>From Jim and David Goodman, who was the other person in the plane.


See N64KR at http://KRBuilder.org <http://krbuilder.org/>  - Then click on the 
pics 

See you at the 2010 - KR Gathering in Richmond, Ky - I39

There is a time for building and a time for FLYING and the time for Flying has 
begun.

Daniel R. Heath - Lexington, SC



From: Jim Morehead [mailto:kr...@sbcglobal.net] 






Dan,



Sure pass this along, the best way to learn is through other peoples mistakes.



I'm doing great.  The bruising is going away really fast.  There has never been 
any pain from the accident, just from the breathing tube down my throat during 
surgery.



I went to the airport to look at the KR, it is not in good shape.  The biggest 
problem is the firewall.  I never took off the cowl but the cowl is pulled away 
from the fuselage over 1/2 inch.  I will not get it home until next week, then 
we will open things up so we can see what is going on.



Got your bags packed yet for the KR Gathering?  Have a great time.  Give 
everyone a big Hello for me.



Jim Morehead



From: David Goodman [mailto:dgood...@verticalavionics.com] 



Dan,

I sent this narrative to another KR builder to be put on the KR net so everyone 
could see the lessons learned from this mishap, but it has not yet made it 
there.  I was in the plane with Jim.

I think it important to get the word out to people so they can (hopefully) 
avoid the pitfall that reached up and grabbed Jim and I.  I am cc?ing Jim on 
this e-mail so he aware.

 N522PC was a standard KR-2 with a Revmaster VW engine.  The h-tail had small 
extensions on it for stability, and had a trim tab that worked extremely well.  
The instrument panel was a purely VHF-only set-up, with traditional steam 
gauges, and it was well thought out.  The workmanship was first rate, and 
actually made me a bit envious.  I had 12.6 hours on this airframe, and it flew 
great.  The total time on the plane was around 25 hours.  2PC flew very well, 
with a stall speed around 53 MIAS, and was very easy to trim up and fly hands 
off.

LESSONS LEARNED UP FRONT:

1.      NEVER, EVER RESET THE NOSE FORWARD ON A BOUNCED LANDING.  The result 
will be a landing on the nose, with a high probability of nose gear collapse.  
My first ?flight? in N191PZ (My own KR-2S) was inadvertent on a high speed taxi 
test, and I did what Jim did, but not as severe.  The result in my plane was a 
destroyed nose gear that had to be replaced.  I probably only moved the stick 
forward 1/4?, but it was enough to bring the nose through.  Jim moved the stick 
more than that and we came through much faster as a result.

The proper procedure for a bounced landing is to add full power and hold the 
nose attitude.  If you contact the ground again, you will still be in a good 
nose high position.  If not, you are flying again and can execute a go around.

2.      FLY THE PLANE TO STOP.  I do not know if Jim got the brakes on or not, 
but I do know if we had more speed on when we flipped, we would probably have 
been killed.

3.      WITH TWO PEOPLE IN THE KR, UPSIDE DOWN THERE IS NO ROOM TO MANEUVER.  
Our feet were stuck under the instrument panel when we came to rest.  I managed 
to get mine free of the panel, but once I got my belt off, there was almost no 
room to maneuver under the plane.  I might have been able to get out of the 
plane eventually, perhaps a ten minute effort, but if the plane had been on 
fire it would have been doubtful I could have gotten out before the flames 
reached the cockpit.

4.      BRIEF EVERYTHING YOU ARE GOING TO DO BEFORE YOU FLY.  Even if you are 
flying by yourself, go over what you will do in an emergency.  We did this, and 
having a plan in your mind when things go bad will help you solve the problems 
as they present themselves.

5.      BRIEF UP, STRAP IN, AND THINK THROUGH WORST CASE SCENARIOS.  Jim 
suffered some bad lacerations to his face and forehead.  When the plane 
stopped, I checked myself, hands move, feet move, nothing feels broken.  I was 
hanging with my head about three or four inches from the ground.   I looked 
over at Jim and his face was in contact with the ground /canopy.  When I 
examined the aircraft in the hangar that afternoon, Jim?s lap belts were about 
eight inches longer than mine.  While Jim is a bit thicker than I am, I did 
strap in very tightly using the seat straps first, then the shoulder harness.  
My lower back was immobile.  Additionally, when I saw the plane begin to tip, I 
pulled my hands to my lap and tucked my head down and full forward.  Maximize 
your survival chances by thinking out what you will do, then keep thinking as 
events unfold.

