N990CC

Destroyed
Fatal

Piper/Cub Crafters PA-18-150S/N: 9917CC

Accident Details

Date
Friday, April 26, 2002
NTSB Number
DEN02GA039
Location
USAF Academy, CO
Event ID
20020510X00654
Coordinates
38.984443, -104.839996
Aircraft Damage
Destroyed
Highest Injury
Fatal
Fatalities
1
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
0
Total Aboard
1

Probable Cause and Findings

The loss of control for undetermined reasons.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N990CC
Make
PIPER/CUB CRAFTERS
Serial Number
9917CC
Engine Type
Reciprocating
Year Built
2000
Model / ICAO
PA-18-150PA18
Aircraft Type
Fixed Wing Single Engine
No. of Engines
1

Registered Owner (Historical)

Name
DOSS AVIATION INC
Address
3320 CAREFREE CIRCLE WEST
Status
Deregistered
City
COLORADO SPRINGS
State / Zip Code
CO 80917-2805
Country
United States

Analysis

HISTORY OF FLIGHT

On April 26, 2002, at 1208 mountain daylight time, a Piper/Cub Crafters PA-18-150, N990CC, registered to Doss Aviation of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and operated by the United States Air Force Academy, was destroyed when it struck trees and terrain following an uncontrolled descent while towing a Schwiezer T6-4A glider, N7538, at the United States Air Force Academy, Colorado. The commercial pilot, the sole occupant aboard, was fatally injured. Day visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan had been filed for the public use flight being operated under Title 14 CFR Part 91. The local flight originated at 1204.

The following is based on personal interviews with, and a written statement from, the cadet glider instructor. The instructor allowed the cadet student pilot to attempt the takeoff to the south, but "he got us off center and I was forced to take the plane from him." When the tow plane and glider turned onto the crosswind leg, the glider instructor "noticed something strange. The tow pilot flew directly west for a much longer period of time than usual." Once they had turned onto the downwind leg, however, the instructor allowed the student to take control of the glider. "Almost immediately, [he] got out of position, namely, a little high and right [of] the tow plane." The instructor took over and pointed out the student's mistake. When he was given control again, "the same thing happened and he proceeded to get high and right once again." The instructor took control again "only this time when I tried to recover I noticed the tow plane was directly below me and our tow rope was almost completely taught (sic)." She decided to hold their position and raised the nose about 1-3 degrees to reduce airspeed and make it easier for the tow plane to get back in position. At an altitude approximately 7,600 feet, "[the tow plane suddenly] pulled sharply to the left in what I thought was a turn. I held on until [my student] pointed out he was in a spiral dive." The glider was "pulled to a straight down position." As the instructor was attempting to pull the release, she heard a loud "snap" and the glider broke free of the tow approximately 7,100 feet, but not before it "had followed the turn for about 270 degrees." They saw the tow plane strike the ground, explode and burn. They returned to the airfield and landed at 1212.

The following is based on personal interviews with, and a written statement from, the student pilot aboard the glider. This was his second flight and he corroborated the account given by the cadet instructor pilot. He said he allowed the glider to get too high and to the right of the tow plane. A "slack line" developed because he failed to "apply enough forward pressure on the stick [and] the tow plane did not pull up to correct the slack line." The cadet student pilot said he saw that the glider was "really high" above the tow plane, "approximately 100 to 150 feet above," the tow plane was at their 11 o'clock position, and it appeared they were overtaking it. Twice, he asked the instructor if they should release the tow because the tow line appeared to be taut. "About this time the towline went taught (sic) which caused the tail of the tow plane to be lifted up and to the left, and our aircraft's nose to be pulled down and to the right." The tow line broke when the glider was pulled into a near-vertical attitude. The student watched as the tow plane continued "the induced turn and fly into the ground." The instructor was able to recover from the dive and land.

Ten witnesses submitted written statements. Several of those witnesses were interviewed. The following is based on those witness' interviews and statements. Witness #1, a student pilot in a glider behind the mishap tow plane, noticed it was "extremely low...it did not appear to be at a dramatic down angle. The it was into the trees and I saw an explosion. The plane was not spinning and did not appear to be out of control. It just flew straight into the ridge." Witness #2, another cadet student pilot preparing to enter the traffic pattern, saw the tow plane "just nose straight down in a dive and impact."

Witness #3, a control tower spotter who had just come on duty, saw the tow plane "flying straight at the ground [and] disappear behind the ridge." Witness #4, and observer in the tower, saw and aircraft "flying directly towards the ground" and disappear behind the tree line. Witness #5 corroborated these statements, saying he "saw the tow plane in a nosedive" before it disappeared behind a ridge.

Witness #6 saw "a tow plane dive away from a sail plane" at pattern altitude, then he saw "the tow plane continue to bank and spiral into the ground," making no apparent attempt to recover. The duty SOF (witness #7) agreed, saying "it looked like a left hand spin" from base to final.

