother was a pilot, maybe he had been indoctrinated to think like a one. Good memories!

    • @tomcoryell
      @tomcoryell 6 місяців тому

      @@GlamorganManor I drove professionally for 40 years in a high wind area with ice and snow. Tractor trailer rigs would tip over routinely from the wind. I would always drive with a margin for the oncoming rig to miss me if they blew over. Also, I would drive with two tires on the edge of the road if the road was icy and the margin was dry.

    • @chicketychina8447
      @chicketychina8447 5 місяців тому

      3 in 40 hrs!!!!
      I'm an instructor.. Everyone gets between 5 and 10 before going solo.
      3 is not enough..

  • @ericfielding2540
    @ericfielding2540 8 місяців тому +5

    Great to hear a happy ending to this story. Flying at 16,000 feet gives a lot of altitude to work with, but only if you are past the mountains. He had incredible luck with the timing of failure.

  • @lloydprunier4415
    @lloydprunier4415 8 місяців тому +10

    I think the reply of 8,000' runway relaxed him somewhat! Very lucky man and how this all happened at the location it did is almost a miracle.

  • @sachiperez
    @sachiperez 8 місяців тому +11

    so much relief in his voice when he learned where the airport was.

  • @connielentz1114
    @connielentz1114 8 місяців тому +7

    You hear the anxiety in his voice but he doesn’t let it overwhelm him. Very healthy response

  • @George4943
    @George4943 8 місяців тому +2

    I was flying over the Rockies in my Cessna 172. I was in a long cruise climb when my engine stopped. Tried everything. Eventually switched to just one tank and the engine restarted.
    Reported it and shortly a placard was issued: "Use a single tank above 5000 ft." to avoid vapor lock.

  • @sonnygL7
    @sonnygL7 8 місяців тому +19

    Happy tears to hear this man made it out ok. Definitely choked up hearing him say MAYDAY x3... I always tear up hearing these tragic stories but this time around this pilot was able to make it home. Ty lord🙏🏼❤

  • @dusttodust
    @dusttodust 8 місяців тому +7

    Paper! IFR chart on the seat! I want to meet this pilot.

  • @myfavoritemartian1
    @myfavoritemartian1 8 місяців тому +7

    I smiled through the whole thing. We once lost a top cylinder on a round engine at about 8,000 AGL. It windmilled and that piston going up and down was mesmerizing to watch. No airport, just a 1 month old plowed field. Turned out OK. Oil everywhere.

  • @scottyallen7237
    @scottyallen7237 8 місяців тому +1

    Reminds me of my step-Dad's experience back in the late-70's in his 1961 Cessna 210A (with wing struts) when he had an engine crankshaft break on a low-time 2nd engine enroute from Eastern Oregon to So Cal. He was over northern Nevada at the time with slightly friendlier terrain. The engine did not seize, but he had to land immediately. Found a nearly abandon air strip, made a good landing. Family met up with him, drove home, loaded up his re-built original engine, drove back out and installed it himself (not quite like Charles Bronson's movie) with son's help, flew it home. Being a diesel mechanic with a passion for flying, just another fun adventure for him. I definitely miss him.
    He often flew this airplane all over the country to repair broken trucks for the trucking company he worked for. Kind of a fitting return of favor that his pickup truck was used to drive out to fix the airplane this time around.

  • @papawheelie5835
    @papawheelie5835 8 місяців тому +21

    Nice job getting her down safely! I've personally experienced a engine out during a checkride. Trim for best glide, head on a swivel looking for suitable landing spot, gentle (very gentle) turn to line up, then attempted to and successfully re-started the engine. Yeah. Passed that checkride with flying colors!

  • @LouT1501
    @LouT1501 8 місяців тому +15

    Appreciate the Bob Hoover reference, having seen his routine in the Shrike at Reno many years ago. Very glad he made it safely!

  • @SteveD328
    @SteveD328 8 місяців тому +23

    Beautiful job!! And to get it onto 33 with all the terrain down there, even better. I’ve been in and out of Aspen more than 1,000 times in Dornier 328 turbo props, Learjets and Challengers. That airport is no joke. Beautifully done!!

    • @stevedaniels3064
      @stevedaniels3064 8 місяців тому +2

      My first type was in a DO-228, not a jet but a fun plane to fly.

    • @SteveD328
      @SteveD328 6 місяців тому +1

      @@stevedaniels3064 I never got to fly the jet version, all of my 328 time was in the turbo prop. Awesome airplane!! I was lucky enough to go to school for the airplane at the factory at Oberpfaffenhofen, near Munich, Germany.

