N2823H

Destroyed
Fatal

Piper PA-28-181S/N: 28-7990474

Accident Details

Date
Friday, January 7, 2005
NTSB Number
ATL05FA041
Location
Bradley, SC
Event ID
20050111X00035
Coordinates
34.059444, -82.242500
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 loss of control of the airplane due to spatial disorientation, which resulted in an uncontrolled descent and collision with trees and the ground. A factor was the dark night conditions.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N2823H
Make
PIPER
Serial Number
28-7990474
Engine Type
Reciprocating
Year Built
1979
Model / ICAO
PA-28-181P28A
Aircraft Type
Fixed Wing Single Engine
No. of Engines
1

Registered Owner (Historical)

Name
REGISTRATION PENDING
Address
PO BOX 1527
Status
Deregistered
City
MC CORMICK
State / Zip Code
SC 29835-1527
Country
United States

Analysis

HISTORY OF FLIGHT

On January 7, 2005, at 1856 eastern standard time, a Piper PA-28-181, N2823H, registered to pending applicant Cherokee One, LLC, and operated by the private pilot, collided with trees and the ground in Bradley, South Carolina. The personal flight was operated under the provisions of Title 14 CFR Part 91 with no flight plan filed. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed. The private pilot and the three passengers received fatal injuries, and the airplane was destroyed. The flight departed McCormick County Airport (S19), McCormick, South Carolina, at an undetermined time on January 7, 2005.

According to flight service station records, the pilot telephoned the Anderson, South Carolina, automated flight service station (AFSS) for a weather briefing at 1739 and requested a standard weather briefing for a 1-hour-15-minute flight from S19 to Marlboro County Jetport (BBP), Bennettsville, South Carolina, with an estimated departure time of 2000. The pilot also requested wind information for 3,000 and 6,000 feet. The briefer told the pilot that the satellite imagery was showing cloud cover over the entire route. The briefer stated that the current reported conditions at Greenwood County Airport (GRD), South Carolina, were visibility 10 statute miles with overcast clouds at 3,800 feet, and at Columbia, South Carolina, ceilings were broken at 4,000 feet. The briefer stated that the forecast for Columbia was ceilings broken at 2,000 feet, and, by 2100, conditions at Florence, South Carolina, were forecast to include clouds at 2,000 feet with mist, and that conditions there were expected to deteriorate after 2200.

The pilot did not file a flight plan to BBP, and, according to information provided by family members, the accident flight was instead en route to GRD. No known radio communication or radar contact was made with the flight. When the airplane failed to arrive at GRD, friends and family became concerned and initiated a search. Witnesses in residences near the accident site reported the downed airplane to the local 911 operator at 1856. One witness reported the airplane sounded "as if in distress ... [with] the engine idling high." The wreckage was found in a wooded area 9.14 nautical miles north northeast of S19.

PERSONNEL INFORMATION

The pilot held a private pilot certificate for airplane single-engine land issued March 6, 1999, and a third-class airman medical certificate issued September 27, 2004, with no limitations. The pilot's logbook was not recovered for examination. On the pilot's March 6, 1999, application for his private pilot certificate, he reported 55.5 total flight hours with 7.3 hours night instruction received, and on his September 27, 2004, application for the medical certificate, he reported 150 total civilian flight hours.

AIRCRAFT INFORMATION

The four-seat, low-wing, fixed-gear airplane, serial number (S/N) 28-7990474, was manufactured in 1979. It was powered by a Lycoming O-360-A4M 180-hp engine, S/N L-29497-36A, and equipped with a Sensenich model 76EM8S5-0-62, S/N 19917K, fixed-pitch propeller. Review of copies of maintenance logbook records showed an annual inspection was completed November 24, 2004, at a recorded tachometer reading of 5173.1 hours, airframe total time of 5713.1 hours, and engine time since major overhaul of 642.1 hours. The tachometer and the Hobbs hour-meter were observed at the accident site, however, damage precluded determining the current readings.

METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION

A review of recorded data from the GRD automated weather observation station, elevation 631 feet, revealed at 1816 conditions were winds calm, visibility 10 statute miles, cloud conditions broken at 2,200 feet above ground level and overcast at 3,400 feet above ground level.

The GOES-12 infrared satellite image at 1832 depicted a region of mid- to high-level cloud cover extending over an area that included the accident site. No convective clouds were identified in the immediate vicinity.

