TO ALL INTERESTED PARTIES IN EAA CHAPTER 445 NTSB ACCIDENT REPORT
CONSERNING PAST MEMBER FLOYD REDMOND
NTSB Identification: ATL04FA061.
The docket is stored in
the Docket Management System (DMS). Please contact
14 CFR Part 91: General
Aviation
Accident occurred
Sunday, December 28,
2003 in
Campobello, SC
Probable Cause Approval Date:
12/28/2004
Aircraft: Mooney 20F, registration:
N2996L
Injuries: 1 Fatal.
The pilot obtained fuel before departing on the cross country flight. Two
witnesses on the ground heard and observed the airplane approaching their
location. The airplane was about 100 to 200 feet above the trees. One witnesses
stated the airplanes engine was heard to increase in power, decrease in power,
and increase in power again. The other witnesses stated the engine was making a
popping sound, while the engine was cutting in and out. The airplane was
observed to make a steep right turn and the right wing was perpendicular to the
ground. The nose of the airplane pitched down and the airplane disappeared from
view. The Flight Manual states the airplane will stall at 98 MPH without
extended flaps at a 60-degree bank angle. Examination of the crash site revealed
the right main fuel cap tab was secured. The left main fuel cap tab was in the
open position. Examination of the airframe and engine assembly revealed no
anomalies.
The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of
this accident as follows:
The pilot's failure to maintain
airspeed while maneuvering for an emergency landing resulting in an inadvertent
stall and a collision with trees and the ground during an uncontrolled descent.
A factor in the accident was the pilot's inadequate preflight resulting in a
loss of engine power due to fuel starvation.
HISTORY
OF FLIGHT
On
December
28, 2003,
at 1310 Eastern Standard Time, a Mooney 20F, N2996L, registered to a private
owner, operating as a 14 CFR Part 91 personal flight, collided with trees and
the ground while maneuvering in the vicinity of
Campobello,
South
Carolina.
Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and no flight plan was filed. The
airplane was destroyed. The commercial pilot was fatally injured. The flight
originated from Petersburg,
Ohio,
on December
28, 2003,
at 1015.
Witnesses stated they heard an airplane approaching their
location. They looked up and observed an airplane flying to the north between
100 to 200 feet above the trees. The engine revved up in power, decreased in
power, and revved up again. Another witness stated, "the engine was making a
popping sound, and cutting in and out." The airplane was observed to make a
steep right turn, and the right wing was perpendicular to the ground. The nose
of the airplane went down and the airplane disappeared from view. A few seconds
later both witnesses heard an impact sound as the airplane collided with the
ground. They went inside and called the 911 telephone operator.
PERSONNEL
INFORMATION
Review of information on file with the FAA Airman's
Certification Division, Oklahoma
City,
Oklahoma,
revealed the commercial pilot was issued a commercial pilot certificate on
April
11, 1999,
with ratings for airplane single engine land, and airplane multiengine land. In
addition the pilot held a mechanic certificate issued on June
30, 1993,
with ratings for airframe mechanic and power plant mechanic. The pilot held a
second-class medical certificate issued on June
18, 2003,
with the restriction must have available glasses for near vision. The pilot's
logbook was not located; and the biennial flight review could not be determined.
Review of information on file with the FAA Aero Medical Records Division
revealed the pilot had 3,770 flight hours.
AIRCRAFT INFORMATION
The
husband of the registered owner stated the airplane was not insured and the
pilot-in-command had a key and performed the maintenance on the airplane. The
husband stated he called the deceased pilot about two weeks before the accident
and asked him to do the annual inspection, which was overdue. He further stated
that he did not know the deceased pilot was going to be taking the airplane out
of the state.
Review of the logbooks revealed the original logbooks were
lost. The current logbooks were created from the previous owner's records and
repair station information on December
5, 1988.
The total tachometer time was 3170 hours. The airplane had a Lycoming
remanufactured "o" time engine installed at tachometer time 2781 on
June
30, 1977.
The last recorded annual and 100-hour inspection was conducted on
July
13, 2002,
at tachometer time 3737.42 hours. The emergency locater transmitter battery
(ELT) was replaced on June
13, 1992.
The tachometer was damage and the time tachometer time could not be determined.
The ELT battery expiration date was May
31, 2001.
The
son of the pilot-in-command pilot stated the airplane was topped off with
between 45 to 47 gallons of 100 low lead fuel at
Petersburg,
Ohio,
on December
22, 2003.
The airplane was taxied to a tie down point and remained parked over the
Christmas holiday. The airplane was taxied over to the refuel point on
December
28, 2003,
and topped off with 1.9 gallons of 100 low lead fuel.
METEOROLOGICAL
INFORMATION
The Greeneville-Spartanburg International Airport
1253 surface weather observation was wind was 210-degrees at 6 knots, visibility
10 miles, clear, temperature 59-degrees Fahrenheit, dew point temperature
41-degrees Fahrenheit, and altimeter 30.30.
WRECKAGE AND IMPACT
INFORMATION
The main wreckage of the airplane was located in a
wooded area on a hilltop adjacent to 915 Old Melvin Hill, Campobello,
South
Carolina.
Examination
of the crash site revealed the right wing of the airplane collided with a tree.
The outboard section of the right wing and rib were separated. Tree branches
along the crash debris line exhibited 45-degree "V" cuts. The wreckage debris
line continued forward 46-feet where the engine assembly was separated from the
firewall. The engine assembly was buried beneath the ground 32-inches. The cabin
area and empennage with the tail section was located 136 feet down the crash
debris line.
The nose section of the airplane separated at the firewall.
