Charles Packer <
[email protected]> wrote:
At the time that the crash was reported to have happened the ceiling
was about 600 feet as recorded at DCA. It was about that time that
I happened to check the relevant Weather Service web page after
noticing the totally featureless gray sky visible from our windows
here in Northeast D.C. I have been annoyed that the published
photos are all from one angle from the rear so that you can't see
what happened to the plane's engine.
There are two photos of the front of the plane in today's Washington
Post. The plane is on the ground, so the view isn't blocked by the
tower.
I'm no expert on plane engines, but it's pretty obvious that that
plane will never fly again. I'm not sure whether the front half of
the engine is missing or whether the engine got very compressed.
I'm surprised that there's as little damage as there is, to the plane
and to the two people in it, given that it must have decelerated from
cruising speed to zero in a fraction of a second. Apparently the main
medical complaint by the people in the plane was hypothermia. (The
rescue took several hours, and it was a chilly night.)
The newspaper says that the pilot -- or at least someone with the same
name and same birthday -- has wrecked a plane before.
At Chessiecon, the lights in the con suite flickered shortly before I
left. Unfortunately, I didn't make note of the time. I wonder if it
could have been due to the crash even though Hunt Valley is 38 miles
(61 km) from Gaithersburg.
--
Keith F. Lynch -
http://keithlynch.net/
Please see
http://keithlynch.net/email.html before emailing me.
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