This is an interesting narrative, and I think it can teach us a few lessons. My comments are not an attack on the pilot, and I'm certainly not trying to throw blame on him. I think that we should talk about these things openly to try and learn from them. In that spirit, here are a few observations.
Narrative by the pilot (see pg 9):
https://dms.ntsb.gov/public/63000-63499 ... 630982.pdfThe pilot was a low-time pilot, with less than 2 hrs Sonex time, landing at a short (<2500 ft) runway. Pilot was high on base so made a 270-degree turn to loose altitude in order to save the approach. This is certainly not something that is common in any airplane or traffic pattern. It's not clear why the pilot chose to do this, or if this was something that he had done in the past as a way to correct a high approach.
There are several recurring trends in landing accidents, and this seems to fall in perfectly: don't try to save a bad approach, but go around. I'll add to this one of my own admonishments: don't try to do inventive things in flight that you haven't practiced beforehand. As pilots, we need to develop mastery of our airplanes, but that comes from methodical practice in a controlled environment. This saying has always resonated with me - "In an emergency you don't rise to the occasion, but rather you fall back on your level of training." There is a place for improvisation and adaptation, but you owe it to yourself to get good training in the fundamental tasks ahead of time.
My take-aways from this accident are:
1) Discipline and standardization are important.
2) Become proficient in the slow-speed characteristics of the Sonex, and understand the effects of power, airspeed and sink rate.
3) Mentally rehearse your actions ahead of time to help speed up the decision making and thought processes in the heat of the moment.
Lastly, we need to hold ourselves accountable for our own level of proficiency. Even when it's inconvenient, expensive, or otherwise a pain, we still need to find ways to get ourselves truly ready to fly. This is never so important as right before flying our new planes for the first time. We've put a lot of time, effort and money into getting ready to fly for the first time, but let's not short-change the process before we are well-and-truly ready.
Jeff