Home Documents Images Message Board
(Use your browser's back button to return to the page that you were previously viewing.)
| NTSB Identification: NYC96LA096. The docket is stored in the (offline) NTSB Imaging System. |
| Accident occurred Sunday, May 05, 1996 at HARWINTON, CT |
| Aircraft: Cessna 152, registration: N25414 |
| Injuries: 2 Minor |
| Event: 20001208X05846 Status: Final Report Approved On Saturday, February 01, 1997 |
| NTSB Preliminary Narrative (6120.19A) |
| On May 5, 1996, at 1017 eastern daylight time, a Cessna 152, N25414, was substantially damaged during a forced landing in Harwinton, |
| Connecticut. The commercial pilot/flight instructor and pre-solo student pilot received minor injuries. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, |
| and no flight plan had been filed for the local dual instruction flight, which originated at Mountain Meadows Airstrip, Harwinton, about 1 minute |
| prior to the accident, and was conducted under 14 CFR Part 91. |
| In a written statement, the flight instructor reported that during the pre-flight examination of the airplane, water was found in the fuel tanks by |
| the student pilot. The student pilot continued to drain the sumps until no more water was found. On takeoff roll, the engine sputtered and the |
| takeoff was aborted. As the airplane rolled clear of the runway, the engine quit. Unable to restart the engine, the pilots pushed the airplane |
| back to the hanger where it was inspected by the owner who was a licensed aircraft mechanic. Additional water was drained from the tanks, |
| and then the engine was run. According to the flight instructor, the mechanic told the pilots, "...it was OK to fly...." The pilots then taxied for |
| departure again, and after becoming airborne, and at about 200 feet high, the engine lost power. During the forced landing, the airplane struck a |
| power line and landed nose low in a field and nosed over. |
| According to an FAA written report, After the airplane was placed upright, additional amounts of water were found when the wing tanks |
| were drained. The airplane had been refueled with 16.5 gallons on May 4, 1996, along with two other aircraft. A check of the other aircraft |
| found water in their tanks. A check of the fuel farm found the fuel filter was collapsed, and bypassing water. |
| The FAA report also stated, "...The operator didn't have a fuel management program in place and no fuel sumping records were found. The |
| operator did not have the appropriate equipment to maintain a fuel farm or appear to have the training required to operate a fuel farm safely." |
| According to the Cessna Pilot Safety and Warning Supplement; Proper Sampling from Quick Drains; "...If excessive sampling is required, the |
| recommended procedure is to completely defuel, drain and clean the airplane fuel system, and attempt to discover where or how the |
| contamination originated before the airplane flys again...." |
| Although the pilot referred to the owner as a "...licensed aircraft mechanic....", the FAA reported that he did not hold a mechanic certificate. |
| NTSB Final Narrative (6120.4) |
| Water was found in the fuel tanks during preflight, and additional draining was accomplished until no more water appeared. The pilots boarded |
| the airplane and initiated a takeoff, at which time, the engine sputtered, and the takeoff was aborted. After the airplane cleared the runway, the |
| engine lost total power; attempts to restart it were unsuccessful. The airplane was pushed to the operator's hangar where the operator |
| inspected the airplane. Additional water was found in the tanks, which was drained, then the engine was run. The operator said the airplane |
| was, '...OK to fly...', and the pilots boarded the airplane for departure. Once they were airborne, about 200 feet high, the engine lost power. |
| During the forced landing, the airplane struck a power line and descended to the ground where it nosed over. When the airplane was placed |
| upright, additional water was found in the tanks. Examination of the fuel farm, where the airplane was refueled, revealed the filter was |
| collapsed, and the fuel was contaminated with water. The FAA reported the operator did not have a fuel management program in place or the |
| appropriate equipment to maintain a fuel farm. According to the airplane manufacturer, '...If excessive sampling is required, the recommended |
| procedure is to completely defuel, drain and clean the airplane fuel system, and attempt to discover where and how the contamination originated |
| before the airplane flys again....' |
| NTSB Probable Cause Narrative |
| the operator's failure to eliminate water-contaminated fuel from the airplane, which resulted in the loss of engine power and collision with an |
| obstacle during the forced landing. Also causal was an improperly maintained fuel storage facility. |
| Occurrences and Sequence of Events |
| Occurrence: 1, LOSS OF ENGINE POWER(TOTAL) - NONMECHANICAL |
| Phase of Operation: TAKEOFF - INITIAL CLIMB |
| Sequence of Events for Occurrence Number: 1 |
| 1 ( Cause ) FLUID, FUEL / CONTAMINATION, WATER / (0) |
| 2 ( Cause ) PREFLIGHT PLANNING/PREPARATION / INADEQUATE / COMPANY/OPERATOR MANAGEMENT |
| 3 ( Cause ) AIRPORT FACILITIES, FUEL STORAGE / INADEQUATE / (0) |
| 4 ( Cause ) MAINTENANCE / INADEQUATE / |
| Occurrence: 2, FORCED LANDING |
| Phase of Operation: EMERGENCY LANDING AFTER TAKEOFF |
| Occurrence: 3, IN FLIGHT COLLISION WITH OBJECT |
| Phase of Operation: EMERGENCY LANDING AFTER TAKEOFF |
| Sequence of Events for Occurrence Number: 3 |
| 1 (Finding) OBJECT / WIRE,TRANSMISSION / (0) |
Home Documents Images Message Board
(Use your browser's back button to return to the page that you were previously viewing.)