Almost Died!

Guys, this is obviously not my usual content but it's an interesting (and scary!) story. If you have any pilot or ATC friends please share this with them. Thanks!

Пікірлер: 604

  • @yikes8399
    @yikes83998 ай бұрын

    I’ve got my instrument, and man it can be so easy to forget to cross check and get complacent with autopilot in your aircraft. Glad to see you were able to recover and make it out of this. It’ll act as a great reminder to cross check and make sure the autopilot is doing what it’s supposed to do.

  • @alfaeco15

    @alfaeco15

    8 ай бұрын

    Trust, but verify.

  • @lyingcat9022

    @lyingcat9022

    8 ай бұрын

    I like to think about my AP and Nav as a third set of flight controls. YOU are still flying the plane no different than if by hand. When you set or arm a mode you need to stay on the instruments to ensure it’s doing what you expected. You’re right it’s too easy to rely on the AP, set and forget. Very bad habit to fall into. It’s a skill all of its own to operate the airplane solely on AP and Nav.

  • @colty7764

    @colty7764

    8 ай бұрын

    you were banking in the 180 turn, and in a sustained bank like that you lose altitude . If you're at low altitude that can be dangerous. Or lead to a stall an spin.

  • @capchuckpriceutyoub
    @capchuckpriceutyoub8 ай бұрын

    Mark, thanks for sharing. First advice: file a NASA report to give you some legal cover. Second, remember that when in autopilot, always, always remain ahead of the plane, knowing what is supposed to happen next, and be ready to do that thing manually at all times. I experienced an autopilot mistake on approach to 25L at Phoenix (KPHX) with parallel arrivals. The autopilot failed to capture the localizer, and in fact turned the wrong way, toward the parallel runway. Because I was closely monitoring and anticipating, I was able to take over and correct it manually. You need to be ready to do that at every point the autopilot has to take action. Simple mental hack: pretend you are an instructor and your autopilot is your student.

  • @djagrarms7916
    @djagrarms79168 ай бұрын

    Glad your still with us mate👌🏼

  • @Av-vd3wk

    @Av-vd3wk

    8 ай бұрын

    you’re*

  • @djagrarms7916

    @djagrarms7916

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Av-vd3wk are you a grammar professional extraordinaire or just another mangy gun grabbing moron that gets their rocks off when someone in our community dies?

  • @paddylofoss

    @paddylofoss

    8 ай бұрын

    We have had about 15 dead here at french valley in the last 6 months and about half are from weather and letting the plane get ahead of them.

  • @betterl8thannvr
    @betterl8thannvr8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing your mistakes Mark, as a pilot and gun nut I like to hear this kind of forthrightness. I live in the PNW, and the terrain here could have made a mistake like this far more dire. Hopefully you also filed an ASRS (NASA) report, because as a fellow collector of F agencies they will happily use your honesty against you.

  • @Physhi

    @Physhi

    8 ай бұрын

    100% correct. A friend of mine did something similar and lost his license.

  • @Nunyobidne55

    @Nunyobidne55

    8 ай бұрын

    Yep, mark you have 10 days to file. Do it. The F agencies will screw you

  • @gdaddy5193
    @gdaddy51938 ай бұрын

    CFIT ... I started flying with a with a NASA test pilot and instructor 50 years ago. These guys seemed arrogant, but, they weren't. They were 100% confident in their abilities. I was kind of humbled by him. We were driving and missed a turn. He asked me why I didn't speak up. I said I thought he knew what he was doing. He said you'll never make it as my co pilot if I don't speak up "Never assume I know what I'm doing!" A lesson learned. Never become complacent, never assume and don't be afraid of asking for help. Two NASA astronauts flew a T38 into the ground and both died. It was pilot era. The NASA pilots were pissed at him. It's bad enough to make a mistake out of arrogance, but, he took someone else with him. When I moved back to New York and joined a flying club and as a student became the go to guy to fly in the right seat. People knew they could count on me 100% ... and if I turned down an opportunity to fly. The owner of the club would take the guy up for a check ride. He knew I saw things I didn't like. Stay vigilant and be safe.

  • @palerider7171
    @palerider71718 ай бұрын

    Worked in GA back in the 90’s and the seen lots of stuff. One pilot I knew flew out of ECP into cloud coverage commenced a banking turn, went inverted and then he pulled “up” … right into the gulf. He was an experienced pilot that unfortunately trusted his instincts for a few moments more than his instruments. Trust but verify! Be safe out there Mark.

