Jim Peace Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/dfw/news/small-plane-crashes-on-a-street-in-carrollton/ Quote
LANCECASPER Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 Looks like a 231, N231GZ. Based out of Addison. Passengers survived and transported to hospital, but no word on the severity of the injuries. Quote
Niko182 Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 4 minutes ago, LANCECASPER said: Looks like a 231, N231GZ. Based out of Addison. I think rocket. Prop is feathered. 2 Quote
LANCECASPER Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 2 minutes ago, Niko182 said: I think rocket. Prop is feathered. Possible but hard to tell with the pictures. https://flightaware.com/photos/aircraft/N231GZ Quote
Niko182 Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 1 minute ago, LANCECASPER said: Possible but hard to tell with the pictures. https://flightaware.com/photos/aircraft/N231GZ I was using this one. Also top blade doesn't look bend, and the 2 bottom ones are bent opposite directions. Seems like the prop was not spinning. 1 Quote
aviatoreb Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 9 minutes ago, Niko182 said: I was using this one. Also top blade doesn't look bend, and the 2 bottom ones are bent opposite directions. Seems like the prop was not spinning. That seems right - it looks like a prop that was feathered and not spinning at time of impact for the reasons you said. So most likely a rocket. Have we ever seen this before - the skins around the fuselage are stripped away - was that the crash or did the firemen do that saving the passengers? The general shape of the passenger compartment looks in tact - I hope. hopefully they will come through ok. Quote
exM20K Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 The filed airspeeds in the flightaware history look more 231-like than Rocket. Glad to read responders reported non-life-threatening injuries. -dan Quote
EricJ Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 6 minutes ago, aviatoreb said: That seems right - it looks like a prop that was feathered and not spinning at time of impact for the reasons you said. So most likely a rocket. Have we ever seen this before - the skins around the fuselage are stripped away - was that the crash or did the firemen do that saving the passengers? The general shape of the passenger compartment looks in tact - I hope. hopefully they will come through ok. It looks to me like the cabin burned. There's still a fire on the wing. Since the cabin is intact I'm guessing and hoping they got out before it burned. 1 Quote
exM20K Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 8 minutes ago, aviatoreb said: That seems right - it looks like a prop that was feathered and not spinning at time of impact for the reasons you said. So most likely a rocket. Have we ever seen this before - the skins around the fuselage are stripped away - was that the crash or did the firemen do that saving the passengers? The general shape of the passenger compartment looks in tact - I hope. hopefully they will come through ok. https://www.cbsnews.com/dfw/news/small-plane-crashes-on-a-street-in-carrollton/ looks like the fire is responsible for the skins. Is the oil access door in the right place for a rocket? Quote
milotron Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 The NACA intake sure looks like a TSIO360, not a Rocket. Edit...or is that a dent/damage to the cowl? Quote
Will.iam Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 The wx here in dfw area has been nasty all weekend and today they are lucky to dead stick it with the low ceilings we have been having and survived. Quote
hammdo Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 I live about 2 miles from the accident. My old home is 1/2 mile from where it crashed. I also started a thread when I heard about it… more pics, live atc link, news links… -Don Quote
Rusty Pilot Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 Glad to see they survived. It looks like the pilot kept his focus and continued to fly the plane as long as he could. Quote
Fly Boomer Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 Pretty fast airplane -- usually 180-200 knots groundspeed. Also pretty busy: 09/15 1 day Addison Tyler Addison 09/26 9 days Addison Elmdale Dalhart Stevens Field Dalhart Addison 10/19 3 days Addison Tyler Sugar Land San Antonio Austin Addison 11/14 1 day Addison Abilene Addison 11/23 5 days Addison Corpus Wharton Addison 12/01 1 day Addison Tyler Addison 12/08 2 days Addison Sugar Land San Antonio Austin Addison 12/12 1 day Addison Abilene Addison Quote
A64Pilot Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 The fire in the video is interesting, seems to come from inside of the fuselage and not from engine area or wing fuel area and seems small. Of course fuel could have come into the fuselage from the tanks, but that’s a little unusual? I’ve been burnt, actually hot hydraulic fluid so not fire burnt, but it sucks, I hope they weren’t burnt. Nothing else is that painful and slow healing. It’s possible for stops on a prop to be broken so a blade is feathered on a prop that doesn’t feather, but I bet lunch that props feathered, not from damage Quote