Witness #8 was stopped at the intersection of the football stadium access road and Douglass Drive when he saw the tow plane in "an unusual attitude" that reminded him of a "wing over." The airplane was about 800 to 900 feet above the ground, and in a 40-45 degree nose high/75-85 degree left wing low attitude. The nose fell through the horizon past vertical, then straight down before making a "steady and positive" recovery. "It entered the trees at about 40-45 degrees nose low, heading in an easterly direction." Witness #9, a retired Air Force fighter pilot, was driving west on Community Center Drive when he saw the tow plane about 300 feet above the ground and in a 45-60 degree nose-low dive. Witness #10, a commercial pilot, was southbound on Interstate Highway 25 and north of the Academy airfield when he saw the tow plane make "a descending spiral" from about 300-500 feet. It was "nearly vertical" when it disappeared in the trees.

The accident occurred during daylight hours at a location of 38 degrees, 59.072' north latitude, and 104 degrees, 50.407' west longitude.

PERSONNEL INFORMATION

Doss Aviation, Inc., employed the 72-year-old tow plane pilot, a retired USAF fighter pilot, in February 1992. He held a commercial pilot certificate with airplane single-engine land, multiengine land, and instrument ratings. He was also type rated in the Cessna 500. The pilot was issued a second-class airman medical certificate, dated August 30, 2001, that contained the restriction, "Holder shall wear lenses that correct for distant vision, and possess glasses that correct for near vision. Medical certificate not valid for any class after August 31, 2002." The special issuance certificate under Title 14 CFR Part 67.19 was granted after the pilot underwent bypass surgery in 2000. The pilot's logbook was not located, but information provided by Doss Aviation indicated he had logged 15,479 total flight hours as of January 2002, of which approximately 8,000 hours were in the PA-18. In the previous 90 days, he had logged 150 hours. His last biennial flight review was accomplished on March 24, 2002; his last company check, consisting of 3 glider aero tows as required by Title 14 CFR Part 61.69, was accomplished on August 29, 2001, and his last recorded instrument proficiency check was on December 10, 1999.

The instructor aboard N7538, a cadet third class, said she had made about 100 glider flights, each flight averaging about 15 minutes. The student pilot aboard N7538 said that this was his second glider flight.

AIRCRAFT INFORMATION

Cub Crafters of Yakima, Washington, manufactured N990CC, a Piper/Cub Crafters PA-18-150 (s/n 9917CC), commonly known as the "Super Cub," in November 2000. It was equipped with a Lycoming O-360-C1G engine (s/n L-37720-36A), rated at 180 horsepower, and a McCauley two-blade, all-metal, fixed-pitch propeller (m/n 1A200/FA8242, s/n YF020), manufactured on October 19, 2000. On November 7, 2000, the propeller was repitched to 42-40 inches, and reinstalled on the airplane on November 10, 2000. At the time of the accident, the airframe had accrued 1,215 total hours. The tail hook installed on N990CC was a Schweitzer model 3415D.

According to the airframe maintenance logbook, the following 100-hour inspections were performed:

DATE TOTAL TIME

April 17, 2002 1,200

February 19, 2002 1,100

December 21, 2001 1,000

November 1, 2001 900 (annual inspection)

September 28, 2001 800

August 21, 2001 700

July 25, 2001 600

July 5, 2001 500

June 14, 2001 400

April 26, 2001 300

March 15, 2001 200

February 2, 2001 100

November 10, 2000 Certification date

N7538, a Schweizer TG-4A (USAF s/n 70-0168, civilian s/n 168), was the Air Force version of the Schweizer SGS 2-33A. According to its maintenance records, the airframe was completely overhauled , X-rayed, and rebuilt on June 8, 2000. The work, part of an annual inspection, included the installation of a new tow hook that was accomplished at 14,794.8 hours total time. The most recent annual/100-hour inspection was accomplished on February 1, 2002, when the airframe had accrued an additional 92.2 hours, for a total time of 15,669.1 hours.

METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION

Weather at the time of the accident, as reported at the Air Force Academy Airfield, was: wind, 210 degrees at 14 knots, variable from 160 to 220 degrees; visibility, 15 statute miles; ceiling, 6,500 feet broken, 10,000 feet broken, 20,000 feet broken; temperature, 61 degrees F.; dew point, 30 degrees F.; altimeter, 29.82 inches; remarks: wind data estimated.

WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATION

The airplane struck trees and the ground on a magnetic heading of 128 degrees in hilly, forested terrain, and came to rest on a magnetic heading of 204 degrees at an elevation of 6,653 feet msl (mean sea level). A post-impact fire destroyed most of the airplane and the surrounding vegetation. The fuselage, left wing, a portion of the right wing, and both horizontal and the vertical stabilizers were intact, but the fabric had been burned away, exposing the airframe tubing. The right wing tip was l...

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# DEN02GA039