July 3, 2005 Cirrus in the Water: Here's What Happened |
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(Ilan Reich's account of his June 30th Cirrus SR22 chute deployment, in his own words. Written July 3, 2005.)
July 3, 2005
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Ilan Reich |
| Photograph by Joe Planck
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Thanks for the huge outpouring of
support, good wishes and prayers from my friends. I was
deeply touched by everyones sentiments, whether from
reading the COPA website, listening to voice mails or
reading emails. I will try to answer each person
individually, but please understand if I dont.
I am writing
to answer the common questions on everyones mind and to
attempt to organize my own thoughts and emotions after
having gone through a very traumatic ordeal.
Many lessons
can be learned from my experience of surviving an airplane
crash, including:
Dont trust
anything the news media publishes. Various inaccurate and
misleading reports had me: inexplicably parachuting out of a
plane that already had its own parachute; losing control in
a dive; coming dangerously close to a nuclear reactor; and
activating the chute because of mechanical problems. None
of these is true.
Practice,
practice and more practice. Maneuvers like recovery from
unusual attitudes, deploying the parachute, shutting down
the plane after any emergency, should be instinctive. Quite
simply, when things go awry theres no time to consult a
checklist or the pilots operating handbook (POH). While in
retrospect I didnt do everything right, I did get all of
the important stuff right.
Dont fly a
single engine plane that isnt equipped with a parachute.
Although the chances of actually encountering an emergency
situation that is worthy of pulling the chute are probably
small to infinitesimal over the course of any given pilots
career, the penalty for not having a parachute is almost
certain death. Each pilot has to establish and evaluate
their own risk assessment criteria, but for me something
that has a greater than 50% risk of death, even if only 1%
of the time, is an unacceptable risk. Thats why I bought a
Cirrus in the first place.
* * * * *
Before I
describe in minute detail what happened, heres a brief
summary. On the afternoon of Thursday, June 30 I was
incapacitated by a short seizure while being vectored for an
instrument approach. When I became alert again, the plane
was descending at 204 knots, which is faster than redline
speed. Following normal procedure I was able to recover
from this unusual attitude; an instant later I chose to
activate the parachute. On the descent, I steered the
plane clear of a fuel tank farm, and crash-landed into the
water near Haverstraw, NY.
My injuries
are more severe than the cuts on the hand described in the
press. First, my back was broken by the impact of crashing
into the water. Thankfully I retain full body function and
have every reason to expect a complete recovery after
wearing a brace for the next month. Second, I have a benign
brain tumor, which has been growing undetected in the middle
of my brain for many years and was apparently the cause of
the brief seizure in-flight. Thankfully the tumor does not
affect my mental facilities in any way, and the risk of
future seizures is now being controlled by medication. In
the coming weeks I will be discussing treatment options with
various specialists: these include surgery or doing
nothing. In either event, it is fairly certain that my
flying days are over.
* * * * *
Now for the
details..
I departed
Lincoln Park, NJ at approximately 4:20 pm. My plane was
there for two weeks for its regular 50 hour inspection and
an assortment of squawks, including new spark plugs after
400 hours, replacement of the broken shear coupling on Alt
2, cosmetic work on the leading edges and wheel pants, and a
new fuel sender unit and gauge. The last item required
emptying the tanks and then refilling them so that the new
fuel gauge could be properly calibrated. This exercise
introduces air into the fuel lines, so we spent a lot of
time running the engine on the ground to ensure that all the
air was gone.
The
destination was my home base at Westchester County Airport,
NY (HPN): 35 miles and 12 minutes as the SR22 crow flies.
Notwithstanding the short distance, I filed an IFR flight
plan because the weather was hazy and the weather forecast
for HPN was predicting temporary cloud buildups starting at
2,000 feet. As I climbed through 800 feet I contacted NY
air traffic control and picked up my clearance: V39 BREZY
intersection, Carmel VOR, direct; 3,000 feet. In quick
succession I was handed off to the next controller, and
coming up at BREZY intersection I was told to expect the ILS
16 approach at HPN. After BREZY intersection I was handed
off again, and that controller started to give me vectors
for the final approach course: fly a heading of 080 degrees
and maintain 3,000 feet. A few moments later I was
instructed to turn an additional 20 degrees to the left and
maintain 3,000 feet. Incidentally, the visibility in the
air was only 2-5 miles, so the decision to file IFR was
certainly prudent.