  • @9mmthroatpunch211

    @9mmthroatpunch211

    8 ай бұрын

    Damn that's crazy how do you go upside down and not realize it probably happens to the best

  • @palerider7171

    @palerider7171

    8 ай бұрын

    @@9mmthroatpunch211 pulling a blanking turn gives your inner ear a sense of “gravity”” and without a horizon to focus on it easy to become disoriented. That why when your IFR you have to trust your instrument above your instincts.

  • @9mmthroatpunch211

    @9mmthroatpunch211

    8 ай бұрын

    @@palerider7171 ok I appreciate you making it make sense never been in a plane so I was curious thanks

  • @drewmortenson

    @drewmortenson

    8 ай бұрын

    @@9mmthroatpunch211 Yeah it's an unfortunate result of evolution, we didn't evolve to fly so the way our inner ear works it's physically unable to decipher between certain linear and rotational accelerations. That's also why motion simulators can make you feel like you're actually accelerating

  • @cscinc
    @cscinc8 ай бұрын

    Great share. I'm a retired 27-year radar controller from SDF and an instrument-rated pilot. I host the local IMC Club every month and stories like this are what I preach to avoid. I study a lot of NTSB accident reports and the common denominator in most is complacency. It is very insidious. You get really comfortable with something, it gets easy to skip steps. Remember when you first flew with a GPS and Autopilot on a coupled approach, you were probably checking and rechecking that you did everything right. After a while, things get comfortable and we start skipping the rechecking part. I really love my glass cockpit and all of the technology that it brings and it is so easy to enter and go. The great thing about an autopilot is that it frees the pilot up to monitor instead of having to actively center the needles. I won't fly if my autopilot is out and I am planning an IMC or night cross-country flight. I came close to landing at Walterboro once on the way to Charleston a couple of years ago. We were departing Tullahoma TN from the AOPA regional fly-in and I took off VFR because there were 350 other planes there and it was going to get complicated. We thought we could get a pop-up IFR if needed but by the time we needed it, we were way below the MVA and Center couldn't issue an IFR. We ended up landing at Cherokee County GA, filing an IFR flight plan and launching again. We used Walterboro as a destination because there was a nasty front hanging over Charleston and I wasn't about to fly anywhere around those red cells, especially IMC. We managed to get down below the cloud deck at Walterboro, canceled our IFR, and picked our way around the weather to Charleston.

  • @T0myTune
    @T0myTune8 ай бұрын

    This is really cool. I'm no pilot, but appreciate the humility and honesty. Very professional. Mad respect.

  • @WesleyMR_
    @WesleyMR_8 ай бұрын

    I like the Shorty12 in the Battlefield 4. Glad you're still here Mark!

  • @JohnDoe-gj4dv
    @JohnDoe-gj4dv8 ай бұрын

    Mark.....we wouldn't be the same without ya' ..... Don't let it happen again...........

  • @ericsfishingadventures4433
    @ericsfishingadventures44338 ай бұрын

    Good thing is you're still here to talk about it! Keep on making cool stuff!

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla19878 ай бұрын

    I'm a regular Blancolerio fan, so the aviation jargon is cool and welcome.

  • @LittleNoiseBoy
    @LittleNoiseBoy8 ай бұрын

    Useful, honest self-analysis, evidencing one of the most important qualities of a good pilot: humility. Thank you for sharing, Sir.

  • @brian70Cuda
    @brian70Cuda8 ай бұрын

    Dang it Mark! Not the thumbnail I want to ever see!! Glad to see you talking us through all of it.

  • @martinap1961
    @martinap19618 ай бұрын

    You made me realize something : Loss of com when very low like you were / no help from ATC that we take as granted !! Tx for the reminder !

  • @RealRickCox
    @RealRickCox8 ай бұрын

    I follow Juan and Dan - mostly to learn about what kinds of mistakes I need to be training for. I'm really glad you caught yourself before something went bad. IMC compounds all the other problems because there's no visual reference. The instruments are the only thing you can reliable go by... and when the autopilot isn't performing as expected... that makes for a very dangerous situation. Glad you made it and shared your experience.

