6) MISHANDLED ABN. ACCIDENTS
About 6) MISHANDLED ABN.
An abnormal is any event in flight that is not considered normal, and that could cause a pilot to be distracted by it, or if not properly corrected, that could cause an accident. Mis-prioritizing and giving the abnormal more attention than aircraft control is often the result. If you are flying with two people up front, consider immediately declaring who is going to fly and who is going to deal with the problem. Sample problems include such things as GPS waypoint modification, attending to a system that is not normal, attending to a passenger that is needing attention, etc. Use a briefing such as; “You fly the plane, I am going to work on resetting the waypoints on this flight plan. You have ATC, you have the aircraft, etc.” An inflight emergency is of more serious nature and can still cause the distraction as mentioned above concerning abnormal. Depending on the severity of the abnormal, the situation may require that you turn the aircraft immediately towards an airport or suitable terrain. Declare an emergency if in contact with ATC. ATC will often ask if you want to declare an emergency. They cannot formally do this for you and this is their way of prompting you to do that. If landing at an airport with emergency services, ask for all men and equipment. This is a phrase that will alert the controller that you desire emergency services be scrambled to the field immediately. It sometimes takes 4 to 5 minutes to get emergency fire and rescue equipment loaded and enroute to the waiting area on the field. Start this immediately. There are three types of emergencies which will dictate the type of urgency that you should use.
- LAND as soon as practicable: You may want to continue on and land as soon as it is convenient for you, because your emergency is not time critical.
- LAND as soon as possible: Find the nearest airport with a runway and turn immediately that direction. Plan to land regardless of how inconvenient that location may be. The reasons for “land as soon as possible” include at minimum – any problem with fuel supply, airflow to the engine, combustion/ignition, smoke in the cabin, unresponsive flight controls, or unknown vibration.
- LAND immediately. You will be landing on something directly in front of you, or very near. It will likely not be an airport. The reasons for land immediately include, at a minimum; engine fire, cabin fire, fuselage fire, or uncontrolled smoke in the cockpit.
Beechcraft V-35B | N2UZ
January 25th, 2025 | Charlottesville, Virginia | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Vans RV-10 | N8757R
January 2nd, 2025 | Fullerton, California | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Cessna 310-D | N6979T
December 30th, 2024 | Peeples, Ohio | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Beechcraft A-36 TC | N36WP
December 19th, 2024 | East Aurora, NY, New York | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Tecnam P2008 | N298PM
December 12th, 2024 | Greenwich, Connecticut | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Vans RV-12iS | N702DP
December 6th, 2024 | Homosassa, Florida | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Robinson R-44 | N62CD
November 1st, 2024 | Iowa, Louisiana | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Lancair 360 | N510G
October 20th, 2024 | Cross City, Florida | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Beechcraft 95-B55 | N73WA
October 8th, 2024 | Avalon, California | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT
Fokker D.VIII replica | N94100
October 5th, 2024 | Red Hook, New York | 6) MISHANDLED ABN., C-FIT