N4076H

Substantial
None

ROBINSON HELICOPTER R22 BETAS/N: 1799

Accident Details

Date
Monday, June 19, 2023
NTSB Number
CEN23LA247
Location
Cedar Lake, IN
Event ID
20230621192412
Coordinates
41.364761, -87.440828
Aircraft Damage
Substantial
Highest Injury
None
Fatalities
0
Serious Injuries
0
Minor Injuries
0
Uninjured
2
Total Aboard
2

Probable Cause and Findings

The failure of the flight instructor to attain/maintain aircraft control while maneuvering, which resulted in an uncontrolled descent and impact with the lake.

Aircraft Information

Registration
Make
ROBINSON HELICOPTER
Serial Number
1799
Engine Type
Reciprocating
Year Built
1991
Model / ICAO
R22 BETAR22
Aircraft Type
Rotorcraft
No. of Engines
1
Seats
2
FAA Model
R22 BETA

Registered Owner (Current)

Name
SUMMERSKYZ INC
Address
2040 COUNTY ROAD 2300 N
City
SAINT JOSEPH
State / Zip Code
IL 61873-9551
Country
United States

Analysis

On June 19, 2023, at 1307 central daylight time, a Robinson R22 Beta, N4076H, was involved in an accident near Cedar Lake, Indiana. The flight instructor and a student pilot were uninjured. The helicopter was operated under Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 as an instructional flight.

The flight instructor reported that the flight departed from the Lansing Municipal Airport (KIGQ), Lansing, Indiana, about 1254 on a local flight. The flight proceeded about 15 miles to the southeast to fly over Cedar Lake. The flight instructor stated that he was providing flight instruction to a pilot under instruction, who was his son, at the time of the accident. The flight instructor rented the helicopter from the operator and was not employed by the operator. According to the operator’s rental agreement, the flight instructor was not allowed to provide flight instruction in the helicopter, nor was he allowed to let anyone else fly the helicopter.

The flight instructor stated they practiced a vortex ring state emergency procedure during accident flight. The flight instructor stated that pilot under instruction told him that the helicopter was not producing power. During the descent, the flight controls were transferred to the flight instructor. The flight instructor said he then proceeded to turn northbound and land on Cedar Lake. The flight instructor said that when he set the helicopter down into the lake, he pushed the cyclic to the left so that the rotor would hit the water. The helicopter was submerged in about 8 ft of water and sustained substantial damage to the tail boom and vertical stabilizer.

In a postaccident telephone interview, the flight instructor stated that when the pilot under instruction said the helicopter was not producing power, the engine gauges indicated 24 inches of manifold pressure and 103% and 104% for the engine and rotor speeds, respectively. He said there was a low rotor warning at about 150 ft above ground level (agl), and he did not recall a prior low rotor warning. He did not mention hearing a squealing noise during any part of the accident flight.

A National Transportation Safety Board Pilot/Operator Aircraft Accident/Incident Report, Form 6120.1 was not received from the flight instructor upon initial request on June 21, 2023. Upon a second request, the pilot provided the form on March 25, 2024. On the form, the flight instructor checked that the purpose of the flight was personal, but stated in the accident narrative that it was a training flight. He stated that there was a loss of power at 1,200 ft over Cedar Lake and was rapidly losing altitude as he looked for somewhere to land. He stated that there was a squealing noise, and about 250 ft agl, he saw and heard the low rpm light and warning horn. Unable to make his intended landing point, he turned left to 360° north to avoid a boat and people. The helicopter landed in the water with the tail touching the water. The helicopter spun three times and the flight instructor pushed the cyclic to the left and the main rotor hit the water. The spinning stopped and the helicopter started to sink in the lake. The flight instructor and student pilot exited the open passenger door.

A witness video showed the helicopter descend above the lake and stop its descent in about a 12-15 ft hover. It did a left hover turn for about 90°. The helicopter then stopped turning and appeared to hover taxi forward before it entered a descent. The helicopter skids entered the water and were submerged up to the bottom of the helicopter fuselage. While partially submerged, the helicopter began to rotate to the right and climb out to the bottom of the skids before it rolled left and descended into the water.

Postaccident examination of the helicopter found no mechanical anomalies that would have precluded normal helicopter operation.

The Helicopter Flyng Handbook (FAA-H-8083-21B), Chapter 2. Aerodynamics of Flight, states, “…as the helicopter begins to accelerate from a hover, the rotor disk becomes more efficient due to translational lift (see translational lift on page 2-19). The result is excess power over that which is required to hover. Continued acceleration causes an even larger increase in airflow through the rotor disk (up to a maximum determined by drag and the engine’s limit of power), and more efficient flight.” Chapter 9, Basic Flight Maneuvers, Hovering Turn, states, “It should be noted that during a turn to the left, more power is required because left pedal pressure increases the pitch angle of the tail rotor, which, in turn, requires additional power from the engine.”

Data Source

Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# CEN23LA247