Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
the structural failure of the wings for undetermined reasons.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Historical)
Analysis
HISTORY OF FLIGHT
On February 8, 2006, at 1515 Pacific standard time, an experimental amateur built Hooker Zenith Aircraft Company Zodiac 601XL, N105RH, impacted flat open terrain in a nose down attitude about 1/4 mile northeast of Oakdale Airport (O27), Oakdale, California. The pilot/owner operated the airplane under the provisions of 14 CFR Part 91. The airplane was destroyed. The private pilot/owner and the certified flight instructor (CFI) were fatally injured. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed for the local area instructional flight that departed Modesto City-County Airport-Harry Sham Field (MOD), Modesto, California, about 1500. No flight plan had been filed. The wreckage was at 37 degrees 45.723 minutes north latitude and 120 degrees 47.823 minutes west longitude.
Witnesses, who saw them boarding at Modesto, indicated that the CFI was seated in the left seat, and the pilot/owner was seated in the right seat.
One witness, located about 1/2 mile north of the accident site, stated that he was outside on his break when his attention was drawn toward the direction of the accident airplane that was flying overhead towards Oakdale airport. The airplane was about 800 to 1,000 feet above ground level (agl). He stated that he heard a "very loud" engine and it sounded as if it were being "revved up" repeatedly. As the airplane flew to the southwest, he saw the wings visibly vibrate, and observed what he thought were pieces of metal separate from the airplane. The witness stated that the engine noise momentarily increased in pitch and volume before the "left wing collapsed and folded rearward against the" fuselage of the airplane. The nose pitched down and the airplane entered a spin to the right. The right wing collapsed upward and folded back against the fuselage. He stated that the airplane impacted the ground in a 45-degree angle, and exploded on impact. The witness further reported that the wings remained attached to the airplane, but folded back during the accident sequence. He added that he did not see any components separate from the airplane prior to impacting the ground.
Additional witnesses from various locations surrounding the accident site reported that the airplane flew a wide arc to enter the traffic pattern. The engine sounded very loud, as if it were alternately being "revved up to full rpm and then going to idle." The left wing of the airplane collapsed upward, and it entered a nose down 60-degree spin to the right. The airplane completed one full revolution before the right wing collapsed upward and folded back. The airplane then struck the ground.
A Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) airworthiness inspector from the Fresno, California, Flight Standards District Office (FSDO) responded to the accident site. He stated that the airplane came to rest in-between rows of trees in an orchard. The wings remained attached to the main spar running through the cockpit area. The skins of the leading edge of the wing sections for both wings separated from the wing spar, but were found in the main wreckage near their respective wings. The tail section also remained attached to the empennage and fuselage, and was folded over the horizontal stabilizer. Impact forces destroyed the airplane, and the cockpit area was destroyed in the post impact fire.
According to the FAA accident coordinator, the airplane was purchased in Hemet, California. The airplane was delivered to Modesto on December 27, 2005, where it was not flown until the day of the accident.
PERSONNEL INFORMATION
Pilot/Owner (Right Seat)
A review of FAA airman records revealed that the pilot held a private pilot certificate with an airplane single engine land rating. The last medical certificate of record was issued on January 18, 1988. It had the limitation that the pilot must have available glasses for near vision.
An examination of the pilot's logbook indicated an estimated total flight time of 320.0 hours logged since February 7, 2005. According to FAA records, the pilot had a total time of 350.0 hours.
Insurance records from December 13, 2005, obtained from the owner's estate, revealed that the pilot had a total flight time of 325 hours, and that he was currently working on a biannual flight review. He also indicated that he was going to utilize the Light Sport Airplane rules in place of a medical.
Second Pilot/Certified Flight Instructor (CFI - Left Seat)
A review of FAA airman records revealed the CFI held a commercial pilot certificate with airplane single and multiengine land, single engine sea ratings, and instrument airplane rating. The CFI also held a certified flight instructor certificate with airplane single and multiengine land ratings and instrument airplane rating. According to FAA records, the CFI had accrued 17,900 hours of total flight time.
The CFI held a second-class medical certificate that was issued on May 24, 2004. It had the limitation that the CFI must wear corrective lenses.