  • @Freedom1776usa
    @Freedom1776usa 2 місяці тому +1

    That one guy on the radio for 20 seconds felt like an eternity. I would have been so pissed if that was me with dead engine and this guy is just lolly gagging around!

  • @kCI251
    @kCI251 8 місяців тому +7

    With that much altitude, he did some wide "S" turns and kept the airport no more than a 90 degree turn. Pilot did a fantastic job!

  • @billbrisson
    @billbrisson 8 місяців тому +15

    nice to hear good news for a change!

  • @marclattoni1959
    @marclattoni1959 8 місяців тому +24

    I flew over the rockies at 10,500' regularly from Calgary to Invermere and often to Vancouver all the while keeping an eye out for potential landing spots. I recall being nervous practicing power-out orbits over a field with dead stick landings in a Skylane. I was just as nervous watching this video that combined both situations. Whew!

    • @paul_k_7351
      @paul_k_7351 8 місяців тому +1

      This should be standard practice in single engined aeroplanes. The guy in the video did well but the airport being there should t have come as a surprise to him!

  • @falkomatzler271
    @falkomatzler271 8 місяців тому +1

    With almost billions of videoclips on UA-cam, yours are the ones that I enjoy most by now.

  • @reggiepaulk
    @reggiepaulk 8 місяців тому +72

    Hagerman pass is one of the least forgiving passes in the Colorado Rockies… he’s very lucky, as there are nearly no options to land.

    • @josephoberlander
      @josephoberlander 8 місяців тому +8

      Beautiful hiking in the summer, though.

    • @TD_YT066
      @TD_YT066 8 місяців тому +9

      LOL, I drove over it in a rental, said 'Scenic Drive' from Basalt to Leadville on my map, oh yeah, it sure was. :)

    • @terrallputnam7979
      @terrallputnam7979 8 місяців тому +18

      Not lucky, Blessed!

    • @tyyamnitz8408
      @tyyamnitz8408 8 місяців тому +1

      What would you even do in that situation

    • @baltimoraclehdeg4270
      @baltimoraclehdeg4270 8 місяців тому +3

      ​@@tyyamnitz8408"First, take a deep breath ... " --- Never mind ; you're @ 14K' in a non- pressurized cabin ... 100% "Gripping"
      For me, i'm so conditioned to expect awful outcomes when i hear Juan's theme music, i was really praising the Lord at the conclusion.

  • @MarcMcMillin
    @MarcMcMillin 8 місяців тому +9

    So thankful that Chris was able to make this landing. Very emotional after all the bad news lately.

  • @JohnChuprun
    @JohnChuprun 8 місяців тому +20

    Nice job Chris. What a horrible situation and you nailed it. EDIT: Would love to know a follow up of what happened to that engine!

  • @pavelavietor1
    @pavelavietor1 8 місяців тому +13

    this driver got tremendous aeronautical skills ❤, saludos

  • @350oak
    @350oak 8 місяців тому +11

    Aspen Dead Stick..! Outstanding job Pilot Chris. 😮

    • @350oak
      @350oak 8 місяців тому +3

      And, he pulled a Hoover in front of all the High-Rollers.

  • @forgeworxblacksmith6453
    @forgeworxblacksmith6453 8 місяців тому +27

    Great airmanship, awesome outcome 👏
    Thanks Juan for the happy ending video 😊

  • @andrewg.spurgeon1736
    @andrewg.spurgeon1736 8 місяців тому +12

    Text book case of keeping your wits about you and concentrating on the business at hand to get on the ground in one piece and still alive. Masterful piece of flying. That is extremely challenging terrain to fly in with a fully functional airplane. Not exactly forgiving when you're dead stick with one shot at the runway. Not very many flat spots out there to set it down if you can't find an airport. I fly out in that area all the time as I have a summer home in Telluride and fly into Telluride Regional & will also land at Montrose when the weather doesn't allow a landing at Telluride. I fly my Cessna Conquest II from Florida to Telluride and back 9 or 10 times a year and always say my prayers that I don't have an emergency over those mountains. He was incredibly fortunate to be so close to Aspen when his engine grenaded. Well done! And great explanation & coverage, Juan. Look forward to you interviewing him on the channel.

  • @steveb5224
    @steveb5224 7 місяців тому +2

    I had a catastrophic engine failure over the North Atlantic leaving Santa Maria Azores. I too also did a dead stick landing and had I been another five minutes out I would have been in the drink. The Cessna 172 I was flying a ferry flight to Germany.

