jlfree25
Steelers Fan 4-life
Buddy of mine who flies for Eagle One was called in yesterday flying mechanics/inspectors to all the Trooper Helo locations for inspections - the Glide Slope indicator might of been the culprit (NTSA has already hinted to this in briefings.)
This is what has been said in briefings and is common knowledge;
Trooper 2 was flying back from Waldorf and got into heavy clouds/fog - the pilot went to fly by instruments and set a course to AAFB and called for an ambulance to meet them there to transport 2 patients to PG General. All appeared well until the helo dropped off of radar, last transmission was "I lost my glide slope."
This is PURE Speculation at this time;
The pilot believed he was flying correctly by instrument in the clouds/fog until he noticed the tree-tops or something was wrong with the glide slope indicator; he made the radio transmission and they crashed.
Flying with the glide-slope indicator in the proper position leads the pilot to believe everything is ok. If it is not working correctly the angle of entry to the LZ will be off, either to shallow (not too bad) or to steep (REALLY bad), apparently it was too steep as they came up short of Andrews. If there is one thing in this scenario to take any type of comfort, is the entire crew and passengers did not spend 30 seconds of pure hellish panicking with an inverted helo or spinning wildly out of control; we can only hope they did not know what happened.
One question I did ask was "why did it take them so long to find the crash?" There is an emergency beacon that transmits a radio frequency to help rescuers locate the crash. Unfortunately in the heavy fog they could not launch the search aircraft used to triangulate this rescue signal. So the search went by ground...
Regardless, it is a horrible tragedy and many lives are affected...
Thanks for the update. To everyone I started another thread as to an idea to help Tonya's family. Please check it out.