Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
the pilot's loss of control and resulting exceedence of the design stress limits of the aircraft, which led to an in-flight structural failure. The pilot's loss of control was due in part to the loss of primary airspeed reference resulting from pitot tube icing, which was caused by the internal failure of the pitot heat switch. Factors in the accident were the pilot's distraction caused by the airspeed reading anomaly and spatial disorientation.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Current)
Analysis
1.1 HISTORY OF FLIGHT
On March 6, 2002, at 1035 Pacific standard time, a Cessna 425, N444JV, experienced a loss of control and a subsequent in-flight breakup at San Jose, California. The aircraft descended to ground impact in an area of rolling, hilly pasture land. The aircraft was owned and operated by the pilot under the provisions of 14 CFR Part 91 of the Federal Aviation Regulations. The aircraft was destroyed in the accident sequence. The instrument rated private pilot and two passengers sustained fatal injuries. Instrument meteorological conditions prevailed at the altitude where the loss of control occurred. The flight departed the Reid-Hillview airport in San Jose at 1029, and was en route nonstop to La Paz, Mexico. An instrument flight rules flight plan was filed, and the pilot had received an instrument clearance prior to departure.
According to a review of recorded air-to-ground communications tapes and radar data obtained from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Bay Terminal Radar Approach Control facility, the aircraft was initially cleared after takeoff to climb to 13,000 feet msl on radar vectors to Victor airway 485. The controller issued a heading of 110 degrees, then told the pilot to intercept the airway and proceed on course. The communications tapes, along with recorded radar data, disclosed that the airplane was climbing at about 2,000 feet per minute (fpm) through 6,700 feet when it began a series of heading and altitude changes that were not consistent with its ATC clearances. The airplane turned right and climbed to 8,600 feet, then turned left and descended to 8,000 feet. The airplane then turned right and climbed to 8,500 feet, where it began a rapidly descending right turn. At 1034:33, as the aircraft was descending through 7,000 feet, the pilot advised ATC "four Juliet victor I just lost my needle give me..." No further transmissions were received from the accident airplane and the last radar return showed it descending through 3,200 feet about 11,000 fpm.
A ground witness to the accident was riding a horse about 1.5 miles from the impact site and was attracted to the airplane by a loud "screaming" jet sound. She looked up and saw the aircraft descend out of the clouds "in a cork-screw pattern." As the airplane got close to the ground, the flight path changed from a descent to a climb while still in the corkscrew turn, with the ascending corkscrew turns much tighter than the descending ones. The airplane then seemed to level off momentarily before it began an arcing and spiraling turn until it disappeared behind a hill. Additional witnesses on a golf course about 0.5-miles from the impact location heard a loud sound they characterized as like an explosion or gunshot. The airplane then rolled level, and continued in an arcing horizontal spin until it disappeared behind a hill. These two witnesses reported that they saw parts falling from the airplane and that it was "smoking."
Other ground witnesses located on a nearby golf course reported that they saw parts falling from the aircraft as it descended to the ground.
1.2 PERSONNEL INFORMATION
The pilot's FAA Airman and Medical Records files were reviewed and they disclosed that he held a US private pilot certificate with land airplane ratings for single, multiengine, and instruments. The certificate was most recently issued as a replacement for a lost certificate on April 24, 2001. The US certificate was issued on the basis of Canadian pilot certificate number WGP 9287, and the records noted that the US certificate was valid only when accompanied by the Canadian certificate.
Detailed review of the airman record files disclosed that he first applied for a US private pilot certificate on the basis of his Canadian certificate on November 3, 1967. A US multiengine land practical test was passed on April 3, 1979, and that class rating was added to his certificate. The pilot applied for and passed the US written and practical tests for an airplane single engine instrument rating on October 11, 1988. On April 18, 1989, the pilot passed the US practical instrument rating test for multiengine airplanes; this test was taken in a Beech 90. The application for this practical test listed a total flight time of 1,956 hours, with 247 in the Beech 90.
The pilot held a third-class medical certificate, which was issued on August 2, 2000, with limitations that he wear corrective lenses and possess glasses for near and intermediate vision. At the time of the medical examination, the pilot reported a total flight time of 4,556 hours.
