by chief4192 » Fri Jan 28, 2022 3:46 pm
How or why I failed to fully latch and secure my canopy on my Waiex B taildragger before takeoff is irrelevant to the discussion of how to get safely back on the ground in this situation. I’m told that the three other pilots who have also experienced this situation are not available for comment, so my description of how a Sonex flies without a canopy will hopefully provide enough information to be of use to anyone who may find themselves in the same quandary. (I know, do your checklists carefully and thoroughly…)
I had just climbed and turned back out of the pattern, then leveled out and gained speed to 120 mph when my canopy was ripped from the airframe in a thunderous crash of shattering plexiglass. The airplane immediately pitched somewhat nose up, but I had good authority and I assumed I could probably land the airplane somewhat normally (first mistake). Continuing back downwind (but on the opposite side) I rejoined the pattern and lined up on my takeoff runway. I noted that I was below the 5-degree VASI for the runway and planned a shallow descent until I intersected the glidepath. That was, however, the last time I noticed the VASI as the airplane was pitching up more and more as I slowed and descended. At this point, doing about 90 mph, which without thinking I automatically considered too fast for a safe landing (second mistake), and getting more and more concerned about my very poor forward visibility, I decided to feed in some flaps both to help slow me down and to pitch the airplane forward. After several seconds and about 10 degrees, I realized things were rapidly getting worse, not better.
Then I got lucky. My left leading edge clipped the top of a tree, which instantly told me I was still lined up pretty well, but no more than 75 feet AGL and only 150-200 feet from a cross road with poles and wires, well short of the runway! Immediate full throttle helped me pull us over the wires but couldn’t keep us in the flying envelope. Neutral weight-and-balance and all that full-throttle air on control surfaces helped keep the plane level, so we did two pancakes separated by a 50 foot bounce on the safety field short of the runway. Not a scratch on me, but those wonderful titanium gear legs are NOT available as used parts. Not a ripple in the firewall and no cracks I could find in the engine mount. A strong airplane!
If I had to do it over I think I should have opted for a high-speed wheel landing and worried about the speed once I was on the ground. Landing without a hard-surface runway seems much less straightforward. Knowing the stall speed in this configuration would be invaluable, but recovery from a test stall before landing might involve some other bad behavior.
The loss of the canopy not only affected the trim attitude of the airplane, it severely compromised the lifting body configuration of the Sonex airframe. My sinkrate as I set up on approach must have been close to double what it normally was, as I could have impacted the ground hundreds of feet short of the end of the runway if not for my “lucky” warning.
My hope is that no other Sonex pilot ever has to endure this, but please have some idea of what you might do in a similar situation.
I’ll also post a few parts for sale in the appropriate section