N216PB

Destroyed
Fatal

Cessna 172P S/N: 17274440

Accident Details

Date
Friday, April 28, 2000
NTSB Number
LAX00FA178
Location
CHESTER, CA
Event ID
20001212X20842
Coordinates
40.269275, -121.239990
Aircraft Damage
Destroyed
Highest Injury
Fatal
Fatalities
4
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
0
Total Aboard
4

Probable Cause and Findings

The pilot's encounter with a wind shear at low altitude, which resulted in a loss of control and a stall/spin. Factors in the accident were the high density altitude and the pilot's lack of experience and training in high density altitude operations. The pilot's decision to takeoff downwind, while reasonable given the nature of the obstacles and terrain on the other runways, set up a situation where decreased safety margins existed and is considered a factor.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N216PB
Make
CESSNA
Serial Number
17274440
Engine Type
Reciprocating
Year Built
1980
Model / ICAO
172P C172
Aircraft Type
Fixed Wing Single Engine
No. of Engines
1

Registered Owner (Historical)

Name
BERNDT SCOTT J
Address
355 E LASSEN AVE APT 19
Status
Deregistered
City
CHICO
State / Zip Code
CA 95973-0574
Country
United States

Analysis

HISTORY OF FLIGHT

On April 28, 2000, between 1500 and 1620 hours Pacific daylight time, a Cessna 172P, N216PB, collided with the surface of Lake Alamanor near Chester, California. The airplane was operated by Pacific Flight Services of Chico, California, and was rented by the pilot for a personal flight. The aircraft was destroyed in the collision sequence and sank. The private pilot and his three passengers sustained fatal injuries. The airplane was being operated under 14 CFR Part 91 as a personal flight when the accident occurred. The flight is believed to have departed the Chester airport between 1500 and 1530 for a local sightseeing flight around the lake. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and a flight plan was not filed for the flight.

No witnesses to the accident were identified by either Safety Board investigators or investigating officers from the Pulmas County Sheriff/Coroner's Office.

Investigation disclosed that the pilot rented the airplane from the operator and departed from the Chico airport about 1430 and flew to the Chester airport, a distance of 47 miles. At the Chester airport, the pilot met with his fiance, her grandparents, and her younger brother. According to the fiance and other family members, the pilot loaded his fiancee's grandparents and her younger brother onboard the airplane to go sightseeing around the lake while the fiance waited for the group to return. This was the pilot's first flight with passengers since obtaining his fixed wing private pilot certificate 14 days prior to the accident.

The airport manager and owner of the local fixed base operation (FBO) on the field witnessed the group of people walk out to the accident airplane and get in. He said he was about 100 feet away from the airplane and he heard it start up and also heard the subsequent takeoff. He said that he owns a Cessna, and the engine sounded "typical" and normal. The airport manager said he is also an airframe and power plant mechanic with inspection authorization. While he did not note the exact time, he believes that the airplane took off somewhere between 1500 and 1530.

The airport manager said that pilots typically land on runway 34 and depart using runway 16 so that they fly over the lake and not the noise sensitive town of Chester. He said he could not be 100 percent certain, but he believed the pilot departed on runway 16 out over the lake.

Shortly after 1600, a motorist driving along the west shore of the lake observed the tail of an airplane sticking out of the water and went to the U.S. Forest Service ranger station across the street from the airport to report the sighting. According to Pulmas County Sheriff's office, the 911 emergency call from the U.S. Forest Service office reporting the aircraft wreckage sighting was logged at 1625.

The location of the wreckage was plotted on a USGS survey map by the responding search and rescue personnel from the Pulmas County Sheriff's office. The location as plotted was later determined to be about 4,600 feet on a magnetic bearing of 132 degrees from the approach end of runway 34 (or the departure end of runway 16). The location is 0.4 miles east of the lake's north-south oriented western shoreline. According to the airport manager, the position of the wreckage would be consistent with either a upwind to crosswind turn point for runway 16, or, a base to final turn point for runway 34.

PERSONNEL INFORMATION

The pilot's personal flight records, the operator's records, and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) airman and medical records files were reviewed. He held a private pilot certificate with ratings for rotorcraft helicopters and single engine land airplanes. The rotorcraft helicopter rating was issued on August 1, 1999, and the airplane single engine land add-on rating was issued on April 14, 2000. The pilot's most recent third-class medical certificate was issued without limitations on September 1, 1998.