  • @dessertfox3263
    @dessertfox32638 ай бұрын

    Glad you are still with us! In the process of almost crashing, you and the rest of us will learn some important lessons. Thank you for your humility in admitting the mistakes and I look forward to hearing the next episode after you figure out what actually happened. The value of this kind of content cannot be overstated.

  • @MrLinusunil
    @MrLinusunil8 ай бұрын

    It's worth so much sharing this, and I'm glad you did 🙏 also glad you're still here!

  • @metalmaniac788
    @metalmaniac7888 ай бұрын

    Just started the video, but I am glad that you are ok!

  • @cwinter90
    @cwinter908 ай бұрын

    Glad you're alive! I watch several aviation channels (not a pilot though). I am a skydiver however and I watch the JOINTHETEEM (AKA Friday Freakout) channel which shows issues skydivers have and they debrief what went wrong and how it could have been avoided, etc. Love learning all the ways to survive and things to avoid.

  • @ericfagerburg7448
    @ericfagerburg74488 ай бұрын

    A friend of mine flying back in to Greenville, SC at night in IMC got the low altitude alert from the controller. Luckily, he heard it and reacted immediately. Greenville is not flat like Walterboro. I appreciate you sharing. It's an important reminder. No matter how few or how many hours we have, we still have to check and re-check. Never take anything for granted! I'm about to have an autopilot installed so this is particularly useful for me. btw, I had previously watched your videos about Scott's little issue. I was impressed by how you handled that situation. When I just now learned you're a pilot I'm less surprised than I was. The attitude you bring to flying is the same as what I saw with Scott's situation. Big thumbs up from a fellow pilot!

  • @georgewashington9058
    @georgewashington90588 ай бұрын

    I like your attitude, always learning as a pilot. The best autopilot is you!

  • @jackbenningfield5431
    @jackbenningfield54318 ай бұрын

    Well said sir. Not a pilot but appreciate the humility and the willingness to share. You just might have saved someone else because of your video. Love your content and thank you again.

  • @riverbard8287
    @riverbard82878 ай бұрын

    Damn, that’s scary! As a private pilot myself, I’m vary glad you caught it in time. Stay safe!

  • @MechanicalMafioso
    @MechanicalMafioso8 ай бұрын

    Mike Patey has some great videos on GA do’s and don’ts several good videos. He’s unfortunately lost numerous friends in the last year or so do to stupid mistakes by the pilots. Great to see you’re still here with us!!!!

  • @stevenoberg4277
    @stevenoberg42778 ай бұрын

    “Keep him at 24,000. No, feet." From the movie Airplane.

  • @anomaly_echelon7994
    @anomaly_echelon79948 ай бұрын

    Flying through clouds is insane, one small mistake or a couple of instrument failures and you're one with the terrain before you know it... glad nothing happened this time round.

  • @kings101ish

    @kings101ish

    8 ай бұрын

    Not exactly, during instrument training we are taught to be able to maintain positive control even with equipment failures. In IMC you can maintain control of the airplane with just an altimeter and turn coordinator. It’s all about applying what you were taught and never becoming complacent, complacency kills.

  • @gregsteedley2705
    @gregsteedley27058 ай бұрын

    Glad you're still with us my friend. I think Paul and Sally would've been pretty upset otherwise. Stay safe and stay cool!

  • @rg3412
    @rg34128 ай бұрын

    Your assessment is so honest, it's refreshing to hear a man who is modest enough to recognize something went wrong.

  • @doncarlson8391
    @doncarlson83918 ай бұрын

    Fate is the Hunter......not this time Fate. Glad you made it OK. Blue skies and tailwind, my friend.

  • @connorrichardson1470
    @connorrichardson14708 ай бұрын

    Glad you are alive. On my solo long cross country during my private pilot training I got scolded over the radio. I had flight following and it was pretty much my second time ever talking to atc. I was reading back instructions and forgot to include my tail number, and the controller wasn’t having it lol. Thanks for showing your mistakes so others can learn man

  • @moonasha
    @moonasha8 ай бұрын

    #1 thing is complacency kills! As a new pilot in the clouds you'd be scanning that altimeter every few seconds. I'm not a pilot but I know some of those units only have one altitude knob that works in 100s of feet then switch to 1000s as you turn it, maybe that's what happened? or maybe it somehow left vertical speed mode without turning altitude hold back on, since you said you were on heading mode. Nice plane by the way

  • @Sniperboy5551
    @Sniperboy55518 ай бұрын

    I’m not a pilot, but I’m an aviation and gun nerd, so this was an interesting story. Glad you’re still here brother!

