Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary CEN10CA362

Grand Junction, CO, USA

Aircraft #1

N9754C

HILLER UH-12E

Analysis

The helicopter had recently undergone an annual inspection and about a month thereafter the pilot planned to take it for a test flight. After completing an engine run-up, he noted that the helicopter appeared to be operating well. The pilot elected to perform a hover-taxi to a nearby helipad, which consisted of a flight path that would overfly a storage container. As he flew past the container, the helicopter’s engine experienced a total loss of power and he landed in a bark pile. During a postaccident visual examination by Federal Aviation Administration inspectors, they could not determine any problems with the helicopter’s engine. The pilot reported that following the helicopter being recovered he found a plug covering the fuel tank's vent line. The pilot opined that the plug resulted in the loss of power.

Factual Information

The pilot/owner reported that he bought the helicopter in 2005, and that the helicopter had been out of annual inspection until May 2010. In June 2009, the helicopter was taken to an aircraft maintenance shop for its maintenance inspection; however, the pilot/owner reported that no work was done to the helicopter and that a disagreement on the component times developed. So in January 2010, he moved the helicopter back to his own shop where another mechanic completed the inspection. A month after the inspection, the pilot/owner planned to do a practice and test flight on the helicopter. He added that he did a complete run-up and that the helicopter was running fine. The pilot/owner then tried to hover-taxi the helicopter over a storage container to a helipad. As he flew past the container, the helicopter’s engine lost power and he elected to “lay” the helicopter over into a bark pile. A visual inspection by the responding Federal Aviation Administration inspectors was unable to determine any problems with the helicopter’s engine. The pilot/owner reported that once the helicopter was recovered, it appeared that a “plug” was covering the fuel tank’s vent line, and that he believed that’s why the engine lost power.

Probable Cause and Findings

The total loss of engine power for undetermined reasons.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

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