Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
The failure of the left main landing gear due to fatigue cracking of a bolt that initiated at a corrosion pit, which formed in the absence of a required protective cadmium coating.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Historical)
Analysis
On October 27, 2018, about 0750 Pacific daylight time, a Cessna 182G airplane, N3267S, was substantially damaged when it was involved in an accident near Burns, Oregon. The private pilot and two passengers were not injured. The airplane was operated as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight.
The pilot stated that, upon approaching the intended landing area in the Alvord Desert near Burns, the pilot performed a high reconnaissance to assess the wind conditions. He observed two other airplanes land before him and configured the airplane with the wing flaps in the full-down position. The airplane touched down, during the landing roll, the left-wing dipped downward. He applied left rudder and right aileron to correct the left wing's attitude. Despite his efforts, the left-wing made contact with the ground before coming to rest. The left main landing gear was sheared off and the nose gear collapsed.
A witness reported that she observed airplanes landing in the landing area and took photographs of part of the accident sequence. She stated that the accident airplane touched down and the airplane suddenly pitched up in the air, then the nose was pushed into the desert terrain (see figure 1).
Figure 1: The accident airplane impacting the ground.
The main landing gear consisted of two channels that attached to each leg. The inboard channel contained a bolt that was attached through a hole in the gear leg (see figure 2). The outboard channel was clamped around the gear leg, and a forward and aft bolt secured the clamp. The Textron Aviation Maintenance Manual contained a note stating that the bolts attaching the outboard channel must be torqued from 660 to 750 inch-pounds with at least 80% contact between the channel and strut.
Figure 2: Main landing gear leg diagram and accident parts
The National Transportation Safety Board Materials Laboratory’s examination of the left main landing gear’s remaining channels and bolts revealed that the inboard support had two rounded rectangular cavities, which had contained an attachment bolt; the lower remnant of this bolt and the nut along the threaded portion of the shank were still affixed to the support. The upper portion of the bolt (the head) was missing, and the fracture surface displayed a 45° slanted orientation. Adjacent to the bolt on the support side was a V-shaped impact mark consistent with an adjacent component colliding with the support and moving downward (or outboard). A portion of the upper flange on the support had fractured and liberated, with cracks emanating from this position. The upper left portion of the support exhibited a crack emanating from the upper rectangular cavity, consistent with overstress fracture and another component impacting, fracturing, and deforming the support flange upward.
The bolts had been plated with cadmium, a corrosion inhibitor. However, corrosion pitting was observed along the threads, which is consistent with fatigue cracking in the thread roots of both bolts (the right bolt only exhibited small fatigue cracks, less than 100 µm in depth). While the cadmium plating can provide protection to the underlying alloy steel, corrosion pitting can still occur. This may be due to the operational environment, including locations near saltwater, as well as from a crevice corrosion mechanism.
The bolt exhibited a hardness of 31 Rockwell C Hardness Scale, which generally corresponds to a tensile strength of 141,000 pounds per square inch. With a crack depth of 0.13 inch, which is 32% of the bolt cross section, the fracture toughness of the bolt would be reduced by at least 45%.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# WPR19LA020