N5768S

Substantial
None

Schweizer SGS 1-26BS/N: 394

Accident Details

Date
Tuesday, August 7, 2001
NTSB Number
SEA01LA147
Location
Rock Island, WA
Event ID
20010815X01692
Coordinates
47.310150, -120.080947
Aircraft Damage
Substantial
Highest Injury
None
Fatalities
0
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
1
Total Aboard
1

Probable Cause and Findings

The student pilot's improper inflight planning and decision (delay in establishing an approach to a suitable landing area) and his subsequent failure to attain the proper glidepath for the selected landing area, resulting in an overshoot of the selected landing area and collison with trees during landing. Factors included the pilot's lack of experience, and trees in the vicinity of the landing site.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N5768S
Make
SCHWEIZER
Serial Number
394
Engine Type
Unknown
Year Built
1968
Model / ICAO
SGS 1-26BSG26
Aircraft Type
Glider
No. of Engines
0

Registered Owner (Historical)

Name
CASCADE SOARING SOCIETY INC
Address
1 PANGBORN DRIVE
Status
Deregistered
City
E WENATCHEE
State / Zip Code
WA 98802
Country
United States

Analysis

On August 7, 2001, approximately 1330 Pacific daylight time, a Schweizer SGS 1-26B glider, N5768S, operated by Cascade Soaring Society Inc. of East Wenatchee, Washington, and being flown by a student pilot, was substantially damaged in an off-airport landing near Rock Island, Washington. The pilot of the single-seat glider was not injured in the accident. The 14 CFR 91 instructional flight had departed approximately 1300 from Pangborn Memorial Airport, Wenatchee, Washington, on an intended cross-country flight to Ephrata, Washington. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and no flight plan was filed for the flight.

The student pilot's certificate was issued on June 29, 2001. The student pilot's flight instructor, who towed the student to altitude on the accident flight and who completed an NTSB accident report form on behalf of the student, reported that the student had 30 hours total pilot time, including 8 hours in the accident make and model. The flight instructor stated:

...[The student] had been instructed to climb to at least 6,000 [feet] MSL

prior to leaving the local area. He may have left too low. When he failed

to find lift and [too] low to return to Pangborn without finding lift he delayed

selecting a safe landing site until only one option remained. His approach

was high and a tail wind spoiled his [judgment]. His landing was 150 feet

from a cherry orchard (with 400 feet of open field behind). He aimed

between trees and received no injuries.

The off-airport landing site was approximately 2 miles east of the airport. The flight instructor reported that no mechanical malfunction or failure was involved in the accident.

According to the 1997 Soaring Sailplane Directory, published by the Soaring Society of America, the SGS 1-26B has a maximum lift/drag ratio (L/D max) of 23 at 43 knots. Pangborn Memorial's elevation is 1,249 feet above sea level, and Ephrata Municipal Airport (approximately 29 nautical miles east-southeast of Pangborn Memorial) is 1,276 feet above sea level. The flight instructor reported that winds at the time were from 250 degrees at 7 to 8 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# SEA01LA147