MIDAIR EMERGENCY: A Jabiru light aircraft, the type Bruce Knowles was flying when forced to make an emergency landing.
A PILOT has told of the moment he made an emergency landing after the engine cut out at 1500 feet in "no man's land" in far north Queensland.
Bruce Knowles said he had only 90 seconds to land the Jabiru aircraft after it lost power 15 minutes after taking off from Weipa on Tuesday.
``We felt a vibration at about 1500 feet, a couple of seconds later the motor went out," the 60-year-old Victorian pilot said.
``We had total engine failure. The prop wasn't spinning at all.
"We planned a descent into the wind ahead of us."
With only seconds to make a decision, the pilot of 38 years and his passenger Ivan Nunn grabbed a map to find land as they flew over wetlands.
The pair scrapped their original location because it was too dangerous but found a piece of land, surrounded by a swamp, and attempted the landing at an outstation in an area between Aurukun and Coen.
"There were no other options at all," Mr Knowles said.
"There was no power in the aircraft and it wasn't responding.
"You monitor air speed, you monitor height, then you take a descent.
"We were actually flying into the wind. Providing you have the right air speed, the plane will keep flying.
"Luckily the place we landed, which we found out afterwards, was an old airfield."
The pair used an iPad to alert rescuers of their location and, after spending the night inside the plane, were found yesterday morning by police and rangers who had travelled to Wathineen outstation.
They travelled about 30km on four-wheel-drive motorcycles because the area was hard to access.
The old landing strip was covered in two feet of grass.
"We were very lucky," said Mr Knowles, a pilot of more than 35 years.
"I've never experienced anything like this. We were lucky that it happened when it did."
Just a few points regarding the accuracy of newspaper reports .
The aircraft depicted in the report is not the aircraft in the story, which in itself is not unusual . The aircraft in question was in fact a VH registered J430
I am also led to believe that the engine only stopped when the throttle was closed prior to landing .
Mmm , nice of Telstra to provide an IPad reception at ground level in the middle of nowhere . Perhaps it is more feasible that the pilot radioed an overflying aircraft from the Jab radio .
Yes Zibi , believe or not but the aircraft did fly out , all by itself a day or so later.
Bob