Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
THE PILOT'S INADEQUATE COMPENSATION FOR CROSSWIND CONDITIONS. A CROSSWIND AND ICY RUNWAY CONDITIONS WERE FACTORS IN THE ACCIDENT.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Historical)
Analysis
On November 12, 1994, at approximately 1550 Alaska standard time, a wheel equipped Cessna Model 172 airplane, N6322D, operated by Ryan Air Service, Inc. collided with terrain during the landing rollout on runway 29 at the Bethel Airport, Bethel, Alaska. The commercial certificated pilot and his two revenue passengers, the sole occupants, were not injured and the airplane sustained substantial damage. The 14 CFR Part 135 on-demand flight last departed Akiak, Alaska at 1529 and the intended destination was Bethel. The pilot reported that special VFR conditions prevailed in the control zone and that the flight was on a company VFR flight plan.
The pilot reported that during the landing flare, he noticed the airplane begin to drift off the final approach course. After touchdown, the airplane bounced and then settled onto the runway.
The airplane skidded off the edge of the ice covered, snow packed runway adjacent to taxiway F, and the horizontal stabilizer struck a snow berm. The runway braking action was reported by the pilot as poor to nil. The substantial damage/accident assessment was reported to the NTSB on November 18, 1994, by an FAA airworthiness inspector.
At 1550 hours weather observation at Bethel was reporting in part: Sky condition, partially obscured, measured ceiling, 900 feet overcast; visibility, 1 mile in blowing snow and fog; temperature, 19 degrees F; dew point, 17 degrees F; wind, 310 degrees at 18 knots, gusts to 25 knots; altimeter, 29.64 inHg; remarks, blowing snow obscuring 2/10ths of the sky. The pilot reported that at touchdown, the winds were 250 degrees at 25 knots.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ANC95LA010