[NSRCA-discussion] Stupid accident

John Pavlick jpavlick at idseng.com
Sun Aug 23 20:53:18 AKDT 2009


Been there done that. But only once... so far...

John Pavlick
http://www.idseng.com
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ronald Van Putte 
  To: Jim Quinn ; General pattern discussion 
  Sent: Saturday, August 22, 2009 5:50 PM
  Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Stupid accident


  My favorite "trick" is to neglect to attach the aileron servo connections if I am disturbed while assembling the airplane.  Consequently, John Fuqua asks me to "wiggle the sticks" before carrying the airplane out; it's saved my airplane twice already.


  Ron VP


  On Aug 22, 2009, at 4:44 PM, Jim Quinn wrote:


    Wow! I saw these planes at Toledo and the Nats! I'm really sorry. They were/are beautiful trophy winners in Toledo. I agree with Don, make a routine and stick with it. A good budfdfy of mine recently had 9 stitches from a mini electric (smaller than a 1/2 glow) when his throttle went to high, he grabbed the wing and the plane spun around and struck his hand. 
     
    Jim Quinn 





----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    From: "Atwood, Mark" <atwoodm at paragon-inc.com>
    To: General pattern discussion <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
    Sent: Saturday, August 22, 2009 2:45:03 PM
    Subject: [NSRCA-discussion] Stupid accident


    Hey All,



    Had a bad morning this morning because I got careless, and because I altered my normal habits. I normally have my neck strap tucked into my shirt starting the airplane, but this morning I simply clipped it onto the Tx while it was sitting on the ground.   Started my primary Black Magic, had it sitting on idle, picked up my Tx and somehow turned the Tx funny such that the strap bumped the throttle…enough to make the plane jump forward startling me.  In the split second that I moved to catch it, the strap moved the throttle higher and before I could recover it, it slammed the wing into the table next to me hard enough to snap the entire fuselage into two pieces.  



    I was very fortunate that no one was injured and that no other equipment was damaged, but I was crushed to watch (in slow motion of course) such catastrophic damage occur to the plane.  They’re just not meant for that type of abrupt side load.



    Anyhow, just wanted to throw out the warning.  I’ve picked up my tx 1000 times without incident, but seldom do I have the strap attached.  Just not my routine. But one odd movement can make things go VERY wrong, VERY fast.  Be careful, be methodical, and don’t change your habits.



    Mark

    PS, probably repairable over the winter.  Fuse is in 2 pieces with a lot of damage, and the wing that hit is pretty messed up.  It’ll be a project for sure.  

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