Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
The pilot receiving instruction’s loss of airplane control while performing aerobatics, which resulted in a stall/spin at an altitude too low for recovery. Contributing to the accident was the flight instructor’s inadequate supervision.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Historical)
Analysis
HISTORY OF FLIGHTOn November 15, 2023, about 1040 central standard time, an Xtremeair GMBH XA42, N42XM, was substantially damaged when it was involved in an accident near Union City, Tennessee. The private pilot receiving instruction and the flight instructor were fatally injured. The airplane was operated as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 instructional flight.
The airplane was recently purchased by the private pilot and two other pilots. The flight instructor provided instruction to all three owners for familiarization and to meet insurance requirements. The intention was to meet insurance requirements and increase each pilot’s proficiency. The other two co-owners witnessed the accident and their description of events was consistent throughout.
The airplane departed on the accident flight from Everett-Stewart Regional Airport (UCY), Union City, Tennessee, completed traffic pattern work at a nearby airport, and returned to UCY to perform aerobatic maneuvers in the airport’s aerobatic “box.” The co-owners observed the airplane’s approach and entry into the box and described the engine sound as smooth and continuous throughout.
One of the co-owners stated that the airplane was flying north to south and was conducting an “avalanche” maneuver, which comprised a loop during which a snap roll is performed at the top.
He estimated that the airplane entered the maneuver at an altitude of about 1,200 ft agl and reached the top of the loop around 2,000 ft agl. He stated that, rather than completing a 360° snap roll at the top of the loop, the airplane’s roll continued through 540° and the airplane was upright when it should have finished the roll inverted and continued through the remainder of the loop. By this time, the airplane had slowed considerably, the engine was at full power, and the gyroscopic effect of the propeller pulled the nose down, with no airspeed, and the airplane entered a spin. Once in the spin, the rotation stopped, then the airplane entered a secondary spin and descended to ground contact. He estimated that the airplane descended in a nose-down attitude of about 75°.
The other co-owner stated that the engine “sounded great” as the airplane entered the avalanche maneuver. During the snap roll, “the nose did an extra rotation in the roll axis,” and the airplane stopped upright and yawed to the left. He stated that it was possible that the airplane entered a “gyroscopic tumble” before entering a 1.25-turn spin. The airplane recovered from the spin about 500 ft agl, and the co-owner speculated that the pilots may have, “tried to pull out there” before the airplane entered another spin. When asked, the co-owner said that the engine was running “at full power,” but that once the spin was fully developed, he could not recall what the engine sound was. PERSONNEL INFORMATIONThe pilot held a private pilot certificate with a rating for airplane single-engine land. His most recent Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) third class medical certificate was issued on May 23, 2022. He reported 650 total hours of flight experience on that date. Initial examination of excerpts from the pilot’s logbook could not reconcile his total experience; however, 6 flights totaling 8 hours of experience in the accident airplane were recorded between November 1 and 14, 2023.
The flight instructor held an airline transport pilot certificate with multiple type ratings and a flight instructor certificate with ratings for airplane single-engine, multi-engine, and instrument airplane. His most recent FAA first class medical certificate was issued on July 25, 2023. He reported 6,800 total hours of flight experience on that date. His pilot logbook was not located and his total flight experience in the accident airplane make and model was not determined. WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATIONThe airplane came to rest upright on flat terrain in a solar farm on the west side of UCY. The airplane rested in its initial impact crater on a 325° heading, consistent with the vertical descent described by the witnesses.
The front and rear cockpit areas were deformed and the composite structure was fractured throughout. The wings were fractured, and partially separated at their roots, but attached by structure, wires, and push-pull tubes. The empennage remained largely intact. The vertical and horizontal stabilizers, rudder, and elevator were all damaged by impact. Flight control continuity could not be established initially because the controls were impinged against structure by upward impact forces. Once the airplane was lifted, and as wings and structure was separated, flight control continuity was confirmed from the flight controls, through several breaks, to the flight control surfaces. All fractures were consistent with impact and overstress fracture.
Both main fuel tanks, the “Acro” fuel tank, and the fuel header tank were breached by impact and did not contain fuel. Fuel was ponded in the impact depression beneath the left wing.
The engine was partially buried in its impact crater. Two of the three propeller blades were fractured at their roots. All three blades showed chordwise smearing (mud). Once lifted, the engine starter case showed rotational smearing and scoring in the approximate arc of the starter ring gear.
The engine oil sump was fractured and destroyed by impact. The fuel servo was separated by impact but remained attached by cabling and fuel lines. The inlet screen was removed, contained fuel, and was absent of water and debris.
The engine was separated from the airframe and examined at the scene. The crankshaft was rotated by hand at the propeller, and continuity was confirmed through the powertrain and valvetrain to the accessory section. Compression was confirmed on each cylinder using the thumb method. The magnetos were secure in their mounts, but damaged by impact. They were removed, rotated by an electric drill, and each produced spark at all terminal leads.
The fuel selector handle was mounted in the aft cockpit and was connected to the fuel selector valve by a control tube. The valve was mounted near the engine firewall. The control tube was fractured, and the handle moved freely in its mount. The valve was removed, and compressed air flowed freely from the “Acro” inlet port to the engine outlet port. The left main and right main ports were occluded. FLIGHT RECORDERSThe airplane was equipped with an EI (Electronics International Inc.) MVP-50P, which was a panel-mounted, color, electronic engine display allowing the operator to monitor and record parameters related to engine operations and user customizable parameters. The last session, recorded from 9:39:58 CST to 10:39:50 CST on November 15, 2023, was identified as the accident flight.
The airplane was also equipped with a Garmin GPSMAP 695, which was a portable GPS receiver capable of storing data, route-of-flight, and flight-time information for up to 50 flights. A detailed tracklog, including latitude, longitude, altitude, date, time, and groundspeed information, was stored within the unit whenever the receiver had a lock on the GPS navigation signal. The recorded date for all sessions was 1,024 weeks (7,168 days) offset from the actual recorded dates, a phenomenon known as GPS week number rollover. The last recorded session corresponded to the accident event and was 7,168 days offset from the event date. The last recorded data point on the Garmin GPSMAP 695 was approximately 970 ft from the reported wreckage location.
The data showed that, just before entering the last maneuver, the airplane’s GPS altitude was recorded at a minimum of 1,135 ft. The last recorded Garmin GPSMAP 695 data point showed a GPS altitude of 1,693 ft and the derived groundspeed was 49 kts. At the last recorded EI MVP-50P data point, engine parameters were consistent with similar previous aerobatic flights. MEDICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL INFORMATIONThe Obion County Medical Examiner ruled the cause of death for the flight instructor and private pilot as blunt force injuries and the manner of death for both as accident.
The FAA Forensic Sciences Laboratory performed toxicological testing of postmortem specimens from the flight instructor. No tested-for substances were detected.
The FAA Forensic Sciences Laboratory also performed toxicological testing of postmortem specimens from the private pilot. Atorvastatin, Ibuprofen, Lisinopril, and Diclofenac were detected. Atorvastatin (Lipitor) is an HMG CoA Reductase inhibitor (statin) used to treat high cholesterol. Ibuprofen (Motrin) is a non-prescription NSAID used to treat pain, fever, and inflammation. Lisinopril is an ACE inhibitor used to treat high blood pressure. Diclofenac (Voltaren) is a prescription NSAID-type anti-inflammatory medication. No medications were found that would have posed a hazard to flight safety.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ERA24FA038