Menu Sign In Contact FAQ
Banner
Welcome to our forums

Missing single engine aircraft N Sea D-EDDH

Airborne_Again wrote:

The Cessna 172 has a “BOTH” tank selector position. It is the required setting for takeoff and many pilots leave it there for the whole flight.

And there is absolutely no reason not to leave it on BOTH during normal operations. The German BFU will probably conduct an accident investigation. There’ll also be a preliminary (summary) report in a couple of months.

Germany

Thomas_R wrote:

And there is absolutely no reason not to leave it on BOTH during normal operations.

There are absolutely valid reasons to not leave it on BOTH during normal operations, but that’s a different discussion.

ESKC (Uppsala/Sundbro), Sweden

Airborne_Again wrote:

There are absolutely valid reasons to not leave it on BOTH during normal operations, but that’s a different discussion.

Maybe if you fly a 172 from 1959, which was not the case here…

Germany

Thomas_R wrote:

Maybe if you fly a 172 from 1959, which was not the case here…

I’ve extensively flown 172s from a number of years, including one from 2006. But if you want to start a discussion why there – in your opinion – is no reason to use fuel selector settings other than BOTH, please start a new thread.

ESKC (Uppsala/Sundbro), Sweden

ASN updated: Floating body found by ship at Barrel-Oilfield seven days later.

Other comments:

The available flight history for the aircraft on Flightaware shows that it was used almost exclusively for local flights in the Hamburg area, so a flight across the North Sea was very much out of the ordinary.

I wonder what his destination was considering he was 6 hours into that flight and Sumburgh closes at 1615 on a Saturday?

Administrator
Shoreham EGKA, United Kingdom

I don’t think he had a destination, at least not one with a runway. It really looks like pilot incapacitation and the airplane kept going on autopilot or suicide.

Peter wrote:

Floating body found by ship at Barrel-Oilfield seven days later.

That refers to a much older accident:

https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/68256

LSZH(work) LSZF (GA base), Switzerland
27 Posts
Sign in to add your message

Back to Top