Posted on 11/11/2013 11:45:36 AM PST by george76
Plane crashed around 4 p.m. after reporting engine trouble
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Dr. Perry Inhofe was an orthopedic surgeon in Tulsa. According to his biographical information on the Central States Orthopedics website, Inhofe attended Duke University and studied biomedical engineering and electrical engineering. He graduated in 1984.
Perry Inhofe then attended Washington University in St. Louis for medical school. He graduated in 1988 and did postgraduate training at Barnes Hospital in St. Louis and the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine.
(Excerpt) Read more at koco.com ...
Prayers for the Senator and his family. May the God of all comfort hold them close to His heart.
Tragic. May God be with your family, senator. :(
Ntoriuosly, senators and planes never seem to end well. Stevens, Obenshain, etc.
Heartbreaker...Sen. my deepest condolences.
TERRIBLE TRAGEDY.
My prayers are for Senator Inhofe’s family.
Twin turboprop, high wing loading, spoilers on top of wings instead of ailerons. As a result of the spoilers it handles differently at slow speeds and it cannot carry much ice because of spoiler cannot activate with ice on top of wing.
Mitsubishi Industries in Japan made it.
Has killed a lot of folks, both experienced and inexperienced pilots both.
Heinz (helo), Wellstone also come to mind.
What strikes me is that driving for 45 years I can only recall engine failure three times, but the number of hours on the road way excedes what I would experience casually in the air. Plus, not nearly the attention to maintenance. Two of the times were due to rubber belt failures which in a plane would have been proactively replaced. The third time, was due to an electrical fuse problem but the manufacturer (Chevrolet) already had a bulletin out.
Piston planes are dangerous.
Only fatality was Inhofe....this thing stinks to high heaven.
Have we moved into the age of ‘hidden’ assassinations????
Yeah but even with engine failure at 1100 feet the glide ratio should get you down okay. I don’t like this not one bit
Yeah but even with engine failure at 1100 feet the glide ratio should get you down okay. I don’t like this not one bit
Small planes always grab a fair share of deaths in any group that uses them frequently -
Inhofe was one who joined Ted Cruz in his “long speech”. About 6 weeks ago.
Hi,butter, always appreciate your hard work on the Obama origin threads. Best regards....
Inhofe has been in the forefront of calling out the bogus UN IPCC climate BS. May God grant him peace with the tragic loss of his son.
Although I have to fly in smaller planes at times I avoid them like the plague whenever possible. My Dad was a pilot and owned a wide variety of them but I never wanted to fly in them. I'm sure they are probably safer than I think but I'm a white knuckle flier anyway so I like the big planes.
Was him.
There’s that along with the 1100 feet which is higher than the typical air field pattern approach. And it was daylight which should give enough time to find something flat——especially in that FLAT country. Most of us practice dead-stick landings which ignore the engine(s) all together. If only one engine is out I’d prefer cutting the other also just to avoid crabbing, unbalanced torque, etc. There’s no real excuse for wadding up a plane under those conditions-—and that certainly raises suspicions.
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