On the day of the accident, official sunset was at 1736, end of civil twilight was at 1804, moonset was at 1434 with an elevation more than 15 degrees below the horizon, and moonrise would be 0548 on January 8, 2005. Moon phase was a waning crescent with 11 percent of visible disk illuminated. Review of these data by a Safety Board senior meteorologist revealed the moon was below the horizon at the time of the accident and would have been obscured by the mid- to high-level cloud cover.

WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATION

Wreckage debris and broken tree limbs were scattered about 175 feet along an approximate 235-degree magnetic heading from a cluster of scraped and broken trees. A separated section of the outboard left wing and an outboard section of the left aileron were lodged in one of the damaged trees at the beginning of the debris path. A crater approximately 3 feet deep, 20 feet long, and 10 feet wide was observed on the ground approximately 90 feet southwest of the initial cluster of broken trees, and the fuselage and empennage were located approximately 40 feet southwest of the crater. The fuel tanks were breached, and fuel odor was detected in the general area where some fuel tank pieces were found. From the northeast side of the debris path looking southwest toward the main wreckage, the tree in which the outboard section of the left aileron was lodged showed scrapes and damage higher than the break and scrape damage in the other trees.

Examination of the left wing revealed a separated section was on the ground at the base of a tree with the left flap attached; the main wing spar and the flap were bent, and the fuel filler cap was secure in its port. An approximate 6-foot section of aileron cable with a turnbuckle intact was found with this section of the left wing; the separated cable ends showed a splayed appearance of the individual cable strands. The composite left wingtip cap was found separated and in a tree. The left inboard section of aileron was found attached at the inboard hinge to another separated section of the left wing. The left aileron bellcrank was not located. The Greenwood County Sheriff's Department retrieved the outboard section of the left aileron from the tree and submitted it for examination. Sheriff's department personnel reported that the components were crushed around the tree and that it was difficult to separate them from the tree. Examination revealed the outboard section of the left aileron was attached to a separated section of the outboard left wing at the outboard hinge and both showed semi-circular, fore-to-aft accordion crush damage and tree bark debris.

Examination of the right wing revealed an outboard section was separated and on the ground with the composite wingtip cap attached and a section of the right aileron attached at the outboard and middle hinges. Sections of the main wing spar were bent and separated. The fuel filler cap was absent from the port and found within the debris path. The right aileron bellcrank was attached, both arms were bent inboard, and the stops were in place. An approximate 6-foot section of balance cable and an approximate 2-inch section of the control cable were attached to the bellcrank; the separated cable ends showed a splayed appearance of the individual cable strands. The inboard section of the right aileron was separated inboard of the rivet line. An inboard section of the right flap about 2.5 feet long was found separated with the inboard bracket attached. The outboard section of the right flap was found separated and showed semi-circular fore-to-aft crush damage.

The empennage was attached to the fuselage with the vertical fin attached by a section of aircraft skin. The rudder was attached to the vertical fin at all attach points, and the rudder control cables were attached to the rudder horn. Rudder control continuity was established from the rudder to the cockpit rudder bar. The stabilator structure with the trailing edge was attached, most of the left side skin was attached, most of the right side skin was separated and found in the debris path, the balance weight was attached, and the stabilator trim tab was attached. The stabliator control cables were attached to the balance weight. Stabilator control continuity was established from the balance weight tube assembly to the cockpit t-bar. The stabilator trim tab arm assembly was attached to the tab and bent, and the trim control cable was observed on its drum.

The fuselage was on its left side. The cabin, cabin roof, and cabin floor showed crush damage, the cabin door was separated, and the seats showed deformation. The instrument panel was crushed with most instruments and avionics separated from their mounts. A separated section of a control yoke was found near the impact crater. Separated rudder pedals were observed within the debris field. The engine primer control was found separated and in the "in" and "locked" detent. The engine start and magneto switch was found separated with the key absent and the orientation of the keyhole in the "both" position. The attitude indicator and the directional gyro were found crushed and separated; disassembly of each revealed their respective rotors and rotor housings displayed circumferential scoring.

The engine was separated from the firewall with sections of the engine mount bent and attached. Dirt and debris were found embedded around the propeller, spinner, and the cylinder fins. The propeller remained attached to the crankshaft, the spinner was crushed onto the propeller hub, and both propeller blades displayed chordwise gouges across the leading edge and forward face. One propeller blade exhibited an s-shaped bend and was twisted from root to tip, and the other propeller blade was bent and twisted from approximately mid-span to tip. Tree branches 2- and 3-inches in diameter were found within the debris path severed cleanly in a diagonal linear pattern.

Crush damage was observed to the No...

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ATL05FA041