The pilot's most recent personal flight record book covering the period from November 2000 to the date of the accident was recovered in the wreckage and showed a total pilot time of 4,987 hours, with 2,471 hours in multiengine airplanes. The log recorded 636 hours of actual instrument flight time, with 138 hours of simulated instrument experience. The pilot purchased the airplane on October 10, 2000, and he logged about 400 hours in it prior to the accident.
The logbook showed a pattern of flight activity that was consistent at about 35 hours per month. On January 5, 2002, a biennial flight review was endorsed in the logbook, with the entry noting a total flight of 2.7 hours, with 1.9 hours in actual instrument conditions. An entry dated January 6, 2002, endorsed the completion of an instrument competency check. That entry listed a flight time of 3.4 hours, with 2.1 flown in simulated instrument conditions. The numbers of approaches flown are not delineated in the entry.
In the 90 and 30 days prior to the accident, the logbook records a total hours flown of 86 and 29, respectively.
A search of the FAA airman records database disclosed no record that the passenger who occupied the right front seat had ever held any grade of pilot certificate.
1.3 AIRCRAFT INFORMATION
The maintenance records were obtained from the facility, which performed the maintenance on the aircraft, Turbine Air, Inc., Hayward, California. In addition, information was obtained from Cessna Aircraft and Pratt & Whitney of Canada manufacturing records, and the official FAA Aircraft and Registry files.
According to the records examined, the aircraft, serial number 425-0013, was manufactured in December 1980, and was purchased by the pilot in October 2000. At the time of the accident, the airframe had accumulated a total time in service of 4,315 hours. The aircraft was equipped with full flight instruments on both the left and right sides of the cockpit; however, the flight director system attitude director indicator and horizontal situation indicator were only on the left side. The aircraft was also equipped for flight into known icing conditions, with in part, heated pitot tubes (left and right sides), static sources, and stall warning vanes.
The aircraft was maintained on the Cessna Continuous Airworthiness Inspection Program for the model 425. The program consists five inspection phases, with varying flight hour intervals between phases depending on the phase number. A chart detailing the inspection requirements is appended to this report. According to the records, the most recent Phase 2 inspection (100-hour/annual equivalent) was completed on March 5, 2002, 2 hours prior to the accident. The most recent pitot-static system test and certification in accordance with 14 CFR 91.411 was accomplished on September 28, 2001.
In September 2000, the original Pratt & Whitney of Canada PT6A-112 engines and Hartzell 3-bladed propellers were removed from the airplane. Factory new PT6A-135A engines, serial numbers PZ0040 and PZ0041, were installed in the respective left and right positions. In addition, factory new 4-bladed McCauley 4HFR34C762-1 propellers were installed, serial numbers 992818 on the left side and 000463 on the right position. This work was accomplished in accordance with Supplemental Type Certificate 5786SW. The engines and propellers had accumulated a total time in service of 337 hours at the time of the accident.
Comparison of maintenance records with the FAA listing of Airworthiness Directives applicable to the airframe, engines, and propellers by serial number disclosed that all AD's were complied with.
During the review of the maintenance records, two major repairs were found for structural elements in the airframe. The first concerned the replacement of the left horizontal stabilizer leading edge skin due to bird strike damage sustained in October 1998. This repair was accomplished in accordance with Cessna Engineering Order 425-0663. The second repair was the installation of reinforcement kits (Cessna kit numbers SK-425-44-1 and SK425-44-2) to the right wing forward lower spar cap. These kits were installed in response to a crack that was detected in the spar cap during an inspection for compliance with AD 91-25-08. Details of these repairs are included in the maintenance records appended to this report.
In an interview, the pilot's son noted that he had spoken with his father 3 or 4 days prior to the accident flight. The pilot was satisfied with the airplane in general, and had not mentioned any chronic or unresolved problems.
At the request of the National Transportation Safety Board investigators, an airworthiness inspector from the San Jose Flight Standards District Office went to the Reid-Hillview airport on the afternoon of March 6 to determine the recent fueling on the accident aircraft. He determined that Nice Air had fueled the airplane on the day before the accident (03-05-02) at the pilot's request. He obtained a sample of fuel from the truck used to refuel the airplane and also interviewed the refueling technician.
According to records at Nice Air, the pilot had requested that the airplane be refueled to capacity (a total of 186 gallons in each of the left and right tanks). The fueling technician stated that he had put 107 gallons of Jet A into the le...
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# LAX02FA101