Ferry pilot ditches Cessna 310 in Pacific enroute California-Hawaii
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Ferry pilot ditches Cessna 310 in Pacific enroute California-Hawaii
Pilot OK.
From CNN:
From CNN:
Originally Posted by CNN
A 65-year-old man flying from California to Hawaii was forced to ditch his plane in the Pacific Ocean on Friday night 13 miles off the coast of Hilo after running out of gas, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
The man was flying a Cessna 310 twin-engine aircraft from Monterey, California, to Hilo when he radioed federal aviation authorities that he was 500 miles out and low on fuel, said Petty Officer 3rd Class Angela Henderson, a spokeswoman for the Coast Guard.
He estimated he would run out of fuel 100 miles short of the island, according to a Coast Guard statement.
The Coast Guard deployed rescue crews aboard a C-130 Hercules and an MH-65 Dolphin helicopter to intercept the pilot and escort his plane with the hope of coaching him to a safe landing, said Coast Guard Lt. Gene Maestas.
But the plane ran out of fuel, they said.
"The pilot ditched his airplane at approximately 5:23 p.m. and climbed out of the cockpit onto the wing," the Coast Guard said in a statement.
The rescue crews pulled the pilot out of the water and transported him to Hilo Medical Center for evaluation, Henderson said.
"He was reported to be coherent with no significant injuries," the statement said.
Authorities did not immediately release the identity of the man, though the aircraft was registered to American King Air of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, an airplane ferry service.
"We are waiting right now to hear from the Coast Guard about the aircraft," Pablo Bassabe, a company vice president, told CNN.
The man was flying a Cessna 310 twin-engine aircraft from Monterey, California, to Hilo when he radioed federal aviation authorities that he was 500 miles out and low on fuel, said Petty Officer 3rd Class Angela Henderson, a spokeswoman for the Coast Guard.
He estimated he would run out of fuel 100 miles short of the island, according to a Coast Guard statement.
The Coast Guard deployed rescue crews aboard a C-130 Hercules and an MH-65 Dolphin helicopter to intercept the pilot and escort his plane with the hope of coaching him to a safe landing, said Coast Guard Lt. Gene Maestas.
But the plane ran out of fuel, they said.
"The pilot ditched his airplane at approximately 5:23 p.m. and climbed out of the cockpit onto the wing," the Coast Guard said in a statement.
The rescue crews pulled the pilot out of the water and transported him to Hilo Medical Center for evaluation, Henderson said.
"He was reported to be coherent with no significant injuries," the statement said.
Authorities did not immediately release the identity of the man, though the aircraft was registered to American King Air of Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, an airplane ferry service.
"We are waiting right now to hear from the Coast Guard about the aircraft," Pablo Bassabe, a company vice president, told CNN.
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Video of the ditching, from ABC:
Plane Makes Emergency Landing Off Hawaii's Coast | Video - ABC News
Plane Makes Emergency Landing Off Hawaii's Coast | Video - ABC News
Join Date: Oct 2011
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13 miles short on a 2100 mile trip.....lol...
16 hours....can you imagine...you run the numbers, over and over, and over...'well I think I can make it'....
I'd be curious if he picked the right altitudes, tried long range fuel..etc....
16 hours....can you imagine...you run the numbers, over and over, and over...'well I think I can make it'....
I'd be curious if he picked the right altitudes, tried long range fuel..etc....
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It must have had a 160-200 gallon ferry tank installed. Be interesting to see how they plumbed it. If the aircraft had the 202 Gallon, 6 tank package, 2 tip, 2 aux and 2 nacelle, it is already a fuel system you need to stay on top of. The fuel return vent lines only going to the tips gives you a possibility to pump fuel overboard if don't manage it right.