Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
The pilot’s exceedance of the airplane’s critical angle of attack, for reasons that could not be determined, which resulted in a subsequent aerodynamic stall and impact with a building.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Current)
Analysis
HISTORY OF FLIGHTOn July 30, 2023, about 0640 Pacific daylight time, a Beech P35, N8572M, was destroyed when it was involved in an accident near Upland, California. The pilot and two passengers were fatally injured. The airplane was operated under the provisions of Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 as a personal flight.
A witness located on the northeast side of runway 24 at Cable Airport (CCB), Upland, California, reported that he observed the airplane in a nose-high profile during the takeoff initial climb. He stated that the airplane was between 300 - 400 ft above ground level (agl) when he saw the left wing drop and the airplane enter a nosedive before he lost sight of it behind a row of hangars. He further reported that he heard the engine, and it sounded to be at full power on takeoff and that the flaps looked like they were in the retracted position.
Airport surveillance video showed the airplane as it entered runway 24 as well as the nose-high takeoff. The video further showed the left wing drop, followed by the airplane entering a nose-low attitude. The airplane struck a hangar on the south side of the runway and came to rest on the ground at the hangar entrance, and a postcrash fire ensued. PERSONNEL INFORMATIONThe pilot held a private pilot certificate with ratings for airplane single-engine land and reported 175 hours of flight experience on his most recent airman medical application, on September 27, 2007, with 50 of those hours in the 6 months before the application. He was issued a third-class medical certificate without limitation. That medical certificate subsequently expired; he did not hold a current medical certificate at the time of the accident.
No further information about the pilot’s flight experience was available. AIRCRAFT INFORMATIONThe airplane’s logbooks were not available for review. Family members of the pilot reported that the airplane logbooks were likely onboard the airplane at the time of the accident.
An FAA inspector canvassed local businesses at the airport, as well as two travel mechanics, seeking information as to whether they had worked on the airplane. None had performed maintenance on it. AIRPORT INFORMATIONThe airplane’s logbooks were not available for review. Family members of the pilot reported that the airplane logbooks were likely onboard the airplane at the time of the accident.
An FAA inspector canvassed local businesses at the airport, as well as two travel mechanics, seeking information as to whether they had worked on the airplane. None had performed maintenance on it. WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATIONPostaccident examination of the accident site revealed that the airplane came to rest inverted on a southerly heading at the base of a hangar. The left wing separated and came to rest on the hangar roof. The firewall and nose landing gear came to rest embedded in the door frame of the hangar. The farthest piece of debris was the nose landing gear, which was located inside the hangar, and a portion of the left wing on the hangar roof, both of which were about 80 ft from the main wreckage. The engine separated and came to rest about 20 ft west of the main wreckage.
The fuselage was thermally destroyed, exposing all flight control cables. Flight control continuity was established from the cockpit to all flight control surfaces. Most of the flight control cables and hardware remained intact. However, the elevator bellcrank/control arm and associated hardware, the elevator down cable continuity hardware, the left wing bellcrank, and the left aileron direct cable had separated, with signatures consistent with impact damage and overload. The tail section was inverted and separated from the fuselage but remained in its relative normal position. The elevator trim actuator was measured in the neutral position. The left flap actuator was found in a position equating to being retracted; no such determination could be made for the right flap. The fuel selector valve was in the OFF position. Manual movement of the fuel selector to the LEFT and RIGHT positions was normal and without binding.
Postcrash examination of the engine revealed that it had separated from the engine mounts. The oil sump pan had fractured open, exposing the interior of the engine case. The oil sump pan was removed, exposing the crankshaft and connecting rods and camshaft, which were all intact. The Nos. 5 and 6 cylinders, as well as the front of the engine/propeller hub assembly, were impact damage.
The top spark plugs were removed and exhibited signatures consistent with normal wear and operating signatures. Both magnetos had separated from their respective mounting pads. Manual rotation of the magnetos produced spark at all posts. The ignition harness was damaged; the leads to the magneto remained attached; however, seven of the ignition leads had separated from the spark plugs.
The propeller hub was broken, with a portion of it remaining attached to the crankshaft, and another portion embedded in the hangar door. Both propeller blades separated from the propeller hub. One propeller blade was located inside the hangar on the floor at foot of a movable helicopter platform. The propeller blade had leading and trailing edge nicks and gouges, chordwise scratching, and S-bending. The other propeller blade was in the main wreckage and had sustained fire damage. Leading edge nicks and gouges were identified, and the blade was curled at the tip. MEDICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL INFORMATIONAn autopsy of the pilot was performed by the San Bernardino County Coroner, San Bernardino, California. The autopsy report lists the cause of death as multiple blunt force injuries, instantaneous, and the manner of death was an accident.
The report described his major coronary arteries as calcified without atherosclerosis. The left ventricle and interventricular septum of his heart were thickened. The remainder of the autopsy, including visual examination of the heart, did not identify other significant natural disease.
Toxicology testing performed at the FAA’s Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, Bioaeronautical Sciences Research Branch, found 12 (mg/dL, mg/hg) ethanol in the pilot’s brain tissue. Losartan was detected in the liver and muscle. Losartan is a prescription medication commonly used to treat high blood pressure. It is generally not considered impairing.
Ethanol is the intoxicating alcohol in beer, wine, and liquor, and, if consumed, can impair judgment, psychomotor performance, cognition, and vigilance. Alcohol consumption is not the only possible source of ethanol in postmortem specimens. Ethanol sometimes may be produced by microbes in a person’s body tissues after death.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# WPR23FA287