  • @sanderruscigno
    @sanderruscigno8 ай бұрын

    Keeping the blue side up isn't enough, and this is a very good example of it. Thanks for sharing and as a pilot I'm more than happy to see you sharing this scary experience.

  • @josegregoriogonzalez874
    @josegregoriogonzalez8748 ай бұрын

    Mark, Thank you for your honest recount of your event. It is really telling how a distraction can lead you to a difficult place. I am happy that this was just a scary moment for you. Well done.

  • @douglastisdale1582
    @douglastisdale15828 ай бұрын

    Hey Mark! I am down in Beaufort, just a few miles away. Great job owning this situation and sharing with us to help prevent this same thing with different results.

  • @Ellexis
    @Ellexis7 ай бұрын

    I've been flying for over five decades and I've never had a controller say to me what you were being informed of. I've made my share of mistakes though; it just comes with the profession of being a pilot. Glad you are safe and have learned from this, and for posting! You'll never make this mistake again.

  • @patrickmoan4086
    @patrickmoan40868 ай бұрын

    Extremely interesting story Mark. Well told. It goes without saying that I'm happy for all those who know and love you that you're safe and able to deliver the experienced-based lesson you've lived.

  • @matthewellisor5835
    @matthewellisor58358 ай бұрын

    "DON'T SINK" "TER'RAIN, TER'RAIN, PULL UP" Glad you kept the blue side on top of the ball; 'cause who else will make me slightly-less-heavy-than-defined-war-crimes launchers?

  • @ScottyScott70
    @ScottyScott708 ай бұрын

    Glad you made it through it brother. It is so easy to get distracted by ATC and working the radios and flying by knobs, you got to pay strict, strict attention to everything going on, listen to your body, your gut will tell you something ain't right before ATC will usually. Stay safe!

  • @stecar9122003
    @stecar91220038 ай бұрын

    First of all thank God that you are alive and unharmed as well that you didn't crash. I'm not a pilot and I have never flown a plane but I love aviation and I love to learn about it. I just happened to see the headline of your video so I watched it and I'm a new subscriber. Glad to see that you are a gun designer.

  • @thunderbolt513
    @thunderbolt5138 ай бұрын

    Well, the simplicity clearness and honesty posture of the narrator/active subject cought my attention. I'm a "bloncolirio-probable cause-jimmy's world viewer also. So, I'm joining the ride. Happy landings from Portugal Mark.

  • @mattstewart9148
    @mattstewart91488 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. I have my private. 220 hours. Getting ready to begin IFR training to get the rating. Good to remember: trust but verify! Glad you’re still here and alive!

  • @peepo-
    @peepo-8 ай бұрын

    The controller was definitely shittin' his pants when he didnt get a resposne as you kept descending shesh. Radio blind spots are no joke, thanks for sharing this scary yet humbling experience.

  • @dannyarcher6163
    @dannyarcher61638 ай бұрын

    That's great controlling, you owe him a beer! You've learnt an important lesson on automation.

  • @robertprice7246
    @robertprice72468 ай бұрын

    I am so glad You are still with us Sir. I was in instrument training, when I lost my medical, and had an incident similar where I had to turn around to get out of IMC. I Thank God, for me, I was still high enough to not have this situation to worry about but was still a "Sphincter Tightening Experience".

  • @ronandersen3336
    @ronandersen33368 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing Mark, I’m currently working on my IFR and flew autopilot for the first time, wow mind blowing, could see how you could get complacent. Taking your advice to heart, trust but verify! BTW, I’m 64yo, definitely started a little late in life. Thanks again

  • @vitaly6312
    @vitaly63128 ай бұрын

    Gun nut and pilot here. Crazy man. You never know what asshole tower can be around there sticking straight into the layer. From having deviated by 2-300feet, I’m wondering why those radio calls weren’t heard. I’ve been out of range as well but that was in the middle of absolute nowhere with very little reception low. This is why that instrument scan is so darn important. Even on autopilot. Glad you’re safe and here to share a story.

  • @smicksmookety
    @smicksmookety8 ай бұрын

    I was very intrigued when I saw "markserbu" underneath one of the many aviation videos I watch. Glad you're alive!

