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February 06, 2012
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Aviation News

 

Man, Dog Rescued After Plane Crash

A man and his dog are safe Friday evening after the Coast Guard rescued them following a plane crash on Montague Island in Alaska. While making his approach to a grassy Montague Island landing strip located southwest of Valdez, the pilot of a Cessna 182 experienced sudden engine failure. The craft's nose wheel caught hard in the ground, and his plane flipped hard over. A Cessna 182 lies crumpled in the grass near a landing strip on Montague Island, southwest of Valdez. The Cessna crashed when the engine suffered a malfunction, the nose wheel caught and the plane flipped hard over. The craft's occupants, a pilot and his dog, escaped harm and were transported safely to Valdez.

Both the pilot and his lone companion, a search and rescue dog in-training buckled safely into the next seat, were able to evacuate the cockpit of the Cessna.  At approximately 2:20 p.m, the Coast Guard's North Pacific Search Command here received reports from both the Cessna's Electronic Position Indication Radio Beacon (EPIRB) and it's Emergency Location Transmitter (ELT). An HH-60 Jayhawk rescue helicopter from the forward-deployed support facility in Cordova was on scene twenty minutes later.

A Coast Guard air crewmember escorts the pilot of a downed Cessna and his dog toward a waiting HH-60 Jayhawk helicopter on Montague Island Friday. The Cessna crashed when the engine suffered a malfunction, the nose wheel caught hard and the plane flipped over hard just short of the island's landing strip. "The pilot and his dog were seen on the beach a short time later by a Good Samaritan in the vicinity aboard the fishing vessel Servant," said Coast Guard Lt. Larry Quedado, one of the Jayhawk's pilots. "Fortunately, the weather at the time was favorable." Both pilot and dog were transported to Valdez, with no reports of injuries. The cause of the engine malfunction is unknown.

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Did You Know?    
 
 
Commercial pilots must be at least 18 years old and have a minimum of 250 hours of flight time
190 hours under Part 141, including 100 hours in powered aircraft, 50 hours in airplanes, 100 hours as pilot in command (of which 50 hours must be cross-country flight time). They must hold an instrument rating (or be restricted to flying for hire only in daylight, under visual flight rules, within 50 miles of the originating airport). They may fly for hire in accordance with applicable parts of the Federal Aviation Regulations.

 


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Aviation Lawyers.com Terms

 


Today's Terms

VASI

Definition:
Visual approach slope indicators provides visual descent guidance during the approach to a runway. The lights are arranged in bars and vary in number from two to 16.

Tail Stall

Definition:
The horizontal stabilizer balances the tendency of the nose to pitch down by generating downward lift on the tail of the aircraft. When the tail stalls, this downward force is lessened or removed, and the nose of the airplane can severely pitch down.

Airport Advisory Area

Definition:
An area within 10 statute miles (SM) of an airport where a control tower is not operating, but where a flight service station (FSS) is located. At these locations, the FSS provides advisory service to arriving and departing aircraft.

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Aviation Legal Hot Topics

 
Topics Related to Aviation Law:

  • Small Plane Crash Icing
  • Pilot Errors & Negligence
  • Maintenance Problems
  • Violating FAA Regulations
  • Structural Design Problems

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Minnesota Aviation Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Aviation attorney you should contact our Aviation Attorney as soon as possible:

  • Andover
  • Anoka
  • Austin
  • Bemidji
  • Brainerd
  • Burnsville
  • Circle Pines
  • Cottage Grove
  • Eden Prairie
  • Elk River
  • Faribault
  • Hastings
  • Lakeville
  • Mankato
  • Minneapolis
  • Moorhead
  • Osseo
  • Owatonna
  • Rochester
  • Saint Cloud
  • Saint Paul
  • Stillwater
  • Winona
 


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