The FAA is investigating a made-for-streaming Red Bull stunt over the Arizona desert that went awry on Sunday. The agency told AVweb late Sunday that it had earlier rejected a request for an exemption from FAA regulations by organizers of the stunt. “The FAA will investigate Sunday evening’s attempted Red Bull Plane Swap in Arizona. One of the two single-engine Cessna 182 aircraft used in the stunt crashed after it spun out of control. The pilot landed safely by parachute. The other pilot regained control of the second aircraft and landed safely. The agency on Friday denied the organizer’s request for an exemption from Federal regulations that cover the safe operation of an aircraft.” the agency said in a statement to AVweb.
In the denial letter, the agency says it can see no public interest being served in the stunt and it also said the stunt might affect public safety. It has apparently refused permission for similar actions in the past but in those cases it was to simulate a crash landing. The organizers specifically asked for relief from 91.105(a)(1), which says someone has to be in the cockpit when the plane is in flight. The FAA says the stunt actually violated other regs, too.
Given that the FAA yanked the license of that idiot who allegedly bailed out of his plane for a YouTube stunt, it's probably a dead-nuts certainty that these two guys have seen the last of their flying days.
3 comments:
First(?) a Taylorcraft and next a Skylane. These attention whores ruining perfectly good airplanes just to satisfy their egos is beyond comprehension. What do they get out of the stunt? Is it just to say "look at me"? Okay, you've had your 15 seconds of 'fame'. Now go away.
Just go.
Dale
I guess I am too old-fashioned, but I see no reason they couldn't have had a pilot as well as a stunt man, in each airplane. A senseless waste of a good aircraft.
w3ski
Somebody's been watching too many Tom Cruise videos ...
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