Gary,
“Yes, the 61-knot requirement is all about crash energy”
I am well aware that the faster an object is going the more kinetic
energy it has. The point I was trying to make is, the FAA choose the number 61
for their benchmark speed. They could as easily chosen some other number. Maybe
60, or 55, or whatever. From your discussion, would not 55 have been
better?
Then the article could have said, Lancairs stall at a higher speed than
55. The stall speed of the Lancair aircraft had nothing to do with the accident
in question. That is why the number 61 was not significant. Your statement
about Lancair aircraft having a higher stalling speed than 61 and as a result
more kinetic energy injects an element that was not in play in the article I
was commenting on. In other words, you changed the subject.
The subject aircraft did not stall and so, regardless of what its
stalling speed might be, it was not relevant or significant to the discussion.
Regards,
Lynn Farnsworth
Super Legacy #235
TSIO-550 Powered
Race #44
Mmo .60 Mach