  • @mikemazzola6595
    @mikemazzola65958 ай бұрын

    Mark, thank you for sharing your “almost”. I bet nearly every instrument rated pilot has had at least one “almost”. I wouldn’t be here if my father’s “almost” was a crash and burn. He is a retired Naval Aviator. Watching this video reminded me of my “almost” which I described to a young private pilot sitting next to me a couple of weekends ago while he was serving as my safety pilot for practice instrument approaches to maintain my six HITS. My “almost” was a takeoff into a low cloud layer and low visibility. No, it was not a zero-zero takeoff. I have since developed a special check list that I keep in the Notes Ap of my cell phone. Takeoff into LIFR? Not before completing my special check list that amounts to “fly the airplane EXCLUSIVELY” with no allowed distractions until engaging heading mode on the autopilot of my Piper Arrow. None. No communication. No navigation. Just flying the AI on my G5 until 500 AGL.

  • @wYatt121509
    @wYatt1215098 ай бұрын

    Brother you ARE beloved. We care for you. While I am not a pilot I do follow you and your exploits. God bless you my friend, although you do not need to join him any time soon. I appreciate how you accept your learning opportunities. We ALL make mistakes but only the smartest among us accept, learn and move on with more wisdom. I am glad to have a brother like you. AGAIN God bless my brother, he watches over us all. Thanks for all of your inventions, ALL free peeps need 'em.

  • @nickhart5332
    @nickhart53328 ай бұрын

    Damn Mark! Glad it worked out well for you and you caught it before the ground did. Also, stoked I found your channel! Can't wait to order a 50 soon!

  • @donaldknapik2706
    @donaldknapik27068 ай бұрын

    I’m in the trades and your message about complacency speaks volumes. I’ll be using it in my classes.

  • @jrjr1273
    @jrjr12738 ай бұрын

    Mark, Very happy to see the way things went. Great video. Very happy that You are still with us. JR

  • @xELH0B0L0C0x
    @xELH0B0L0C0x8 ай бұрын

    Yea good to still have you with us brother, please upgrade that plane. I love learning from this channel ❤️

  • @JimmyArogen
    @JimmyArogen8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for publishing this and not being ashamed about it. 20 year old plane😂 Most people can not afford that, but then again, they won’t be flying IFR 😄

  • @mcdoctorglock

    @mcdoctorglock

    8 ай бұрын

    IKR?!? I'm used to flying in aircraft older than I am, and I'm in my 50's.

  • @shanebandfield3934
    @shanebandfield39347 ай бұрын

    Also a private pilot, gun enthusiast, and mechanical engineer in SC. Thank you for being open with sharing this. I think the primary mistake is comfort with autopilot in capturing that altitude. So glad you're with us, and hopefully this means you will not be lost in a recurrence of this scenario. And by sharing this, hopefully other pilots like me will be reminded to verify that altitude capture. Wonder how many lost in imc have been due to this very thing?

  • @rws0010
    @rws00108 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. Years ago I almost died flying cargo in twin Cessnas, and it’s something you never forget. I did notice your panel layout is abnormal. When you set up your new panel make your primary ADI/ALT/AIRSPEED cluster be directly in front of you and your secondary navs/gps over to the side. It’s not a good setup to have to be flying straight and level but turning your head to the right to see your primary instruments.

  • @SandrasSpicySpanishSalami
    @SandrasSpicySpanishSalami8 ай бұрын

    You absolutely are beloved my dude. Glad you are safe❤

  • @RK-kn1ud
    @RK-kn1ud8 ай бұрын

    I'm not a pilot, but I have experienced a situation where an item became lodged underneath a pedal in my car. After watching your footage and seeing the items on your "dashboard" I immediately thought of how such a situation could possibly create a hazardous situation like in the N388RA accident. I guess what I'm trying to say that we should always keep our cargo secure.

  • @mortcs

    @mortcs

    8 ай бұрын

    A Chinook helicopter doing commercial work crashed this year. The crash reports indicate that an iPad fell down under the pedals and the crew lost control killing all hands. I see a lot of KZread flying vids now with iPad being used for flight planning and backup instruments with sketchy mounts.

  • @TechGorilla1987

    @TechGorilla1987

    8 ай бұрын

    There was a helicopter crash recently caused by an iPad being lodged in a pedal.

  • @timrobinson6573

    @timrobinson6573

    8 ай бұрын

    That's how the Challenger space shuttle blew up. A box of Good N' Plenty got wedged behind the gas pedal.