  • @EVE101Patt
    @EVE101Patt 8 місяців тому +2

    for us glider pilots every landing is a dead stick landing ;-) but when i fly motorplanes i can't get that "where can i put it down if i can't continue" out of my head

  • @VideoconferencingUSA
    @VideoconferencingUSA 8 місяців тому +11

    Nice job, I flew a 78 Turbo 210 for about eight years. Great to hear a happy ending.

  • @M_MTsc
    @M_MTsc 8 місяців тому +7

    Great job. I fly a 210T and can't imagine how he must have felt when that engine. It's not like a 210 is known for glide performance.

  • @Relkond
    @Relkond 8 місяців тому +1

    Way I see it, glider pilots come in two varieties.
    Those who chose to fly without an engine.
    Those who don’t chose to fly without an engine.

  • @johnkeller441
    @johnkeller441 8 місяців тому +4

    When flying into KASE in a Cessna T-206, I would fly over Independence Pass (VFR) at 16,500, and pull the power back (not to idle) and glide down into the Roaring Fork Valley to a landing on runway 15 without touching the power. I realize that is a lot different than "engine out" but it was still a good practice session. I had a stuck throttle in a Cessna 182 back in the late 70"s and that is something to teach flight students, also. Really glad this engine out worked to the benefit of the owner; other than paying for a new engine.

  • @bradkenville1714
    @bradkenville1714 8 місяців тому +7

    Juan, Thanks for reporting this near miss for Chris in his T-210. How ironic that he was on his way to Montrose to visit Western Skyways. A great job by the controller to get Chris the help that he desperately needed in this emergency, another professional helping GA pilots in distress, Bravo! Juan really appreciated the young Mr. Leck put on a great Hangar 107 safety seminar featuring yourself and Mike Patey. I have never seen Mike that distressed as he was while talking about the loss of his 4 close aviation friends, very sad for Mike and his community in Spanish Forks!

  • @greggb1416
    @greggb1416 8 місяців тому +6

    “oh for god’s sakes I do”…, (not a pilot), but that statement alone brought tears to my 60yrs young eyes…. Awesome outcome..!
    Great report Juan, look forward to the interview video.
    Thank you sir.

  • @fredpfeiljr6450
    @fredpfeiljr6450 8 місяців тому +6

    What a tremendous job by this man. He had an angel on board this day!

  • @SKYGUY1
    @SKYGUY1 8 місяців тому +3

    Nice work Captain! I should think that it would be no surprise to see ZERO on the oil pressure gauge since the engine had seized. I have always encouraged my students to practice real live "COORDINATED" S-turns on final to get rid of the excess altitude if it's necessary.

  • @Rob_Stefan
    @Rob_Stefan 8 місяців тому +9

    Fuel remaining in minutes is a required question in emergencies for what should be obvious reasons, but the important part that is often missed is “fuel remaining in pounds”… gives the fire department an idea of what they need might be up against.

    • @stevedaniels3064
      @stevedaniels3064 8 місяців тому

      Yet the standard phraseology is "fuel in minutes "

    • @Rob_Stefan
      @Rob_Stefan 8 місяців тому

      Much of the .65 needs to be overhauled. Our whole system can be replaced with an IPad, Foreflight and an Ads-b receiver.

  • @gwiyomikim5988
    @gwiyomikim5988 8 місяців тому +7

    Note to self : in case of engine failure in the mountains do it near an airport! (By the way Juan, the scruffy “Top Gun” look 1:14 suits you well!👍🏼)

  • @duckydrummer6331
    @duckydrummer6331 7 місяців тому

    You could hear the relief in the pilot’s voice when he spotted the Aspen airport.

  • @davecrupel2817
    @davecrupel2817 2 місяці тому +1

    Dead sticking over the rockies....the windy, blustery rockies....
    Jesus Christmas he is very fortunate.

  • @kenclark9888
    @kenclark9888 8 місяців тому +8

    With the engine seized can’t feather the prop. Awesome job

    • @mikebailey7071
      @mikebailey7071 8 місяців тому

      Wow, I never though of that

    • @jhmcglynn
      @jhmcglynn 8 місяців тому

      It’s better that the prop froze in one position. There’s a lot of drag with a windmilling prop.

    • @user-wc4jb2yq9l
      @user-wc4jb2yq9l 8 місяців тому +1

      No feathering prop on a 210

  • @paulis7319
    @paulis7319 8 місяців тому +4

    I could feel the relief in his voice when he got Aspen in sight. His engine picked a perfect spot to quit! Sucks he had to drop a load of cash for a new engine, but hopefully his new engine will give him many more years of safe flying!

