N1831Y

Destroyed
Fatal

Cessna 172C S/N: 172-49431

Accident Details

Date
Sunday, February 21, 1999
NTSB Number
CHI99FA094
Location
GRENOLA, KS
Event ID
20001205X00126
Coordinates
37.350425, -96.439109
Aircraft Damage
Destroyed
Highest Injury
Fatal
Fatalities
2
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
0
Total Aboard
2

Probable Cause and Findings

loss of control in flight due to incapacitation.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N1831Y
Make
CESSNA
Serial Number
172-49431
Engine Type
Reciprocating
Model / ICAO
172C C172
Aircraft Type
Fixed Wing Single Engine
No. of Engines
1

Registered Owner (Historical)

Name
MOLINE FLYING CLUB INC
Address
RT 1 BOX 24A
Status
Deregistered
City
GRENOLA
State / Zip Code
KS 67346
Country
United States

Analysis

HISTORY OF FLIGHT

On February 20, 1999, at 2015 central standard time (cst), a Cessna 172C, N1831Y, operated by a commercial pilot, was destroyed when while maneuvering on base leg for landing to the south at Liebau Airstrip (45KS), the airplane impacted the terrain. Night visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time of the accident. The personal flight was being conducted under 14 CFR Part 91. There was no flight plan on file. The pilot and passenger on board the airplane sustained fatal injuries. The cross-country flight originated at Goodland, Kansas, at 1630 mountain standard time (mst), and was en route to Grenola, Kansas.

According to his son, the pilot and his wife had flown to Laramie, Wyoming, to attend the funeral of his wife's mother. They were returning to their ranch at Grenola, Kansas, on the day of the accident. The son said that they took off from Laramie at approximately 1430 mst.

A flight instructor for Cowboy Aviation, Laramie Regional Airport, Laramie, Wyoming, said that the pilot came into Cowboy Aviation on the afternoon of February 20, 1999, just before he and his wife departed. The pilot paid his hanger bill and contacted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Flight Service Station at Casper, Wyoming. The flight instructor said that the pilot obtained a weather briefing. A credit card receipt from Cowboy Aviation, dated February 20, 1999, at 1418 mst, showed that the pilot purchased 18.4 gallons of fuel.

A witness at Renner Field/Goodland Municipal Airport, Goodland, Kansas said that the pilot came into Butterfly Aviation, the fixed base operator on the airport, to pay for fuel. A credit card receipt from Butterfly Aviation, dated February 20, 1999, at 1615 mst, showed that the pilot purchased 15 gallons of 100 low lead fuel. The pilot then departed. The witness said that nobody saw the airplane takeoff from Goodland, Kansas.

The pilot's son said that he and his wife were driving back from the funeral and were at Garden City, Kansas, when he spoke to his mom. It was 1711 cst (1611 mst) when he spoke with her. His mom told him that they were at Goodland, Kansas getting gas for the airplane, and that they would be taking off right after she hung up. She asked the son to have their house-sitter turn on the runway lights on their airstrip. The son said that the pilot had a Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) receiver on board the airplane, and that the pilot's route would have been a straight line from Goodland to the airstrip. He said that they would have taken off at 1730 cst, and that the flight from Goodland to Grenola takes approximately 3 hours. He said this would have put them in at 2030 cst. The son said he called the house-sitter at 2100 cst. The house-sitter said that the pilot and his wife had not arrived yet. The son arrived at the house and the airstrip at 2200 cst. He said that he drove up and down the road in front of the house looking for signs of the airplane. At 2220 cst, the son called the Elk County, Kansas, Sheriff. The Sheriff told him that they were receiving an emergency locator transmitter (ELT) signal.

PERSONNEL INFORMATION

The pilot held a commercial pilot certificate with single and multi-engine airplane ratings. The certificate cited a restriction prohibiting the pilot from carrying passengers for hire at night and on cross-country flights of more than 50 nautical miles.

The pilot held a second-class medical certificate with privileges limited to crop-dusting. The certificate granted full third- class privileges.

According to FAA medical records, the pilot reported on February 4, 1999, to have accumulated 5,100 total flying hours. The pilot's most recent personal logbook showed that the pilot last completed a biennial flight review on June 12, 1998.

The pilot was self-employed as an agricultural spray (crop dusting) pilot. Records obtained from the FAA Aviation Data Systems Branch, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, revealed the pilot had been involved in two previous crop dusting-related airplane accidents; the first occurring on April 29, 1983, and the other on April 28, 1985.

AIRCRAFT INFORMATION

The airplane was registered to the Moline Flying Club, Incorporated, of Grenola, Kansas. It was co-owned by the pilot, his son, and two other associates. The airplane was used for pleasure flying.

The airplane underwent an annual inspection on September 22, 1998. The total airframe time recorded at the annual inspection was 2,815.5 hours, and equaled the total tachometer time. The time taken from the engine's tachometer at the accident site was 2,827.0 hours.

METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION

At 2056 cst, the FAA Flight Service Station at Wichita Mid- Continent Airport, Wichita, Kansas, (287 degrees magnetic at 50 nautical miles from the accident site) reported the surface observation as a broken ceiling of 2,700 feet above ground level (agl), and 10 statute miles visibility. The temperature was reported as 36 degrees Fahrenheit, and the dew point was reported as 27 degrees Fahrenheit. The altimeter was reported as 30.40 inches of mercury (Hg), and the winds were 360 degrees magnetic at 8 knots, with wind gusts to 17 knots.

At 2103 cst, the Automated Surface Observation System (ASOS) at Chanute Martin Johnson Airport, Chanute, Kansas, (065 degrees magnetic at 48 nautical miles from the accident site) reported the surface observation as a broken ceiling of 1,300 feet agl, an overcast ceiling of 1,800 feet agl, and 7 statute miles visibility. The temperature was reported as 37 degrees Fahrenheit, and the dew point was reported as 34 degrees Fahrenheit. The altimeter was reported as 30.36 inches Hg, and the winds were 360 degrees magnetic at 11 knots.

WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATION

The NTSB on scene investigation began on February 21, 1999, at 1400 cst.

The accident site was located on the eastern edge of a cow pasture, bordering a wooded area, approximately 2, 110 feet east of a north-south running unpaved county road. The accident site was also located 3,520 feet northeast of the Liebau Airstrip.

The accident site began with a 25 foot tall, 7 inch diameter hedge tree located within the western edge of a wooded area approximately 80 feet east of a north-south running barbed-wire fence. Severed and broken branches, 1 to 3 inches in diameter, were scattered outward from toward the northwest beginning near the base of the tree. Two other hedge trees, one located approximately 30 feet west-northwest of the first hedge tree, and the other located 42 feet northwest of the first referenced hedge tree, were broken approximately two-thirds up their respective tree trunks from their root bases. Tree branches and trunk segments as small as 1 and 1/2 inches in diameter to as large as 5 feet in length and 6 inches in diameter, fanned outward to the west and northwest for approximately 90 feet. The broken trees aligned along a common descending angle of approximately 34 degrees.

Pieces of plexiglass from the airplane's windscreen, pieces of fiberglass from the airplane's wing tips, aeronautical charts, and several small pieces of severed wood, fanned outward through the trees on the edge of the wooded area, along a 325 degree magnetic heading, to the barbed-wire fence.

A 54 foot long, 78 inch wide, ground scar began 90 feet from the first hedge tree, on a 323 degree magnetic heading. The ground scar was 7 inches at its deepest point, one-third the distance from its start, on the southwest edge. The ground scar ran up the slope of a hill on a 16 degree incline, through the barbed- wire fence, and into the cow pasture. Several small pieces of fiberglass, plexiglass, charts and wood fragments were located in and around the west-northwest side of the ground scar.

The airplane's propeller was located in the ground scar approximately 120 feet from the first hedge tree on a 324 degree magnetic heading. The propeller flange was broken torsionally from the crankshaft. Both propeller blades showed torsional bending, and deep chordwise and longitudinally-running scratches.

The leading edges of both blades showed several nicks, many 1/4 inch in depth. The outboard 7 inches of one propeller tip was broken chordwise, and rested 12 feet southwest of the ground scar, along the barbed-wire fence. The outboard 3 inches of the other propeller tip was bent aft and broken. The rear plate of the spinner remained attached to the propeller. It was bent aft and twisted, conforming to the propeller hub.

A 60 foot section of downed barbed-wire fence crossed the ground scar 124 feet from the first hedge tree on a 324 degree magnetic heading. Two 5 foot high and 4 inch diameter fence poles were broken off at ground level. One rested on the southwest side of the ground scar. The other post rested near the airplane's main wreckage

Small pieces of plexiglass, fiberglass and twisted metal from the engine cowling, the nose gear wheel pants, the nose gear, personal effects, and a 50 inch long, 5 inch diameter section of fence post ran outward, in succession, from the northwest end of the ground scar for the next 81 feet before ending at the airplane's main wreckage.

The airplane's main wreckage was located in an open cow pasture, 225 feet from the first hedge tree on a 323 degree magnetic heading. The airplane was upside-down, resting on the top of the cabin, both wings, and the top of the vertical stabilizer. The longitudinal axis of the airplane's cabin was oriented on a 150 degree magnetic heading. The main wreckage consisted of the airplane's cabin, just aft the firewall location, both wings, the main landing gear, aft fuselage, empennage, and engine.

The remainder of the fuselage, cowling, just forward of the cabin, and the bottom fuselage beneath the front forward cabin at the instrument panel, was bent upward approximately 75 degrees and crushed aft. Most of the firewall was broken out an...

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# CHI99FA094