The engine assembly and engine mounts separated from the firewall. The propeller
assembly separated from the propeller flange and was buried beneath the surface
of the ground. The propeller spinner was destroyed. One propeller blade remained
in the propeller hub. The propeller blade exhibited "s" bending and chord-wise
scarring. The propeller was bent forward at mid span, and the leading edge of
the propeller blade received nicks about two-inch inboard from the propeller
tip. The separated propeller blade exhibited "s" bending and chord-wise
scarring. The propeller blade was bent forward at mid span. The nose gear
separated and was in the retracted position.
The cabin area separated
from the fuselage at the windshield extending aft to the leading edge of the
left and right horizontal stabilizers with accordion crushing. The instrument
panel and lower cabin floor was destroyed. The fuel selector valve was not
located. The flight control system from the control tube at the control column
aft to the push pull tubes and rod end bearings in the center fuselage were
destroyed. The control tubes and rod end bearings extending outboard to the left
and right wings, ailerons, and bell cranks were destroyed. The control tubes and
rod end bearings extending aft to the rudder and left and right elevators were
destroyed.
The right wing received accordion crushing along the leading
edge and was fragmented from the wingtips inboard to the wing root. The upper
and lower wing skin surfaces were fragmented and located down and on the debris
line. The right wing main fuel cap was closed and located to the right of the
engine crater. The right main fuel tank was ruptured and the filler neck had
separated from the wing. No fuel, odor of fuel, or browning of vegetation was
present at the crash site. The right aileron and flap separated at the
attachment fittings. The right main landing gear was in the retracted position.
The aft fuselage received accordion crushing extending aft to the
leading edge of the left and right horizontal stabilizers. The vertical
stabilizer leading edge was damaged and the vertical stabilizer was bent to the
right. The rudder assembly remained attached by the lower two hinge points. The
right horizontal stabilizer was bent upward and aft. The right elevator
separated at the hinge points and was located underneath the horizontal
stabilizer. The left horizontal stabilizer was crushed upward and the left
elevator was separated at the hinge points. The left elevator was located under
the left horizontal stabilizer.
The left wing separated at the wing root.
The wingtip was bent up and aft. The upper and lower wing skin separated
64-inches outboard of the wing root. The left aileron and flaps separated at
their hinge points. The left main fuel tank was ruptured. The left main fuel cap
was located adjacent to the left wing. The fuel cap lock was in the open
position. Rust was present on the filler port neck and on the bottom of the fuel
cap. The left main landing gear was retracted.
Examination of the engine
assembly revealed the engine was damaged on all sides. The crankshaft would not
rotate by hand. All engine accessories except for the flow divider separated
from the engine. The alternator, starter, fuel injector servo, top portion of
the vacuum pump including the internal rotor and vanes, turbocharger housing,
including the turbine hot section separated and were not located. The
turbocharger compressor impeller section was damaged. The fuel nozzles were
removed and unobstructed. The flow divider was removed and opened and no fuel
was present. The No. 1 cylinder head was fractured and the push rods on
cylinders 1, 2, and 3 were damaged. The engine crankcase was fractured at the
nose section adjacent to the No. 2 cylinder. The oil sump was destroyed; the
induction system was separated and fragmented. The exhaust system was separated
and not located. The propeller control arm was damaged and the control shaft was
spring loaded to the high rpm position. The propeller drive end was damaged. The
propeller governor oil screen was clean and free of contaminants. The governor
was rotated by hand and pumping action of oil was noted. The engine fuel pump
top diaphragm was damaged and the actuator arm separated from the pump shaft.
The lower section of the pump was opened and the lower diaphragm and internal
valve was intact.
The rear accessory case was removed and the accessory
drive gears were intact. The oil pump drive spline was broken. The oil pump
impeller gears were intact. The oil filter was opened and free of contaminants.
All four cylinders were removed and the piston domes exhibited light gray color
combustion deposits. The top sparkplugs in cylinders 2, 3, and 4 and the bottom
sparkplug in cylinder 4 were recovered. The top sparkplug in cylinder 1 was not
located. The bottom sparkplugs in cylinders 1, 2, and 3 were not located. All
recovered sparkplugs exhibited light gray combustion deposits. The left and
right magneto ignition towers produced spark at all towers.
The power
section case halves were separated. All internal components were intact. The cam
followers exhibited spalling, pitting, and wear.
MEDICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL
INFORMATION
A Forensic Pathologist from
Spartanburg
Regional
Medical
Center
conducted a postmortem examination of the commercial pilot on December
30, 2003.
The cause of death was blunt force trauma. The Forensic Toxicology Research
Section, Federal Aviation Administration, Oklahoma
City,
Oklahoma,
performed postmortem toxicology of specimens from the pilot. The results were
negative for ethanol, basic, acidic, and neutral drugs. Carbon monoxide and
cyanide testing was not performed.
TEST AND RESEARCH
Review
of the EXECUTIVE 21 OWNERS MANUAL for the Mooney Model 20F PART II FLIGHT
PROCEDURES, PRE-FLIGHT states, "The following pre-flight inspection is
recommended:
9. Check the left
fuel tank for fuel level and drain sump.
15.Check the right fuel tank for
fuel level and drain sump."
Review of PART IV PERFORMANCE
DATA, FIGURE 4, STALL SPEED Vs. BANK ANGLE states at flap setting of 0-degrees
flaps the airplane will stall at 98 MPH at a 60-degree bank angle. With flaps
extended 33-degrees, the airplane will stall at 90 MPH at a 60-degree bank
angle.
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION
The wreckage and GPS was released to Atlanta Air
Recovery, Griffin,
Georgia,
on February
12, 2004.