Posted for "John W. Cox" :
Bryan - excellent post on the tragic loss to Hoyt and his bride on N727TF as a result of a combination of human errors by a great painter. At the airline that I work for, we can have 10 birds in the roost with fuel at the same time. Our Heavy Check projects include open Jet A fuel bays. With 100 personnel at risk at one time we require that every single aircraft is always immediately grounded upon entry and just not disconnected until just prior to removal. Tom did not have this aircraft grounded, there was a drop cloth issue, the fuel vapors did combine with ambient air (because the fuel cell cap was not properly closed) to create the volatile mixture and the rest is the financial devastation. AVGAS vapors are even more unforgiving. The new hangar I just completed for my kit has two grounding rods driven 8 feet down through the crushed rock sub base and 6" concrete pad at two locations under potential park spots. The cost and effort is a simple investment on the road to learning from Hoyt's tragic loss. It is amazing that owners do not understand the value of grounding the aircraft. Helicopter pilots and their wench operators live with the need daily. John Cox
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