Originally posted by AquaShrimp
When the Mosquito first came out, one of the things praised about it was its ability to fly and make turns on one engine.
I think the pilot knew what he was doing. He seemed to recognize the problem immediately, due to his throttling back to recover.
Nobody with 72 hours in type and only 4.5 in the current year with only 529 total hours in a light plane (remember he had 10 yrs before he got his ATP rating) has any business executing a performance routine with a 100 ft hard deck...end of story.
He died becuase he blew the initial recovery, which would not be unexpected given his total time, time in type and current time. He should have had a minimum of 10 hrs a month current time in type or in a suitable alternative practicing unusual attitude recovery and mechanical failure recovery procedures. He died because he had to think and then do in an enviornment where a mistake would kill him...and it did.
If you look at the NTSB accident reports you'd be suprised how many ATP pilots die in single engine mishaps every year...especially acrobatic ones. 20,000 hrs in a jet doesnt make you qualified for 2 hours of hammerheads in your pitts a month.
The guy had zero business in that plane...in those conditions. Simply playing russian rulette with a different kind of bullet.