  • @ronjenkins6674
    @ronjenkins6674 8 місяців тому

    The "Just like Bob Hoover" comment got a big chuckle from me. I was lucky enough to see Bob perform at Oshkosh and Sun and Fun many years ago.

  • @boommasterkc-135____8
    @boommasterkc-135____8 8 місяців тому

    So many of these tapes are listening to those who didn’t make it. I’m so happy to hear one that is an absolute win between ATC and aviator. Single pilot resource management is a real challenge when things go outside the norm and he knew how to ask questions and delegate outside the cockpit.

  • @rogerdixon3700
    @rogerdixon3700 8 місяців тому +5

    Should get a lotto ticket on the strength of that. Beautiful flying and airmanship well done that man.

  • @earnedwings5206
    @earnedwings5206 8 місяців тому +4

    This is a real reminder of what we are truly facing as we are reviewing our flight plans, going through our preflight, and the sometimes boring stretches of a leg to always have a true gauge of situational awareness and know where we would go if something likes this happened. The Lord was truly with him that day for sure!

  • @ttystikkrocks1042
    @ttystikkrocks1042 8 місяців тому +2

    As a Colorado resident and friend of several owners of single engine piston powered aircraft, losing power over the big bumps is the nightmare scenario everyone talks about. I'm glad this one went as smoothly as it did!

  • @Starship007
    @Starship007 8 місяців тому +4

    Nice to have successful emergency outcomes. Another reason to fly during the day and VFR over the Rockies single engine

  • @Tigerskys-6699
    @Tigerskys-6699 8 місяців тому +6

    Wonderful Job! Always a good idea to be mindful of your en-route alternates (location, runway direction/length and weather) when flying over such challenging terrain!

  • @Paul-kw1og
    @Paul-kw1og 8 місяців тому +4

    How lucky can you get being right next to Aspen after passing the high terrain. Job well done.A great finish.

  • @bobdobalina838
    @bobdobalina838 8 місяців тому +1

    So glad to see a happy ending. Incredible timing on that failure, luckiest man alive.

  • @barryhall3971
    @barryhall3971 5 місяців тому

    Great to see one of these engine failure videos with a happy ending - perfectly and calmly executed too! I don't worry about engine failure much anymore since changing from flying planes to cruising sailboats. In fact there is nothing better than the sound of the engine stopping shortly after departure (that and having a bathroom onboard).

  • @ourlifeinwyoming4654
    @ourlifeinwyoming4654 8 місяців тому +3

    This one got to me. A few miles either side of Aspen and this would’ve been much different. Miraculous. Great job all!

  • @guitarhillbilly1482
    @guitarhillbilly1482 8 місяців тому +6

    Its always great to see an Excellent outcome in a situation like this.

  • @ldoyle3rd
    @ldoyle3rd 8 місяців тому +2

    Nothing makes my day more than hearing a successful emergency landing like this. Great job by the pilot and controller!

  • @ganthrithor
    @ganthrithor 6 місяців тому

    Hahaha, amazing. Very lucky to have the engine quit exactly there :D Good job, Chris! Loved the bit where he was like "Oh yeah duh, there's an airport right here!" Must've been a big relief.

  • @Rev1Kev
    @Rev1Kev 8 місяців тому +4

    As impressive as the 205 dead stick landing into Hillsboro Oregon last year, great job captain

  • @baomao7243
    @baomao7243 8 місяців тому +5

    I suspect Chris now has a sudden desire to get (or return) to multiengine.
    GREAT JOB, CHRIS !

  • @terryboyer1342
    @terryboyer1342 8 місяців тому +1

    Aspen approach: November 61 Mike Foxtrot say souls on board and fuel.
    N61MF: We have 1 soul on board and under the circumstances unlimited fuel.

  • @SI-lg2vp
    @SI-lg2vp 8 місяців тому +1

    Lucky pilot.
    I had an engine that would not produce power above an idle and made an emergency landing at McMinnvile, OR. It was during the solar eclipse and we were VFR on top. I was able to circle through a small break in the overcast to land. Know the drill well, and lucked out that day.

  • @mikemarkowski7609
    @mikemarkowski7609 8 місяців тому +6

    Glad to have a positive outcome! Aviating at its best!

  • @theflyingfool
    @theflyingfool 8 місяців тому +10

    Very lucky with the location, as you say Juan and it's the first time I've heard a US pilot use Mayday instead of that execrable phrase "declaring an emergency". He did very well.

