Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary SEA94FA052

IDAHO FALLS, ID, USA

Aircraft #1

N7805H

PIPER PA-12

Analysis

WHILE FLYING AT A VERY LOW LEVEL IN A NARROW CANYON, THE PILOT ATTEMPTED A TURN THAT REQUIRED A STEEP BANK. DURING THIS TURN THE PILOT ALLOWED THE LEFT WING OF THE AIRCRAFT TO COLLIDE WITH THE TERRAIN NEAR THE SHORE OF RIRIE RESERVOIR.

Factual Information

HISTORY OF FLIGHT On January 21, 1994, approximately 1615 mountain standard time (MST), a Piper PA-12, N7805H, impacted the terrain about 12 miles northeast of Idaho Falls, Idaho. The certificated flight instructor received fatal injuries, his passenger received serious injuries, and the aircraft sustained substantial damage. The personal pleasure flight, which was being operated in visual meteorological conditions at the time of the accident, had departed Fanning Field, Idaho Falls, Idaho, about one hour earlier. No flight plan had been filed, and the ELT, which was activated by the impact, was turned off at the scene. According to witnesses, the CFI and one of his students returned to the airport after finishing an instructional flight. After parking the aircraft, the CFI found that his next student had canceled. He therefore invited the student whom he had just finished instructing to accompany him on a pleasure flight around the local area. She accepted his offer, and then switched seats with the instructor, who had been in the back seat while giving instruction. The aircraft departed Fanning Field and proceeded to the east about 1515 MST. The next reported sighting of the aircraft was by a witness who saw it near Blacktail Park (see map) about 1600. This witness reported that the aircraft was coming from the south, and was just above ground level "...barely missing the sagebrush." He said that as the aircraft approached the rim of the plateau surrounding Ririe Reservoir, the engine sounded as if it was brought back to idle. Then the aircraft dove over the edge and dropped into the reservoir canyon. Soon after it dropped out of sight, the witness heard the engine "...throttle up again." Soon thereafter, the sound of the engine faded as the aircraft proceeded northward up the reservoir canyon. The witness said he watched and listened for the aircraft "...for a long time," but he did not see or hear the aircraft come back up out of the canyon. In a post-accident interview, the passenger said that she remembered the pilot entering the south end of the Ririe Reservoir canyon, flying north to the area of Ririe Dam, and then heading back south inside the canyon. She said that during this portion of the flight the pilot was maneuvering the aircraft at a very low level over the frozen surface of the reservoir. The last thing she remembers about the flight was the pilot entering a low level steep left turn at the location where the aircraft impacted the terrain. According to this witness, she was not sure if the pilot was trying to reverse course, or whether he was just making the sharp left turn required to maneuver through this narrow part of the canyon. She did not remember there being any engine malfunction or control surface problems. The witness also said that she had been with the pilot a number of times before when he had maneuvered through this part of the canyon at very low level. WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATION The aircraft impacted the terrain on the western shore of Ririe Reservoir, at a point where the canyon changes course about 130 degrees. At the time of the accident, the aircraft was flying south at the bottom of the narrow Ririe Reservoir Canyon, which is about 300 feet deep at the point of impact. While in a steep left turn the left wing of the aircraft impacted the terrain 84 feet from the edge of the frozen reservoir surface. From the initial impact point, the aircraft traveled on a magnetic heading of 118 degrees for a total distance of 163 feet. About 30 feet from the initial impact were numerous small pieces of the front windshield of the aircraft, and an oil slick ran from the reservoir shoreline to the resting point of the main wreckage. Except for the left main gear, which was located 27 feet from the primary wreckage on a heading of 208 degrees, all portions of the aircraft structure and engine were located together on the frozen surface of the reservoir. Both lift struts were still attached to the wings and the fuselage longerons. The left wing spar attach fittings were both sheared, and the front wing spar carry-through was bent aft into the cabin area. The left wing tip had been ripped from the end of the wing, and the outboard four feet of both wings were crushed back between 35 and 40 degrees. Mechanical continuity was established to all flight control surface, except the stabilizer trim, which had both of it cables severed by the impact. Both propeller blades showed chord-wise scarring and leading edge indentations. The carburetor was broken from its mount, and the front of the engine crankcase had broken during the impact. Fuel was found in the wing tanks and the carburetor, and mechanical continuity was established for all rotational and reciprocating components of the engine. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION An autopsy was performed by Dr. Gary Ellwein, and the cause of death was listed as "Multiple trauma associated with an aircraft accident." A toxicological study was performed on the pilot by the FAA Forensic Toxicology and Accident Research Laboratory, and no drugs, carboxyhemoglobin, cyanide, or ethanol were detected. The aircraft was released to Allan C. Gliege on January 22, 1994, at the scene of the accident.

Probable Cause and Findings

THE PILOT'S FAILURE TO MAINTAIN CLEARANCE FROM THE TERRAIN. FACTORS INCLUDE THE PILOT'S POOR INFLIGHT DECISION TO ATTEMPT LOW LEVEL MANEUVERS IN A NARROW CANYON.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

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