Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary NYC01LA138

Sayre, PA, USA

Aircraft #1

UNREG

Interplane Sky Boy

Analysis

During the initial climbout after takeoff, the ultralight was observed rolling from side to side. It then rolled inverted and impacted the runway. The pilot reported that he "failed to maintain optimal climbing speed."

Factual Information

On June 5, 2001, about 1900 eastern daylight time, an Interplane Skyboy, an unregistered ultralight, was substantially damaged during takeoff from Blue Swan Airport, Sayre, Pennsylvania. The non-certificated pilot received serious injuries. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the instructional flight. No flight plan had been filed for the local flight that was conducted under 14 CFR Part 103. According to the pilot: "Upon take off I failed to maintain optimal climbing speed. Aircraft rolled to the right [and] the left and made contact [with the] ground." According to a witness, the pilot initiated a takeoff from runway 28, with winds coming from straight ahead at 4 knots. The ultralight became airborne in a nose-high attitude after a ground run of a few hundred feet. Once airborne, the wings rocked from side to side, and the ultralight climbed to about 25 feet above the runway surface. The ultralight then rolled 180 degrees to the right, and descended onto the runway in an inverted, nose down attitude. The witness then ran to the wreckage and extracted the pilot. The witness also reported that the accident pilot flew the ultralight earlier the same day for 0.5 hours. After that flight, the witness flew it and noted no problems. The accident pilot then departed on the accident flight. The pilot purchased the ultralight in Florida, and received his initial flight training there. He soloed the ultralight on April 28, 2001. It was then disassembled, and transported to Pennsylvania. It was not flown again until the date of the accident. The pilot had 15.4 hours of flight experience, including 1 hour of solo flight, all in make and model. The pilot's logbook contained an endorsement for solo flight from his flight instructor. The pilot did not possess a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) airman's medical certificate or a student pilot certificate, nor were they required. The ultralight was manufactured in the Czech Republic, and sold as an "ultralight trainer." It was equipped with a pitot-static type airspeed indicator. It was not equipped with an attitude indicator, and climb attitude was maintained by outside visual reference.

Probable Cause and Findings

The pilot's failure to maintain an adequate climb airspeed.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

Get all the details on your iPhone or iPad with:

Aviation Accidents App

In-Depth Access to Aviation Accident Reports