Accident Details
Probable Cause and Findings
The pilots' failure to see and avoid the other airplane, which resulted in a midair collision during short final approach.
Aircraft Information
Registered Owner (Current)
Analysis
On December 9, 2024, about 1630 eastern standard time, a Piper PA-28-181, N90874, and a Cessna 172S, N497SJ, were substantially damaged when they were involved in a midair collision near Pahokee, Florida. The flight instructor and student pilot onboard the Piper were not injured. The flight instructor, private pilot receiving instruction, and student pilot observer onboard the Cessna were also not injured. Both airplanes were operated as Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 instructional flights.
Both airplanes had previously completed multiple landings on runway 18 at Palm Beach County Glades Airport (PHK), Pahokee, Florida. The instructor onboard the low-wing Piper reported that, during final approach for a third landing, about 300 to 350 ft above ground level, he heard a “crunching metal noise” and realized that another airplane had collided with the cabin roof from above. He was able to continue and land on the runway. The instructor added that he had been making position reports in the traffic pattern on the airport’s common traffic advisory frequency (CTAF). He remembered a Cessna making a “short approach” report during their previous traffic pattern, but he did not hear anything during the accident traffic pattern.
The pilot and instructor onboard the high-wing Cessna reported that they had completed one full-stop and two touch-and-go landings. During the fourth approach, the student pilot in the rear seat yelled as he saw “something big” on the left side of the airplane. The pilot pulled back on the control yoke, but it was too late, as contact was already made. The instructor took control and landed uneventfully. The pilot and flight instructor stated that they completed position reports on the CTAF during all four approaches. They heard a transmission from a different airplane on the ground at PHK, but never heard from another airplane in the traffic pattern.
Examination of the airplanes by a Federal Aviation Administration inspector revealed substantial damage to the cabin roof fuselage of the Piper and the outboard left wing of the Cessna.
Review of ADS-B data revealed that the Piper flew a wider left traffic pattern and the Cessna flew a tighter left traffic pattern before the two airplanes converged on short final approach.
Data Source
Data provided by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). For more information on this event, visit the NTSB Records Search website. NTSB# ERA25LA072