As I came
out of the turn to 060 degrees, I noted that my altitude had
slipped to 2,840 feet while I was busy changing frequencies,
turning and loading the approach procedure into the Garmin.
Apparently the plane was not trimmed properly, and I
concentrated on climbing back up to 3,000 feet, while
continuing my scan and noting that everything was running
just fine. Indicated airspeed was 160 knots, which is
normal for the cruise power setting then in use. Then I
blacked out for a period that I now estimate as being 5-10
seconds.
When I
became alert again, I scanned the instruments and was
stunned to see the airspeed indicator showing 204 knots
indicated; the attitude indicator showing the nose below the
horizon; and the altimeter scrolling down quickly toward
1,900 feet. I also realized that my right leg was weak, and
that the controller was calling, asking what happened to my
altitude. For non-pilots, the redline threshold is also
known as the never exceed speed, because the airframe was
not designed to retain structural integrity above that
number. In other words, the wings can break off at any
moment.
Adrenaline
shot through my body as I quickly and methodically executed
the procedure for recovering from this unusual attitude:
level the wings, decrease power, and carefully lift the nose
to avoid any further stresses on the airframe. While
accomplishing this I concentrated almost entirely on the
attitude indicator, and after a few seconds I was satisfied
that the loss of altitude had been reversed at roughly 1,700
feet above the ground. I did not see the airspeed, although
I knew instinctively that it was out of the red zone. After
a fraction of a second of thought, I then activated the
parachute. The factors that led me to this decision
included: no desire to proceed any further into marginal
weather; concern over the loss of altitude; concern that the
planes structural integrity was compromised by the high
speed descent and recovery; and concern that the weakness in
my right leg might hinder my ability to control the plane
down to the runway.
My parachute
experience was quite different from what fellow COPA member
Bill Graham described last month at M3. I heard the rocket
launch and briefly smelled its fumes. A few seconds later I
heard a loud, ripping sound as the parachute reached full
deployment. I then felt a tremendous joltworse than any
turbulence that Ive experiencedas the parachute billowed
open and caused the plane to decelerate. The POH advises
130 knots indicated as the highest deployment speed for the
parachute; but I have no idea what the airspeed was in my
situation. I suspect it was somewhere above 130 knots based
on the very different experiences that Bill and I had.
This jolt
tilted the airplane downward as the parachute established a
level position; it also threw my headphone and glasses in
various directions, and caused my head to hit the ceiling
near the visor. I have a very small bump to show for it;
but that was the only injury from the parachute deployment.
In my opinion the seatbelt retraction system and the
parachute worked exceptionally well under the circumstances.
After
finding the headphone and realizing that the plane was now
level at roughly 900 feet above the ground and descending
straight down under the canopy, the first thing I did was
call the controller on the existing frequency: I had no
time to switch to 121.5; and saw no point in doing so since
the controller was already urgently asking what was going
on. I said Mayday, mayday, 52 Lima here, pulled the
parachute near the Hudson River. I believe that the second
thing I did was punch in 7700 on the transponder, although I
later learned that my plane was already below radar
coverage. Inexplicably, I did not pull the mixture back to
idle, as advised by the POH, and left the power lever just
below the detent (roughly 19 inches MP). In the next minute
this would prove to be an invaluable deviation from what the
POH requires.
I looked out
the window and saw that the plane was descending directly
over a fuel tank farm for the nearby conventional power
station (incidentally, Indian Point, which is a nuclear
reactor, is located on the other side of the river, 5.-8
miles upstream, and away from the vectors for the ILS 16
approach course). This was now the scariest part of the
flight: worse than emerging from a seizure to find the
plane in a high-speed descent, because I already knew from
training how to handle that situation. But there is no
advice in the POH on how to control the plane once the
parachute has been deployed.
Now
everything happened at warp speed. I called the controller
again and said Mayday, 52 Lima is descending directly over
the fuel tanks. No response; and besides, there was
nothing the controller could do to help me. I then used
all available resources to change that outcome: I applied
right aileron and rudder, and rocked the power lever to make
sure that the engine still had power. These actions caused
the plane to gently veer away from the tank farm and over
the water: Bowline Creek, a very wide, calm tributary to
the Hudson River near the town of Haverstraw, NY, a few
miles north of Nyack and the Tappan Zee Bridge.