According to the pilot's flight logbook he had 131 hours total time, with 68 hours in rotorcraft, and 63 hours in fixed wing airplanes. All of the fixed wing flight time was amassed in Cessna 172 aircraft between September 1999 and the accident. Over half of the flights, including the pilot's practical flight test, were listed in the accident airplane. Of the 63 fixed wing flight hours, 10 were recorded as pilot-in-command. No logbook entries were recorded between the pilot's fixed wing practical flight test on April 14 and the date of the accident. Based on the identifiers listed in the logbook for flight origin and destination points, the highest elevation airport used by the pilot was about 2,500 feet msl, and only one flight was recorded to that airport. The balance of the flight activity was conducted in the greater San Joaquin Valley of California at airport elevations below 1,000 feet msl.

According to family members, the passenger in the right front seat did not have any prior aeronautical experience. No record of the individual was found during a review of the FAA airman and medical records database.

AIRCRAFT INFORMATION

The Cessna 172P, serial number 17274440, was manufactured in November 1980, and had accrued a total time in service of 9,005 hours. The most recent annual inspection was completed on February 4, 2000, 156 hours prior to the accident. In addition, a 100-hour inspection was accomplished on April 5, 2000, 58 hours prior to the mishap. A Lycoming O-320-D2J engine, serial number L-1046-39A, was the original Cessna factory installed engine in the airframe and had accumulated the same total time in service as the airframe. The engine had accrued 1,052 hours since the most recent major overhaul. Annual and 100-hour inspections were accomplished on the dates noted for the airframe. In addition, a 50-hour inspection was completed the day prior to the accident. Review of the operator's aircraft status sheet and maintenance department records disclosed that there were no unresolved discrepancies at the time the pilot rented the airplane.

The operator's records revealed that the airplane was refueled on the morning of the accident with the addition of 15.1 gallons of 100LL aviation gasoline. The operator reported that the addition of the fuel topped the aircraft standard range tanks to capacity (43 gallons total, 21.5 in each tank). Another renter pilot flew the airplane for 1.2 hours before the accident pilot rented it; comparison of the recording hour meter reading at the accident site and on the operator's rental log sheet for the pilot's departure from Chico revealed that the accident pilot flew the airplane for a total of 0.6-hours. Using average fuel consumption rates in the airplane flight manual climb and cruise performance charts, investigators conservatively estimated that the airplane had about 20 gallons of fuel onboard at the time of departure from the Chester airport. The disposition of the fuel load between the two standard capacity wing tanks could not be determined.

As noted above, the recording hour meter registered 0.6 hours from the time the pilot took the airplane at Chico. Using the performance charts in the Cessna Aircraft Information Manual for the airplane, the flight time from Chico to the Chester airport was computed (the charts are appended to this report). The performance charts include adjustment factors for the takeoff and climb variances from cruise. A climb to 6,000 feet was assumed in the computations, along with a cruise at 75 percent power, and an additional 6 minutes was factored in for the start and taxi at Chico, and the taxi in to parking at the Chester Airport. The total elapsed time thus derived was between 32 and 38 minutes, or, 0.6 hours on the recording hour meter.

Weight and balance computations were made for the takeoff at Chester, and at a zero fuel condition. The airplane empty weight, total moment, and center of gravity were obtained from the operator's maintenance records. The takeoff condition used the previously estimated 20 gallons of fuel. The occupant weights and seating positions were obtained from the Pulmas County Coroner's office. The detailed computations are appended to this report. For the takeoff condition, the gross weight was 2,258 pounds and the center of gravity was 42.4-inches. For the zero fuel condition, the gross weight was 2,138 pounds, with a center of gravity at 42.1 inches. According to the weight and balance charts in the airplane's flight manual, the allowable center of gravity range for the determined weights was 37.86 inches to 47.3 inches. The maximum authorized gross weight is 2,400 pounds.

According to Cessna Aircraft engineering documents, the control surface travel range for the elevator trim tab is 19 degrees tab down (nose up) and 22 degrees tab up (nose down). During examination of the control system following wreckage recovery from the lake, the elevator trim tab jackscrew actuator was found at a 13-degree tab down (nose up) position (See Tests and Research section of this narrative). At the request of Safety Board Investigators, Cessna Aircraft conducted a series of flight tests with a similarly equipped Cessna 172P. The tests were conducted at a weight and center of gravity location replicating the condition of the aircraft when it arrived at Chester and during the subsequent accident flight takeoff. A normal full-flap approach and landing was made following the procedures specified in the Aircraft Information Manual; the elevator trim tab was then measured and found to be 3.9 degrees tab down (nose up). A 13-degree tab down position was established on the ground and the cockpit indicator marked to be able to return to that setting while in flight. The power off trim speeds at zero flaps and at 10, 20, and 30 degrees of flap extension were then established. At zero flaps, power off, the trim speed was between 53 and 60 knots. With 10 degrees of flaps, powe...

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# LAX00FA178