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Noted
aviators killed in crash
By
Meg Olson
A
plane flying from Point Roberts to Everett last Sunday crashed
into a field near Point Whitehorn, killing both men in the
small two-seater, Jerry Mike Warren of Silverdale,
Washington and Alexander Zuyev of Hollandale, Florida.
One
of a group of three aircraft, the Russian-built Yakovlev-52,
known as a YAK52, was owned by air show veteran and stunt
pilot Neil Bud Granley of Bellevue, according
to Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) representative
Mike Fergus. Granley, flying a YAK55 and other family and
friends in a YAK18 were returning with Warren and Zuyev
from a visit to Granleys son Bob in Point Roberts
where they had treated the community to an impromptu air
showon Saturday afternoon.
The
propeller-driven YAK52 has controls in both front and back
seats. At takeoff, Bob Granley said, Warren was in the front
seat and in control of the aircraft. The three planes had
arranged to rendezvous over Cherry Point after takeoff and,
as the YAK52 turned back to rejoin the group, it had an
aerodynamic stall, airflow over the wing reduced to the
point that there was no longer sufficient lift to keep the
plane flying. The plane stalled repeatedly until it
hit the ground. Thats what we know. The rest is speculation,
Granley said. In six to eight seconds, the airplane plunged
1,200 feet to the ground. Both men died from the trauma
of the crash, according to the county coroners office.
The
Whatcom County Sheriffs Office (WCSO) responded to
the call shortly after noon on Sunday to the crash site
less than 100 feet from the gate of the BP Cherry Point
Refinery. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and
FAA inspectors arrived soon after and interviewed witnesses
on the ground and from the other planes, who had landed
in Bellingham and driven to the site.
Witnesses
indicate there did not appear to be a problem with the aircraft
engine, said NTSB representative Dennis Hogenson.
There did not appear to be a problem with the airframe.
Weather does not appear to be a factor. The WCSO reported
that the autopsy found no medical conditions that could
be responsible for the crash. Final results are pending
toxicology tests.
Hogenson
said the NTSB is continuing to look for a cause and will
examine the wreckage further this week. My big question
right now is why couldnt they recover, he said.
Designed as an acrobatic trainer, the YAK52 is built to
power out of an aerodynamic stall. Bob Granley, with years
of experience flying the YAK52, said there should have been
ample opportunity to right the aircraft.
Its
not fair to make that jump, said Hogenson when asked
if pilot error was a possible cause for the crash. Given
the two victims backgrounds, its hard to fathom
a mistake in the air cost them their lives.
Warren,
50, a certified flight instructor with a commercial pilots
license, had spent almost 15 years flying. He worked with
the Granley family acrobatic flying team as a mechanic and
flew the small, acrobatic YAKs from airshow to airshow.
He attracted media attention in 1998 when a gust of wind
blew his light plane into power lines at Boeing Field in
Seattle. Warren hung upside down for four hours before being
rescued by firefighters.
Mikes
an extremely experienced pilot. Hes got thousands
of hours of air time. We just dont know what happened
and maybe we never will, Granley said. The setup
of the aircraft when we looked at it doesnt suggest
anything abnormal.
Zuyev,
39, was a decorated Russian fighter pilot who defected from
the Soviet Union in May 1989, taking a MiG-29 from his base
in Georgia and flying to Turkey with other fighters in pursuit.
In years since, he has briefed and taught U.S. pilots and
military officials and written a book about his 11 years
in the Soviet air force and his defection. In his 1993 book
Fulcrum, Zuyev repeated the advice of his flying
instructor which helped pilot him through the maze of close
calls during his nerve-jarring flight from the Soviet Union:
When a system fails, theres always a reason.
A good pilot does not panic.
Granley
said he hopes his friends are remembered for their lives
rather than the freak crash that ended them. We lost
two really good people. Two really good pilots. It was catastrophic.
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