  • @imdabeast100

    @imdabeast100

    8 ай бұрын

    @@timrobinson6573i thought it was a can of diet rite

  • @bertruttan129
    @bertruttan1298 ай бұрын

    I am a shooter and pilot too, fly VFR but fogs are regular popups in Florida so it gets hairy and scary sometimes! glad u made it.

  • @cchuckfm
    @cchuckfm8 ай бұрын

    Scary stuff! Glad you got things corrected, and good reminder to keep an eye on things!

  • @dmccollom1969
    @dmccollom19698 ай бұрын

    Dude! I am so glad things worked out. I like your videos and hope that you make many more videos.

  • @blancolirio
    @blancolirio8 ай бұрын

    Wow! Thanks for staying off the Blancolirio Channel on this one. That was close...Autopilot vertical mode awareness. Man, the fact you never heard those radio calls from atc is frightening. Thanks for Posting!!.

  • @markserbu

    @markserbu

    8 ай бұрын

    Juan, thanks very much for the comment! Yeah, my days of thinking that the autopilot has things handled are over. I'm glad that I just got a slightly scary lesson to teach me that I'd become complacent with it...could have been way worse. Agreed on the radio calls!

  • @jeffersonstatecrash

    @jeffersonstatecrash

    8 ай бұрын

    @@markserbuThat’s not a “slightly scary lesson” that’s a 15 seconds to live and dumb luck that you saved it situation. I’m a 150 hour PPL working on my instrument rating and yeah, this will stick with me. I too am so happy to hear this story from you rather than seeing it on Juan’s channel. We would never have known the real reason if you CFIT, after the post fire crash it would probably have been attributed to a likely medical issue. I had my own recent dumb luck how am I still alive moment caught on camera last month, working through it is a process. Take care of yourself.

  • @RK-kn1ud

    @RK-kn1ud

    8 ай бұрын

    Re-watch your content about N388RA and relate it to this video. It would be beneficial that history not repeat itself in a negative manner. It may not have been a factor in this learning experience, but it could have.

  • @steelcannibal
    @steelcannibal8 ай бұрын

    Glad you're ok man!

  • @af4043
    @af40438 ай бұрын

    Well done you for publishing this. Very brave. Can see by your expression the profound effect this had on you.

  • @kennondeal6798
    @kennondeal67988 ай бұрын

    I’m glad you mentioned the morbid aspect. Although tough to watch, there is a ton to be learned from others mistakes.

  • @crunchythumbsfpv367
    @crunchythumbsfpv3678 ай бұрын

    Wow!!! That was pretty close. Happy you lived through that experience. I have to say I do not even like driving in the fog let alone flying in the clouds.

  • @disgruntledegghead6923
    @disgruntledegghead69238 ай бұрын

    I don't typically "like" many videos, but you got one from me Mark. You really were much higher than some of the pilots flying over my little plot of land in west central Florida. As a "pilot" of quad rotor aircraft (I hate the word drone) I have to be aware of my four hundred foot ceiling and I've seen many manned aircraft well below that ceiling. Fortunately no incidents but... It works both ways guys!

  • @wayneroyal3137
    @wayneroyal31378 ай бұрын

    Glad you are alive. As you practice it’s a good technique to hold your hand on the stick even though Auto is flying. Be ready to disengage if the auto doesn’t capture as expected. In the flat areas you might be lucky, in terrain you might not be so lucky. Fly VMC approaches and fly with it. I have the same setup in our RV7, I also fly a corporate jet. Be confident not reckless. Practice practice practice. Good video..

  • @RustyPilotClub
    @RustyPilotClub8 ай бұрын

    Glad you made it! Thank you so much for sharing this event. Great info!

  • @danielayers
    @danielayers8 ай бұрын

    I think the main way to avoid this problem is to monitor your instruments, which I'm sure you were taught to do when training for your instrument rating.

  • @CHILDOFGOD1973
    @CHILDOFGOD19738 ай бұрын

    Glad you're okay. I'm not a pilot, let's just say we've had some close calls. Here in Walterboro South Carolina. Yeppers glad you're okay Mark

  • @lovetoflylovetofly3843
    @lovetoflylovetofly38438 ай бұрын

    Great video Mark, thanks for sharing your experience, scary indeed.