Narrative:

The day of the mishap, Jim and I flew for 1.1 hours in the morning, with him 
flying from the right seat most of the time.  We did nine landings, and other 
than a tendency to line up right and accept right drift in close, Jim flew very 
well. In fact, it was clear to me he was ready to fly from the left seat based 
on how he had done on the right, so we talked about line-up, power, missed 
approaches, and bounced landings.  I stopped just before we got in and said a 
quick prayer, ?Lord, thank you for the great day to go flying, give us a safe 
flight, and watch over us, amen.?  We hopped in and were airborne ten minutes 
later.

 Takeoff was unremarkable, and we headed to the downwind.  The first pass was 
tight on the field so we went around.  Jim did drop the nose on the first pass 
at about 400 feet and I talked to him about it as we climbed out, that he had 
to not let the nose drop drastically on approach or on final.  This was 
something we had talked about the day before.

On the mishap approach, Jim had the lineup well under control.  We were a bit 
high, but KRIU is 3800 feet long, so landing 1000 feet down was not something I 
was worried about.  As we came in and began to flare, Jim had the plane well 
under control and it looked like an excellent first landing was in the works.  
Touchdown was at about 68 MIAS, well within the norm for 2PC.  The plane 
bounced, my estimate was five to eight feet, and I called for power to remind 
him to get power on the plane.  I saw Jim move the control stick forward in my 
peripheral vision.  Immediately, the nose came through and we hit nose-first on 
the runway.  A second bounce followed and the nose gear collapsed.  The prop 
disintegrated and we began a fast drift to the left side of the runway.  I 
called out ?brakes!? which Jim later said he heard, but we went off the asphalt 
to the left of the runway edge at about a 15 degree angle at about 40 MPH .  
Approximately 30 feet later the nose dug in and we flipped over onto the 
plane?s back.  The flip itself was slow, taking about 2-3 seconds (by my count 
and a pilot eyewitness) which took a good deal of the energy off the plane.  
The vertical tail cracked on impact but did not break off, and the canopy and 
turtle deck broke.  The plane slid another foot to two feet by the gouges on 
the ground.  When the plane stopped, I was sitting upside down with about three 
to four inches between my head and the ground.  Jim?s face was in contact with 
the ground/canopy bow on his side of the plane.  He was cut and bleeding from 
the point his head was in contact, but he was conscious and talking.

 Rescuers lifted the plane off us using the tail.  It only took one person.  
The others helped me out first, then Jim came out my side.

 The first rescuer showed up 40 seconds after we stopped.  The fire department 
was there in two minutes.  One minute after that the paramedics called for an 
AIRVAC for Jim due to the injuries he had to his face and head.  The helo 
called ?two minutes out? a minute later, and landed after a 360 of the field.  
Jim was in the helo and on his way to UC Davis eight minutes after we came to a 
stop on 2PC?s last landing.

 If you are involved in a mishap, NTSB and the FAA will want to talk to you.  I 
had called the FAA before my own ambulance ride, and the NTSB called while I 
was in the ambulance.  Talking to them is another story for another time.

 Jim?s injuries, after flipping a KR were:  Facial lacerations, closed by 3 
hours of plastic surgery at UC Davis.  They did an awesome job by the way.  He 
looks like he was in a bar fight, but might have won.  He also suffered various 
lacerations and bruises, mostly to his arms.  I am sure he is sore, but the man 
is made of iron!  If you see him in the future, I strongly recommend you NOT 
arm wrestle with him.

 My injuries:  Bruised shins (Jim?s plane is a bit small for me) from the 
instrument panel, some good cuts to my knuckles on the left hand and a possible 
jammed left pinkie and ring finger.  Both ears got cut as my headset 
disintegrated around my grape, and I had a few scrapes (no cuts) to my scalp.  
There are a few bruises / cuts on my right arm, and my shoulders are sore, most 
likely from the fast stop and hanging upside down (Jim?s straps are the 
narrower variety.  My straps on 191PZ are the four-inch size, which may or may 
not have saved the bruising to our shoulders).  I have had a few headaches, 
which are coming from the strained muscles in my neck and shoulders.

I hope this short overview answers some questions on what happened.  If you 
have questions, feel free to call, 360 678 1602.  You may include my phone 
number if you forward this to the KR net.  As a pilot, builder, mishap 
investigator, and EAA chapter president it is critical to me the word gets out.

 Dave "Zipper" Goodman
















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