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| NTSB Identification: NYC01LA149. |
| Accident occurred Thursday, June 14, 2001 at Lincoln, ME |
| Aircraft: Cessna 150, registration: N1525Q |
| Injuries: 1 Uninjured |
| Event: 20010627X01260 Status: Preliminary |
| NTSB Preliminary Narrative (6120.19A) |
| On June 14, 2001, about 1300 Eastern Daylight Time, a Cessna 150, N1525Q, was substantially damaged during a forced landing at the Lincoln |
| Regional Airport (LRG), Lincoln, Maine. The student pilot was not injured. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the instructional flight |
| that departed Millinocket, Maine, about 1245. No flight plan was filed, and the flight was conducted under 14 CFR Part 91. |
| The pilot preflighted the airplane, and added about 5 gallons automotive fuel. He estimated that before adding the fuel, the airplane had |
| approximately a 50:50 ratio of 100LL to automotive fuel. After fueling, he let the airplane sit for about an hour, and then drained the fuel sumps. |
| The fuel samples were blue in color, and absent of contaminants. The pilot then boarded the airplane, started the engine, and taxied short of the |
| runway to perform the engine run-up checks. The pilot did not notice any anomalies when he checked the magnetos or carburetor heat. |
| The pilot then departed Lincoln, and flew to Millinocket, Maine, to pickup his flight instructor. After landing, the instructor boarded, and the two |
| completed a cross-country flight to Augusta, Maine. The pilot then flew his instructor from Augusta back to Millinocket, and then departed solo |
| back to Lincoln, Maine. |
| Once in the Lincoln area, the pilot maneuvered the airplane onto a left downwind to land on Runway 35. When the airplane was abeam the |
| middle of the runway, the pilot selected the carburetor heat to "ON." Abeam the landing threshold, he reduced the engine rpm to 1,500, and |
| selected 10 degrees of flaps. On final, he selected 20 degrees of flaps, and made a radio announcement on CTAF stating his intentions. The |
| pilot added that since the airplane was a little higher than "normal" he increased the flaps to 30 degrees. |
| While on final and approximately 600 feet agl, the pilot decided that the airplane was not in a position to safely continue the approach. He |
| initiated a go-around, selected carburetor heat to "OFF," applied full power, and allowed the airplane to accelerate. By the time the airplane was |
| approximately half way down the runway, the pilot had retracted the flaps, and initiated a climb. A couple of seconds into the climb and without |
| warning, the engine lost power. The pilot surveyed the area, and decided to attempt a forced landing to Runway 35. He made a 360-degree |
| turn to position the airplane for the forced landing. The airplane touched down "fast," about half way down the runway, and about 20 feet off to |
| the right of the runway, on the grass. The pilot applied the brakes, but found them ineffective on grass. As the airplane approached a line of |
| trees that were 2 to 4 inches in diameter and approximately 30 feet high, he pulled back on the yoke, and the airplane became airborne. The |
| airplane went into the trees nose high, and came to a stop. The pilot noticed fuel running down the right door. He secured the electric and fuel |
| systems, and then egressed via the left door. |
| According to a mechanic that examined the airplane under the direction of a Federal Aviation Administration inspector, the airplane was removed |
| from the woods intact. The left fuel tank was undamaged and had approximately 5 gallons of fuel in it. The right tank displayed some impact |
| damaged and was leaking. The right tank also contained about 5 gallons of fuel. |
| An engine run was then completed. During the first attempt to start the engine, it backfired, but then started and ran smoothly. Engine rpm was |
| limited to 1,200 because of propeller damage. A magneto check was preformed at 1,200 rpm, and engine rpm dropped approximately 100 rpm |
| for both magnetos. After securing the engine, the mechanic disconnected the fuel line between the gascolator and carburetor. He then turned |
| on the electric-driven fuel pump. Initially, fuel was expelled at what the mechanic classified a "normal" rate, but then slowed. The fuel flow then |
| oscillated between "normal" and a reduced rate. The gascolator was examined and the fuel screen was found absent of debris. The |
| carburetor bowl was also examined. The bowl contained fuel that was absent of debris and water. |
| Occurrences and Sequence of Events |
| No Occurrence records were found for: |
| NTSB Identification: NYC01LA149 |
| Event ID: 20010627X01260 |
| Aircraft Key: 1 |
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