  • @JW23551
    @JW235518 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this! GA safety cannot be overstated or shared.

  • @lew66999
    @lew669998 ай бұрын

    Hey Mark, as a fellow instrument pilot, I'm glad I stumbled upon this video made by you, and not Juan.... Hard to keep your head on a swivel in the clouds, but go up and wring that damn autopilot out in VMC. See if you can recreate the situation, and how to correct it. Get your CFI to go with, and figure it out. We're always learning dude.... 👍

  • @frankrosenbloom
    @frankrosenbloom7 ай бұрын

    Fellow gun nut, private pilot, and Fellow South Carolina resident based in Greer. I can’t say I’ve never busted an altitude on an instrument approach. Those things really make you sit up and take notice. All you need is one communications tower or a hill, even in the low country. Thanks for sharing and so glad you did not become a statistic. Let me know if you’re ever near SC72 and feel free to come in and land for a cup of coffee and a chat. Cheers.

  • @markserbu

    @markserbu

    7 ай бұрын

    @frankrosenbloom Thanks for the comments! Yes, many times after hearing a couple of altitude alerts from ATC, the next one you year is "Radar contact lost". Glad I didn't get that one! I'm a FL resident, but I may take you up on your offer one of these days, thanks!

  • @hurtfeelings2346
    @hurtfeelings23468 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your experience, very valuable lesson! So glad your experience allowed you to recover so quickly.

  • @chrisnelson2581
    @chrisnelson25818 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing that, fellow pilot and I appreciate it. I have a trutrak (bendix king now i guess) in my plane too, and I can say from experience that while I am glad to have it, they are not the most reliable units out there. They really do need keeping an eye on pretty carefully. I also started the habit of flying one of my approaches by hand when I go out to log my practice approaches. I'm definitely gonna keep doing that after seeing your video. Again, thanks for sharing

  • @chuck7299
    @chuck72998 ай бұрын

    I didn't know you were a pilot too. As if you needed to be any cooler! And huge points to you for posted this. This can only serve to help others.

  • @GregiiFlieger
    @GregiiFlieger8 ай бұрын

    Thank-you for this video! Darwin is on your side! Glad you are with us and shared this! Keep safe!

  • @rnzoli
    @rnzoli8 ай бұрын

    Although separation from terrain is not the controllers' reponsibility, these guys are really focused on safety and near-misses like yours take a toll on their nerves, too. (I worked with ATCO's in training sessions, and even a well-played emergency scenario, such as an in-flight fire, a dual flame-out, a hijacking etc. got them very excited - while we were all on the ground, in a simulator.)

  • @clutchnshift1
    @clutchnshift18 ай бұрын

    Failure is a great teacher, but glad you didn’t fail beyond the point of no return. Welcome to the next round, Mark!

  • @hotrodcharliegreen
    @hotrodcharliegreen8 ай бұрын

    Glad your still with us Mark, should you have an untimely demise I will never get on the waiting list for a BFG 50 A. I fully understand how things can happen, when I flew with a pilot buddy he was constantly adjusting trim, checking instruments, checking his air space and he did that for the whole flight.

  • @rocketman374
    @rocketman3748 ай бұрын

    Really glad that worked out this time! 🥵 Always treat your autopilot like a crappy instrument student and watch it like a hawk! I've got over 10,000 hours, been flying for the airlines for 15 years now, and even in my airplane I treat my autopilot the same way. Autopilot doesn't relieve you of the responsibility to be actively involved in the flying process, your scan should never stop, ESPECIALLY single pilot!

  • @lknfly1166
    @lknfly11668 ай бұрын

    I don't know you but good to know that you're still alive, we learn from each other with humility therefore thank you for sharing your experience Captain, cheers from Paris! ;-)

  • @dinoc.5537
    @dinoc.55378 ай бұрын

    Close call. Lots to be thankful for this season. Glad you made it and were not on one of those other YT channels because you plowed it into the ground.

