I attended a really neat flyin in East Texas this weekend. The place has a 
grass landing strip and is sandy soil. It has been dry there lately so it was 
kinda soft I guess you could say, at least after 400 airplanes had landed on it.
I was standing watching planes come and go. A unbelieveably beautifull RV6A 
landed, he seemed to have landed a little fast but what happened was sad. I 
noticed that the plane was bouncing as normal because of the not perfectly 
smooth terrain/runway. It looked to me like the guy was not holding enough aft 
stick just by looking at the elevator, plus he may have been on the brakes. As 
the plane was sorta bouncing up and down because of terrain it just seemed like 
he was letting too much weight be on the nose wheel ( remember soft field 
landing technique? hold the elevator all the way back once down, keep weight 
off of nose wheel on a nose wheel airplane). The bouncing, plus maybe braking, 
plus the leverage of the horizontal piece of metal on the side of a RV nose 
wheel bracketcoming from the pivot point to the axle caused the leading edge of 
the bracket to go downward and start digging into the ground. I don't know if 
the nose landing gear had already bent at this point but it started digging in 
more and more, and I believe this was worsened by the guy probably applying 
brakes. The planes nose gear finally dug in, the prop hit the ground then in 
seemingly slow motion the tail came up the nose bowl contacted the ground and 
the plane flipped upside down and slapped the ground with the verticle tail. 
Pieces of plexiglass broke and you could hear weird crashing metal noises as 
the plane slapped the ground upside down.
There was enough of us there to run immediately lift the plane high enough to 
get the two occupants out, then we flipped the plane back to it's mains and 
rolled it off to the side. 
Fortunately the two inside had minor injuries as far as we could tell. The 
builder pilot had some cuts and bruises, I think from the plexiglass. It was 
sharp as a razorblade at some of the broken edges. He had to go to the hospital 
for some stitches and I never heard if anything else was wrong with him. This 
plane had the sliding rearward canopy that you see on RVs. The front roll bar 
was bent, it looked like the metal on the side of the fuselage was bent some at 
the top from the load imposed by the plane flipping on the rollbar. We had a 
hard time moving the canopy rearward because of bending to get the occupants 
out.
Several things came to my mind. 1. What would those guys have done if we had 
not been there to get them out? What if they landed at a strip out somewhere 
where there was no one? There was fuel leaking in the area, what if it had 
started on fire? Lots of what ifs came to mind after seeing this take place.
What if he had held full aft stick? What if he had not applied brakes and just 
let it roll out? What if there was no roll bar? what if we had not been there? 
what if it had started immediately started on fire?
Any plane as you know can flip upside down, tail dragger as well as nose 
dragger. Plan ahead, what are you going to do if it were to happen to you? How 
are you going to get out if no one is around to help you? How are you going to 
get out fast before it starts on fire? Just because a plane does not start on 
fire immediately does not mean that it is not, so do not mess around. get out 
as fast as you can or get people out if you see an accident. We had the plane 
up and the people out in less than one minute or it seemed that fast. We ran 
lifted and got them out immediately, no questions were asked we just got them 
out.
Think about it people, do you have enough structure to protect you if you 
slammed the ground upside down. If not maybe you should start thinking about 
it. After I saw the metal tubing bend on the RV that was not going fast at all 
by the time it decided to flip upside down I have a totally different way of 
thinking now.
Larry Howell


The front roll bar was bent a little

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