N911UF

MINR
Minor

AGUSTA A109ES/N: 11604

Accident Details

Date
Friday, March 6, 2009
NTSB Number
ERA09IA186
Location
Gainesville, FL
Event ID
20090309X74949
Coordinates
29.634721, -82.423889
Aircraft Damage
MINR
Highest Injury
Minor
Fatalities
0
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
1
Uninjured
3
Total Aboard
4

Probable Cause and Findings

An inadvertent in-flight collision with a duck.

Aircraft Information

Registration
N911UF
Make
AGUSTA
Serial Number
11604
Engine Type
Turbo-shaft
Model / ICAO
A109EA109
Aircraft Type
Rotorcraft
No. of Engines
2

Analysis

On March 5, 2009, about 2010 eastern standard time, an Agusta A109E, N911UF, operated by Air Methods Corporation, as a ShandsCair medical evacuation flight, incurred minor damage from a bird strike while approaching Gainesville, Florida. The certificated airline transport pilot sustained minor injuries, while the flight nurse, flight paramedic, and trauma patient were not injured. Night visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan had been filed for the flight between an automobile accident site in Trenton, Florida, and Shands Helistop (FA12), Gainesville, Florida. The air medical evacuation flight was conducted under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 135.

According to the pilot, the incident occurred when the helicopter was inbound to the hospital, about “3 minutes” from the hospital's rooftop helipad. The helicopter was descending at 145 knots through 800 feet, when the windshield “exploded.” The pilot was pelted with plexiglass and other debris. The master caution warning light started flashing, but the pilot had difficulty reading the caution warning lights as the left lens to his eyeglasses was missing. The pilot was eventually able to determine that SAS number 1 had been disengaged, and after resetting the switches, the master caution light extinguished.

The pilot also noted that the instrument panel lights were off on the pilot’s side, so he reached up to the overhead panel and turned the lights back on. He then noticed that several circuit breakers and switches were broken off, and that several other switches had been moved aft, to the "off" position. The entire overhead panel was covered in blood.

The pilot also determined that despite the wind noise, the helicopter was still operating normally, and he subsequently landed it at its home base, a ground helipad, without further incident. The patient was then transferred 1 mile to the hospital's emergency room by ambulance.

Postflight examination of the helicopter revealed that a 2- to 3-pound duck impacted the helicopter, and came to rest inside the cabin, at the feet of one of the medical crewmembers. The impact broke off the landing light switch and turned off the navigation lights and the anti-collision light. The pilot’s instrument panel lights rheostat was rotated to the point of turning off the lights, and circuit breakers for the number 2 engine starter/generator were broken off, although the circuits remained energized. The circuit breaker for the “Outer Link” satellite tracking system was deactivated, which resulted in the ShandsCair communication center’s loss of flight tracking at 2008.

Blood was also found on one of the main rotor blades.

The pilot further noted that aside from electrical control switches, the power control levers were also located on the overhead panel, and that if they had moved aft, there would have been a reduction of engine power.

A photograph of the overhead panel revealed that there was no forward shielding of the switches and throttles.

Shards from the shattered windshield were forwarded to the Safety Board for further examination. Plastic windshield fractures were found to be “typical of brittle overstress under primarily bending deformation.”

Additional bird strike information can be found at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Wildlife Mitigation web page, at:

http://wildlife-mitigation.tc.faa.gov/public_html/index.html

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ERA09IA186