    • @MichaelOfRohan
      @MichaelOfRohan 8 місяців тому

      We dont want to use mayday because it causes a whole bunch of people to wait on you. Im not saying you shouldnt use mayday, im just saying people think theyre being more courteous by not using mayday.

    • @theflyingfool
      @theflyingfool 8 місяців тому

      @@MichaelOfRohan Really? When the internationally recognised phrase is Mayday, you'd expect everyone else to give way so you can sort out your emergency as expeditiously as possible. Being coureteous isn't part of that equation.

  • @jamieknight326
    @jamieknight326 8 місяців тому +2

    Fantastically well handled. The relief in the pilots voice when he see’s the airport is palpable.

  • @larryscott3982
    @larryscott3982 8 місяців тому +2

    I spent a lot of time in mapping aircraft. And was onboard an ‘off field’ landing. (Airframe lost, no injuries).
    I hear this and my heart is pounding. Omg. When he heard airport 4 mi, good weather, it was a whole different ballgame.

  • @steveb1739
    @steveb1739 8 місяців тому +5

    Great Airmanship Chris! Thanks Juan for your informed commentary.

  • @lindadoerr7919
    @lindadoerr7919 8 місяців тому +4

    Thanks for all your timely videos, Juan. Congrats to Chris on the safe landing. Really enjoyed your Aviation Safety video. I'm proud to be a member of your Patreon crew! 🫡

  • @kenvangoe9358
    @kenvangoe9358 8 місяців тому

    Don't know what background Chris had but for someone who lost an engine at 14 thousand feet he was calm cool and collected and very aware of the gravity of his situation. Like maybe he had some military experience at one time or another or he's just that kind of person. But a great job no matter what . Focused calm and aware Like he was landing on an aircraft carrier in the middle of an ocean with a rolling sea . Third arresting cable and nailed it. God love him.

  • @davidmerwin7763
    @davidmerwin7763 8 місяців тому

    Great Juan! Thank you!

  • @davidd6635
    @davidd6635 8 місяців тому +7

    Have flown many hours in a turbo 210. Great bird, especially ability to fly high over very inhospitable terrain like Chris had. Whew. Great result. Thanks Juan for another educational and interesting episode.

  • @Darryl_Frost
    @Darryl_Frost 8 місяців тому +3

    'fuel remaining?" "at the current rate of consumption infinite. (I'll show myself out).. But a good no kablamo story, will be interested in the chat with him.

  • @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
    @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars 8 місяців тому

    Back in the early days of aviation, EVERY landing was dead-stick! Thank heavens things have changed since then. Great job by Chris here. Best of all, the right outcome.

  • @airgliderz
    @airgliderz 8 місяців тому +1

    We used fly with a modified super cub towing a sailplane on a tow rope from Waverly west private glider port near Wellington Colorado towing a glider to Steamboat springs airport. Then back again a week later. If soaring was good sometimes released from tow a flew airplane back to waverly. I recall our old tow plane pilot used to be a Luftwaffa dive bomber pilot. The glider pet owner used to fly the tow plane to his girlfriends hours, landing on highway 287 and tacied up her driveway. The good ole days before GPS and glass cockpits using paper maps, eyesight and compass...
    They used to have mountain wave FAA Window. I forget who but a man in a pressure suite rode a mountain wave in a 1-34 glider painters like a Coke can to 44,000 or so feet altitude with no engine!! It was so cold some of the paint cracked in areas...
    My highest flight in a glider was about 15,000 feet, climbing in thermal lift at 500fpm plus most the way up, had oxygen in a schwitzer 1-26 as a student pilot. Worked at the glider at the time, was paid in flight hours, that was 1976 through 1980...great memories.
    My dad was partners several pilots with a Cessna T-210 and P-210 sadly one of the partners a prominent doctor in Colorado flew while on instruments trying to land into a small mountain back east, killing several, pilot error flew below terrain. Same guy flew it at top speed into a big haul storm, most the plane gas to be reskinned.

  • @weschilton
    @weschilton 8 місяців тому +4

    So glad to hear about a happy ending!
    Congratulations on your award, Juan!

  • @camsmeltzer9388
    @camsmeltzer9388 8 місяців тому +3

    Nice flying and glad he’s okay!!

  • @catfishgray3696
    @catfishgray3696 8 місяців тому

    GREAT JOB...THX JUAN

  • @petesachs1276
    @petesachs1276 2 місяці тому +1

    Been into Aspen many times with a jet, wow that was sure some story. I’m glad he made it.