An instant
later the plane crashed straight down into the water, which
both then and now I consider to be the lesser of two evils.
It was like a massive belly flop. This was now the second,
scary part of the flight, as water splashed up almost to the
top of the windows. Because I landed in water rather than
solid ground, the gear did not absorb much of the impact.
Instead, the wings and seat did all the work. It was at
this point that the fourth lumbar vertebrae in my back
cracked and compressed from the impact of the crash.
Then came
the very worst part: I could not open the door. The wings
were now sitting right at water level, which leads me to
theorize that the doorframe or pins were deformed by the
impact of the crash. And upon impact, water immediately
came into the cabin; in the three seconds it took me to
realize that the door wasnt going to open, the water level
was up to my ankles. More adrenaline shot through my body.
I reached for the hammer in the armrest compartment, and
with two hands swung at the pilots window. Two whacks with
all my strength and there was an eight inch hole. Steam was
now coming out of the engine as the nosecone dipped
underwater and the cabin tilted forward, so I now remembered
to shut down all the switches and turn the fuel selector to
off. I ripped the lap board off my leg, reached behind my
seat and grabbed one of the two life jackets thats always
there. I then clawed apart most of the rest of the window
glass (which gave me some cuts and splinters) until the hole
was big enough, and climbed out of the cabin. The wings
were now slightly under water; I sat down to put on and
inflate the lifejacket.
I sat on the
wing for a minute to survey the situation and collect my
thoughts. The closest point to shore was roughly 300 feet
away, near the power plant. Several people were already
assembled there at a boat launch, and I spotted a police car
already driving in that direction. The parachute was flat
on the water, mostly on the other side of the plane. I
slipped into the water and began swimming to shore. My leg
got caught on something: no doubt a line from the
parachute. I kicked it free and swam faster and farther
away from the plane. Within four minutes of impact, the
plane was nose down in the water and sank in 30 feet of
water. No fuel leaked out of the plane. In the next ten
minutes I kept swimming slowly, but stopped after roughly
150 feet. There was pain in my back and some blood on my
left hand. I was getting cold. A Haverstraw Fire
Department launch appeared about half a mile away, where the
tributary joins the Hudson River. They came up beside me
and sloppily pulled me onboard. The pain in my back was now
considerable, so I lay down flat across the deck. A moment
later the boat docked near the power plant, where an
ambulance was waiting to take me to Nyack Hospital.
Enroute to
the hospital, a police detective sat next to me and took
sparse notes of my story. The EMT folks stuck me full of
needles for IV and blood tests; my body temperature was 90
degrees, so they wrapped me in more blankets. I felt a hot
spot on my rear end; it turned out to be the battery from my
cell phone that was overheating from being underwater. We
arrived at the hospital and I was wheeled into the trauma
part of the emergency room. They immediately cut off all my
clothes (losing my keys in the process), poked more needles
into me and did a quick check of my limbs and abdomen. I
was then sent for a CT scan of my neck and brain; and later
for X-rays of the rest of my body.
When all the
test results were in, the ER doctor came in and told me that
my back was broken, and that the orthopedist would be there
shortly to explain further. He then left the room, but came
back a moment later and casually said: By the way, did you
know that you have a brain tumor? The neurologist will be
here soon to explain it some more.
* * * * *
I walked out
of the hospital on Friday afternoon. My back still hurts,
mostly from the pressure of the brace that I have to wear
for the next four weeks whenever Im vertical. Im taking
anti-seizure and pain medications and next week will consult
with neurosurgeons on what (if anything) to do about the
brain tumor.
Last night
was the first time I was able to sleep through the night
without waking up several times, sometimes in a sweat; other
times just to cry for ten minutes because I couldnt deal
with the emotions of how and why I nearly died, yet somehow
managed to survive.
* * * * *
Unlike other
peoples descriptions throughout history of near-death
experiences, I did not see my life flash before my eyes; a
warm glowing light; or any symbols of divine presence. What
I saw were stark realities that needed to be dealt with:
airspeed, jolts, altitude, fuel farm tanks, water, pain.
When the
plane crashed and the cabin was underwater, and I couldnt
open the door, I sadly thought: So this is how it ends.
But I immediately determined to reject that outcome, grabbed
the hammer and clawed my way out.
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