AIRCRAFT INFORMATION
The airplane was an experimental amateur built 2002 Zenith Aircraft Company Zodiac 601XL, serial number 6-5301. An FAA Designated Airworthiness Representative (DAR) inspected the accident airplane and issued a special airworthiness certificate in the experimental category on April 19, 2005. According to FAA Form 8050-2 (Aircraft Bill of Sale), the accident pilot purchased the airplane from a private builder on December 13, 2005. The National Transportation Safety Board's investigator-in-charge (IIC) interviewed the previous builder/owner. He stated that the airplane was flown to Modesto on December 15, 2005, where the accident pilot/owner took possession of the airplane.
Pacific Aircraft Service dated the last aircraft logbook entry January 24, 2006. The entry indicated that a copilot brake system was installed. The installation required that the control sticks and rudder bar be removed. After reinstallation of the system, the flight controls were checked for full travel and freedom of movement. Also repaired at the time were broken canopy latch cables.
The airplane was equipped with a Jabiru model 3300A engine, serial number 33-A-639. The last engine logbook entry dated January 24, 2006, recorded an oil and filter change. The engine was test ran and checked for leaks.
A Sensenich propeller model number AF6698, serial number W642K51 was installed new on March 3, 2005, by the builder.
A review of the airplane's logbooks revealed a total airframe time of 60.1 hours on December 5, 2005.
MEDICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL INFORMATION
Pilot/Owner
The Stanislaus County Coroner conducted an autopsy on the pilot on February 9, 2006. The FAA's Civil Aerospace Medical Institute (CAMI) Forensic Toxicology Research Team, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, performed a toxicological analysis from samples obtained during the autopsy. The results of the analysis of the specimens were negative for carbon monoxide, cyanide, volatiles, and tested drugs.
Pilot/Certified Flight Instructor (CFI)
The Stanislaus County Coroner conducted an autopsy on the CFI on February 9, 2006. The FAA's CAMI Forensic Toxicology Research Team, Oklahoma City, performed a toxicological analysis from samples obtained during the autopsy. The results of the analysis of the specimens were negative for carbon monoxide, cyanide, volatiles, and tested drugs.
TESTS AND RESEARCH
Investigators from the Safety Board, the FAA, and the kit manufacturer, a party to the investigation, examined the wreckage at Plain Parts, Sacramento, California, on March 16, 2006, and again on November 16, 2006. The Safety Board IIC noted that the engine had sustained thermal damage due to the post impact fire. One propeller blade was attached at the propeller hub assembly, which remained attached to the engine. The propeller blade, wooden in construction, had impact damage, and was partially consumed by the post impact fire. There were no obvious mechanical malfunctions noted with the engine that would have precluded normal operation.
The airframe inspection revealed that the wing spar was a center spar construction, with the wings attached at the root area with six main spar bolts on each side. Eleven of the main spar attach bolts were found in their normal position and remained connected by their respective retaining nuts and washers. Recovery personnel had disassembled the twelfth bolt during retrieval of the airplane.
According to the build diagram specifications, the wingspan measured from wing tip to wing tip was 27 feet in length. The as measured length of the wings in the wreckage from wing root to a wing tip was 11.9 feet. The inboard section of both wings' leading edge were either thermally consumed or partially consumed in the post impact fire. Both wings were fire damaged at the wing root areas, with the bottom portion split open from impact forces. About 6 feet from the wing tip inboard, leading edge wing skin from both wings had separated from the wing spar and ribs. The rivet holes were elongated and oval shaped from the spar aft to the trailing edge of the outboard portions of leading edge wing skin that had not been fire damaged. Both sections were crushed and accordioned in appearance. Investigators noted multiple S-bends and distortions of the spars of both wings in multiple directions at the wing root areas.
Investigators noted that both wings were displaced forward of their normal position along their lateral axis. The left wing front spar rotated aft, with a sharp bend about midspan of the wing near a support doubler. At that point, the wing spar rotated forward. At the center spar to wing root attachment area, the spar had a "U" shape to it with the opening of the "U" towards the bottom of the wing. The wing spar material from the wing root outboard to the support doubler had splayed apart. The center spar to the right wing root was bent down about 2 feet, then the front por...
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# LAX06LA105