SaxMan wrote:
I'm not a pilot, so that's why I was asking for pilots' opinions.
The CAB indicated the plane rolled right, rolled left and then went over top and entered a right handed spin. By the point of impact the spin had been arrested, but the plane ended up almost perfectly nose down. There was a lot of experience in that cockpit. It would seem a nose-down impact would have been the last thing one would have expected, especially given the room to affect a recovery, albeit an incomplete one.
bdk - there definitely have been accounts of pilots sacrificing themselves or their planes to save bystanders. You may wish to believe that it was merely coincidence, but I choose to believe otherwise.
When recovering from a spin, the nose is generally pointed well down. If not, you would stall again and most likely enter a secondary spin. In fact, there have been many fatalities from pulling up too aggressively from the post recovery dive and entering a spin once again.
Besides stopping the spin rotation, you need to reduce angle of attack and increase airspeed. Both necessitate a nose down recovery attitude.
I'm not saying that self sacrificing has never happened, only that during the last few moments in a situation with limited control, the pilot's input may have little to no effect. How many reports were there of the pilot steering the aircraft away from the grandstands at Reno, when his head was not even visible in the canopy?