LANCECASPER Posted December 13, 2022 Report Posted December 13, 2022 50 minutes ago, Fly Boomer said: Pretty fast airplane -- usually 180-200 knots groundspeed. Also pretty busy: 09/15 1 day Addison Tyler Addison 09/26 9 days Addison Elmdale Dalhart Stevens Field Dalhart Addison 10/19 3 days Addison Tyler Sugar Land San Antonio Austin Addison 11/14 1 day Addison Abilene Addison 11/23 5 days Addison Corpus Wharton Addison 12/01 1 day Addison Tyler Addison 12/08 2 days Addison Sugar Land San Antonio Austin Addison 12/12 1 day Addison Abilene Addison Flying that often may have been the difference between a bad day and a really bad day. 4 Quote
LANCECASPER Posted December 14, 2022 Report Posted December 14, 2022 https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/new-video-shows-bystanders-coming-to-rescue-after-plane-crash/3148347/ 3 Quote
aviatoreb Posted December 14, 2022 Report Posted December 14, 2022 4 hours ago, LANCECASPER said: https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/new-video-shows-bystanders-coming-to-rescue-after-plane-crash/3148347/ Wow - that is a stunning display of the best of humanity - to run up to and climb on to a visibly burning airplane - that who knows could explode into a massive fire any second so scary risk of life and limb - to save some stranger people. 8 Quote
Wildhorsetrail Posted December 15, 2022 Report Posted December 15, 2022 Wow, if I ever crash, God forbid, I hope it's in Texas where people act, not just watch. 4 Quote
WSMD Posted December 16, 2022 Report Posted December 16, 2022 Hello all, I am the passenger of N231GZ - M20 Rocket Engineering conversion to turbo prop inner-cooled. I'm not a pilot so I only know a little bit. Pilot/ Physician is instrument rated for 22 years. Trained in a Mooney because it was built in Texas and could be converted by Rocket. We travel throughout Texas doing exams for the state for work injuries. Hangered in Addison field for 22 years. IFR coming home from our monthly trip to Abilene, 5 mile final 2000 ft. locked onto the ILS, engine failure. Pilot tried multiple things to restart with no success, then just "flew the airplane". Couldn't see the ground until about 400ft. and saw the street/ trees, not a very hard landing until we were lunged forward. Prop was feathered before we crashed. We now know we hit the light pole, but I think the left wing was still attached and barely on fire when we were pulled from the plane. Neither of us lost conscience, the handle fell off inside and I was unable to open the door. Someone came up to the window and we told him to pull outer latch and they got us out. I am now home with broken radius, repaired with surgery, broken facial bones will not require surgery. Pilot fractured L2 that severed nerve, had surgery and nerve will heel in 18 months but may have a drop foot, and stitches in forehead. He should be home in a few days. If he weren't such an amazing pilot with a ton of experience and God watching over us, we wouldn't have made it for sure! 35 6 Quote
hammdo Posted December 16, 2022 Report Posted December 16, 2022 We wish you the best. Keep us posted… -Don Quote
DonMuncy Posted December 16, 2022 Report Posted December 16, 2022 We appreciate your letting us know. The best to both of you. Quote
hais Posted December 16, 2022 Report Posted December 16, 2022 Wish you both a speedy recovery, and thank you so much for sharing details. Quote
Pinecone Posted December 16, 2022 Report Posted December 16, 2022 Thanks for sharing. Good luck on both of your recoveries. Quote
aviatoreb Posted December 16, 2022 Report Posted December 16, 2022 9 hours ago, WSMD said: Hello all, I am the passenger of N231GZ - M20 Rocket Engineering conversion to turbo prop inner-cooled. I'm not a pilot so I only know a little bit. Pilot/ Physician is instrument rated for 22 years. Trained in a Mooney because it was built in Texas and could be converted by Rocket. We travel throughout Texas doing exams for the state for work injuries. Hangered in Addison field for 22 years. IFR coming home from our monthly trip to Abilene, 5 mile final 2000 ft. locked onto the ILS, engine failure. Pilot tried multiple things to restart with no success, then just "flew the airplane". Couldn't see the ground until about 400ft. and saw the street/ trees, not a very hard landing until we were lunged forward. Prop was feathered before we crashed. We now know we hit the light pole, but I think the left wing was still attached and barely on fire when we were pulled from the plane. Neither of us lost conscience, the handle fell off inside and I was unable to open the door. Someone came up to the window and we told him to pull outer latch and they got us out. I am now home with broken radius, repaired with surgery, broken facial bones will not require surgery. Pilot fractured L2 that severed nerve, had surgery and nerve will heel in 18 months but may have a drop foot, and stitches in forehead. He should be home in a few days. If he weren't such an amazing pilot with a ton of experience and God watching over us, we wouldn't have made it for sure! Thank goodness for both of you. And kudos to the pilot for superbly handling a horrible situation. And of course to the good citizens who pulled you out. WOW. 1 Quote
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