  • @ericcheatham7957
    @ericcheatham79578 ай бұрын

    One thing I have tried to do as an instrument rated pilot is keep not just the procedure proficiency, but also the hand flying proficiency. I flew with guys that flipped switches immediately after takeoff and didn't touch the controls again until they were on short final. One route I flew had 7 legs a night, KGUY-KWWR-KWDG-KTUL-KDFW-KOKC-KWWR-KGUY. At least three of those legs were hand flown, including all instrument vectors and approaches. Flying is a perishable skill, and instrument flying even more so. When it came time for the guys who were systems monitors and not pilots to prove they still had it, often times they'd fall short and have to redo the check flight. I also do a lot of chair flying, just thinking about the flight before I go fly it. I've got a few more hours than you, but I've found that's not nearly as important as the mindset you have while flight planning and actually flying the plane. Glad you figured the deficiency out before you flew into cumulus granitus 😊

  • @TheFalconJetDriver

    @TheFalconJetDriver

    8 ай бұрын

    I have know Airbus drivers that made the calls airspeed alive 80 knots cross check, V1, rotate, positive rate, Gear up, auto pilot 1 on!

  • @ChristopherKlepel
    @ChristopherKlepel8 ай бұрын

    I'm not a pilot but I always appreciate when people go over what went wrong. to help other people avoid the same mistakes/issues

  • @ardennielsen3761
    @ardennielsen37618 ай бұрын

    but if you were in Alberta and you set that GPS to 1600 feet, you would be 1800 feet underground... with the dinosaurs and T-rex's they print on drivers licenses, ground level is 3300 feet so 1600 feet flying altitude is 5000 feet. if they aren't running it wide open there loosing altitude most of the time but that's very hard on the engine.

  • @BLKAV8R2021
    @BLKAV8R20218 ай бұрын

    Wow, I heard this on ATC Live that day. Since the weather was bad, I decided not to fly and to fly on my cMSFS2020. I was listening to ATC Live and I heard they call out. I immediately went to Flight radar 24 to look for your airplane. I’m glade you made ok. Thanks for sharing. I actually flew to RBW the next day and recorded the flight.

  • @anchopanchorancho
    @anchopanchorancho8 ай бұрын

    You gotta get your radios checked, the transmit power from ATC at that airport is more than enough to reach you at 500+ feet. Checking LOS on an elevation map seems like there isn't much that would interfere.

  • @Hornet135

    @Hornet135

    8 ай бұрын

    That airport is non-towered so he was talking to Charleston approach.

  • @heywardmorgan7699
    @heywardmorgan76998 ай бұрын

    Wow, it could've been a little more than a stick a thumb in it situation, really happy to hear that's not the case. Hope you're able to keep it up in the future, your altitude, that is😂. All jokes aside, glad you caught it and are still with us.

  • @themanironmask
    @themanironmask8 ай бұрын

    You got extremely lucky, and thankfully you caught the error in time. I'm sure this will change how you fly and hopefully upgrade some of your instruments. Stay safe.

  • @skycop3855
    @skycop38558 ай бұрын

    Sending to all I know, glad you are with us, true professional and this video will save lives. Thank you.

  • @FullSendPrecision
    @FullSendPrecision8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. I'm 40, about a week away from my private checkride and will be working on instrument. I try and be really humble around the plane. I have a healthy fear of it.

  • @patrickoleary6379
    @patrickoleary63798 ай бұрын

    Glad you made it out the other end of that one Mark¡! I watch all the same people for the Education as well. I actually hated flying when I was young, and it was Air Disasters that started making me trust planes more. Then took experimental, And got super into how/why GA accidents happen. Glad you’re safe on the ground again. Mike Patey recently talked ab how he hopes one day we can say, Man what an awesome flight, was so nice and uneventful. Unfortunately, we get big heads and don’t talk ab the nice flights, but when we greased it in a 20kn Cross Component...Hahaha. Keep your wings level, and fig out how you got to that decent!!!

  • @MisterDeets
    @MisterDeets8 ай бұрын

    Complacency is dangerous in both piloting and also in handling firearms. Great video. Lets all stay safe in all our pursuits.

  • @CharlesRTinsley
    @CharlesRTinsley8 ай бұрын

    Well done Mark, it is very easy to transpose a number, then you run out of luck and altitude. Love and learn. You are letting many know how easy it is to make a mistake, check and recheck you settings. My dad taught me there old pilots, and bold pilots, but damn few old bold pilots. Great advice to anyone that is a pilot.

  • @NW-yy3pz
    @NW-yy3pz7 ай бұрын

    Glad you still with us and thanks for sharing. Looking for 1600 ft and ended in -1200 ft/min looks like you have selected a kind ofVS/ descent mode with tgt of 1600 ft/min instead of alt 1600ft alt …ofcourse its a just a maybe .😊