Trevor Jacob. Won't post the link because this guy is under investigation for purposely jumping out and crashing his plane for views. It seems extremely sketchy.
I think he was trying to get the prop. to stop windmilling.Quote:
Controls. What in Hades is he doing yanking the yoke forward and back when the engine quit. Very weird, not needed. Was it performance art?
CanyonAg77 said:
I can't adequately express how much I despise this turd.
Ruined a good airplane. Small airplanes are scarce. Endangered people on the ground. Created a hazardous waste problem for whoever owned the crash site.
I'm 99.9999999% sure this was staged. He makes money off YouTube, I have zero doubt he saw this as a great money making opportunity.
I am an inactive private pilot, and have been an airplane nut since birth. Here's what I see as suspicious.
1) Wearing a parachute. No one, and I mean no one, routinely wears a parachute while flying a small plane. The exception is anyone doing aerobatic training. As someone pointed out, these old planes are small, designed for the average male of 1940. You're going to have to at least remove the seat cushions. Unless you lose control, staying with a small plane with a dead engine is safer than parachuting, 90% of the time.
2) Cameras. Way too many cameras for a routine flight. Jumping with a selfie stick is the biggest red flag.
3) Altitude. These are little planes with small engines, maybe 50hp. It takes a long time to climb that high. No need to do so, unless you need the altitude to do something else....like parachuting.
4) "Have to jump out". No, he did not. The plane had an engine failure, but it only weighs about 900 pounds (including the pilot) and can glide long distances. I'm going to guess he was somewhere around 5,000 feet above ground level. With the engine dead, he could glide about 1.7 miles per 1000 feet elevation.
So any flat spot within 8 and a half miles radius (227 square miles) was within his glide range. The flat spot only had to be 500 feet long...less than 2 football fields. And the video plainly showed several dry river beds, directly below his plane. He might bend the plane a little, but it would be a rough landing, at worst.
Also, the stall speed of the aircraft is incredibly low...35 miles per hour. A Dalmatian dog can run faster than that. Even if he had to land in a wooded area, he could be flying incredibly slow, aim between trees to take impact on the wings, and have a very survivalable crash.
5) Door. The camera showing the cabin door clearly shows it ajar, before the engine quits. Almost as if he expected the engine to quit.
6) Controls. What in Hades is he doing yanking the yoke forward and back when the engine quit. Very weird, not needed. Was it performance art?
7) His rescuers. I didn't think I saw enough of them to call them farmers or not. But it appears to me they picked him up a long way from a farm. Unless it was a pot farm.
I don't understand why he would do that. Or whats the point of doing thatQuote:
The dude had fire extinguishers taped to his legs inside his pants!
Liar, liar, has to be prepared when the pants catch on fire.BQ_90 said:I don't understand why he would do that. Or whats the point of doing thatQuote:
The dude had fire extinguishers taped to his legs inside his pants!
BQ_90 said:I don't understand why he would do that. Or whats the point of doing thatQuote:
The dude had fire extinguishers taped to his legs inside his pants!
They are saying that there are videos of him flying airplanes without a parachute in spite of his claim in the video that he always wears a parachute while flying.CanyonAg77 said:
1) Wearing a parachute. No one, and I mean no one, routinely wears a parachute while flying a small plane. The exception is anyone doing aerobatic training. As someone pointed out, these old planes are small, designed for the average male of 1940. You're going to have to at least remove the seat cushions. Unless you lose control, staying with a small plane with a dead engine is safer than parachuting, 90% of the time.
Quote:
On April 11, the FAA told Jacob he is banned from flying for operating the single-engine aircraft in a "careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the life or property of another," according to a letter obtained by The New York Times.
"You demonstrated a lack of care, judgment and responsibility by choosing to jump out of an aircraft solely so you could record the footage of the crash," the agency said. "Your egregious and intentional actions on these dates indicate that you presently lack the degree of care, judgment and responsibility required of a certificate holder."
...
In their letter, the FAA claimed that he made no effort to contact air traffic control and never tried to restart the engine or look for a place to safely land.
After the crash, Jacob also "recovered and then disposed of the wreckage," the agency said.
What about the crash site?CanyonAg77 said:
Don't have time t find it right now, but I have seen assertions that the fake plane crash was faked. That a second pilot was hiding in the plane when he jumped, flew the plane down for a while, then took it to the airport and landed. The crash site was faked, etc. etc.
I think it is a correct theory.
I heard of him hiring a helicopter to get it out.CanyonAg77 said:
Helicoptered in and out
Quote:
The pilot, Trevor Jacob, agreed to plead guilty Thursday to a felony charge of "obstructing a federal investigation by deliberately destroying the wreckage of an airplane that he intentionally crashed in Santa Barbara County to gain online views," according to the U.S. Attorney's Office, Central District of California.
Jacob's pilot's license was also revoked by the Federal Aviation Administration, which used Jacob's Youtube video as evidence against him, in April.
...
The plea agreement states that in the weeks that followed, Jacob "lied to investigators that he did not know the wreckage's location," when in fact he and a friend had towed the wreckage using a helicopter to Rancho Sisquoc, then placed it in Jacob's pickup truck and took it to a hangar at Lompoc City Airport.
Jacob admits in the agreement that he then "cut up and destroyed the airplane wreckage," then "deposited the detached parts of the wrecked airplane into trash bins at the airport and elsewhere" with the intent of obstructing the federal investigations.
He also admitted in the plea agreement that his decision to parachute out of the plane was not driven by engine failure or lack of safe landing options.