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ericsson16
22nd Jun 2019, 08:18
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-48729071

ve3id
22nd Jun 2019, 13:33
Looks like a repeat of this three years ago:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/may/23/hawaii-plane-crash-five-people-dead

tail wheel
22nd Jun 2019, 21:51
Oahu Parachute Center - there web site shows what appears to be a King Air A90 N256TA?

http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2019/06/beechcraft-a90-king-air-n256ta-fatal.html (http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2019/06/beechcraft-a90-king-air-n256ta-fatal.html)

Seems an odd choice of aircraft for parachuting? Only charge $20 per parachutist to 14K, subject to total 13 parachutists per flight.

Airclues
22nd Jun 2019, 21:59
From the BBC article;

It is not yet clear whether the plane was taking off or landing.

If it was carrying skydivers I would have thought that it was obvious!

ramble on
22nd Jun 2019, 22:28
From the BBC article;

If it was carrying skydivers I would have thought that it was obvious!

I am a bit testy Airclues so forgive me but there is nothing wrong with that BBC line - it is always possible they could have been returning with a problem that developed at low level or even takeoff. That will often catch out an inexperienced pilot who has not landed with a full load and a distracting problem.

You know the old saying about keeping your mouth shut and just looking the fool rather than opening it and removing all doubt...

machtuk
22nd Jun 2019, 23:16
The plane was an old Queenair, 11 deceased....so sad🙁

sms777
23rd Jun 2019, 02:20
Oahu Parachute Center - there web site shows what appears to be a King Air A90 N256TA?

http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2019/06/beechcraft-a90-king-air-n256ta-fatal.html (http://www.kathrynsreport.com/2019/06/beechcraft-a90-king-air-n256ta-fatal.html)

Seems an odd choice of aircraft for parachuting? Only charge $20 per parachutist to 14K, subject to total 13 parachutists per flight.

Are you serious?......$20 per parachutist doesn't even cover fuel cost.
"machtuk" If you read the link tail wheel posted, it clearly states aircraft type and POB.

pbwhi0
23rd Jun 2019, 02:51
lol...:ok:

pbwhi0
23rd Jun 2019, 02:54
From the BBC article;



If it was carrying skydivers I would have thought that it was obvious!

Sorry, should have quoted the reply I was commenting on.

lol :ok:

Fris B. Fairing
23rd Jun 2019, 04:38
Thread on R&N. Seems the aeroplane had a previous near-death experience.

https://www.pprune.org/rumours-news/622779-king-air-down-oahu.html

Dora-9
23rd Jun 2019, 18:42
The plane was an old Queenair
A Beech 65-A90 is a King Air, not a Queen Air.

tail wheel
23rd Jun 2019, 21:45
Are you serious?......$20 per parachutist doesn't even cover fuel cost.

Check their web site! I don't know how they make 13 x $20 = $260 total income cover more than a fraction of the operating costs. The A90s had -6 or -10 engines. Two cycles and taxi fuel would just about chew up the total income.

Squawk7700
24th Jun 2019, 00:33
Check their web site! I don't know how they make 13 x $20 = $260 total income cover more than a fraction of the operating costs. The A90s had -6 or -10 engines. Two cycles and taxi fuel would just about chew up the total income.

It’s not $20 per person, that is the discount for group bookings.

https://www.oahuparachutecenter.com/tandem-skydives

$200 for a tandem.

tail wheel
24th Jun 2019, 08:06
https://www.oahuparachutecenter.com/

Run the film clip:

"Every Saturday Lift Tickets to 14K will only be $20!!"

"That's right $20 to 14K"

"The only catch is all 13 slots must be filled"

Is a "Lift" not a ride to 14,000 feet?

Squawk7700
24th Jun 2019, 08:29
https://www.oahuparachutecenter.com/

Run the film clip:

"Every Saturday Lift Tickets to 14K will only be $20!!"

"That's right $20 to 14K"

"The only catch is all 13 slots must be filled"

Is a "Lift" not a ride to 14,000 feet?

Their standard jumps for qualified jumpers are $32 to 14k. Pretty good. With the current exchange rate, about 90 Australian pesos. The aircraft would have to come down vertically to make any profit out of that.

Stickshift3000
24th Jun 2019, 11:18
Their standard jumps for qualified jumpers are $32 to 14k. Pretty good. With the current exchange rate, about 90 Australian pesos. The aircraft would have to come down vertically to make any profit out of that.

At the current exchange rate USD$32 is less than AUD$48 (BYO chute...).

sheppey
24th Jun 2019, 14:27
https://www.ntsb.gov/_layouts/ntsb.aviation/brief2.aspx?ev_id=20160724X01920&ntsbno=WPR16LA150&akey=1

A similar stall/spin King Air accident. Fortunately all survived on that occasion. The aircraft entered an inadvertent nine turn spin and was only recoverable after the pilot feathered both propellers. Unusual recovery technique. Change of airflow over the tail surfaces maybe?

Fris B. Fairing
25th Jun 2019, 01:04
sheppey
It was the same aeroplane.

cooperplace
25th Jun 2019, 01:54
Yeah, and on landing was found to be missing the R horizontal stabilizer and elevator! As a 1967 aircraft, that might have been clue to retire it permanently.

Ixixly
28th Jun 2019, 10:59
In regards to profit, if it's a skydive centre then sometimes it's run to benefit members so they make their money on the Tandems and keep the costs super low for the solo jumpers with their own tickets.

Pretty tragic, hope they find a cause, RIP.