Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
The substandard installation of the airplane’s autopilot system hardware, which resulted in a malfunction of the rudder control system during flight and a loss of directional control during the landing roll.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Current)
Analysis
On February 18, 2021, about 1730 mountain standard time, an Aviat Aircraft A-1C-200, N43LL, sustained substantial damage when it was involved in an accident in Carefree, Arizona. The commercial pilot and passenger were not injured. The airplane was operated as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight.
The pilot reported that, after an uneventful 2.9-hour cross-country flight, he configured the airplane for the approach to runway 24 at the destination airport. While descending the airplane, the pilot encountered a “rudder abnormality.” Specifically, the pilot stated that, when he disengaged the autopilot by depressing the red disconnect button on the control stick, the nose of the airplane immediately yawed to the right. To counteract the yawing motion, the pilot applied left rudder, and the airplane responded normally. The pilot then engaged the yaw damper, and rudder control remained normal.
During final approach, the pilot disengaged the yaw damper at an altitude of about 800 ft above ground level and maneuvered into a cross-control left slip configuration. He subsequently applied left rudder to align the nose of the airplane with the runway, but the left rudder pedal was not effective, even when it was pressed to the floor.
The pilot elected to land in a nose-right crab position. The airplane touched down on the gravel runway surface, veered to the right quickly, and crossed over the asphalt runway surface. The airplane’s left main landing gear collapsed, and its left wing contacted the ground. The airplane came to rest between the runway and the taxiway with the nose of the airplane oriented 180° opposite the intended landing direction. The pilot stated that the airplane had made a “classic ground loop.”
A postaccident photograph of the airplane revealed that the left aileron sustained substantial damage. Review of the airframe logbook revealed that the autopilot system had been installed and returned to service on December 31, 2020, with a Hobbs time of 156.1 hours. At the time of the accident, the airplane had accumulated 15.7 hours since the autopilot installation.
Postaccident examination of the airplane revealed that the yaw servo bridle cable exhibited no tension and had dislodged from the right pulley assembly attached to the servo tray. The bridle cable was routed under the pulley’s laminated phenolic sheave and was trapped between the yaw servo pulley and the attachment tray. Additionally, the postaccident photographs revealed that a guard pin designed to secure the bridle cable to the phenolic sheave was not present and the attachment tray’s upper and lower surface bore exhibited no evidence indicating that the guard pin had been installed. (The guard pin is designed to prevent the bridle cable from traveling out of the pulley’s groove past the sheaves.) Further examination of the autopilot hardware revealed the following installation deficiencies:
o No cotter keys installed on yaw bridle cable to rudder blocks.
o Torque on bridle cable clamps nuts unable to be measured with torque wrench because of low torque. Torque estimated to be between 5 and 10 inchpounds.
o Gap on both bridle cable clamps measured as 0.026 inches.
o Cable tension on bridle cable for yaw servo was 0 pounds.
o No torque seal observed on bridle cable clamp at intersection of cable.
o Cable tensions on yaw and roll servos was 0 pounds.
o Cable tension on pitch servo was 7 pounds.
o Torque on yaw and pitch servo guard pins measured to be 0 inchpounds.
o Cotter pin missing from castellated nut securing roll pulleys with Part Nos. 11503343-00 and 115-03344-00.
o Cotter key missing from yaw servo pulley.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# WPR21LA135