Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary MIA99LA081

LAKE PLACID, FL, USA

Aircraft #1

N5874F

Cessna 210G

Analysis

The purpose of the flight was to position the airplane at the Miami's Opa Locka Airport. At an altitude of 5,000 feet agl under radar control, the pilot heard a 'snap/thud, followed by a popping noise,' and subsequent engine and propeller stoppage. An airborne restart was unsuccessful, and the propeller would not turn. The pilot realized he could not make it safely to an airport, and landed the airplane in a pasture. The airplane struck a tree, separating the left wing from the airframe. The nose and right main landing gear collided with a gully causing them to separate. According to the operator's records the subject engine was remanufactured by Continental Motors on December 9, 1997, and had 1622.9 hours of operating time since it was installed. The crankshaft was examined at the NTSB Materials Laboratory, and revealed that the crankshaft separated due to a fatigue crack that originated from the aft fillet radius of the No. 2 main journal. The fatigue area contained circumferential gouge marks and heat damage that was consistent with a bearing shell that had rotated or shifted. The bearing shell from the No. 1 rod journal also contained wear damage on the aft and forward edges that were consistent with shifting during engine operation.

Factual Information

On February 12, 1999, about 0821 eastern standard time, a Cessna 210G, N5874F, registered to Gallops, Inc., operating as a Title 14 CFR Part 91 positioning flight, crashed following an engine failure while in cruise flight in the vicinity of Lake Placid, Florida. Instrument meteorological conditions prevailed and an IFR flight plan was filed. The airplane sustained substantial damage and the commercial-rated pilot, the sole occupant, suffered minor injuries. The flight departed Pilot Country Airport, Brooksville, Florida, about 0745. According to the pilot, the flight was positioning to Miami's Opa Locka Airport, to pick up freight. The flight was at an altitude of 5,000 feet agl, under radar control from Miami ARTCC, when the pilot heard a "snap/thud, followed by a popping noise," followed by the engine and propeller stopping. The pilot said, "...all indications were in the green at the time of the noise. [I] had full fuel, [and] engaged the boost pump prior to the propeller stoppage." He tried to restart the engine without success, and the propeller would not turn. The pilot realized he could not make it safely to an airport, and needed to land as soon as possible. The pilot landed the airplane in a pasture about 8 miles north of the Lake Placid Airport. At touchdown the pilot saw a tree in his path, and he tried to avoid the tree by applying rudder. The airplane struck a tree with the left wing, separating the wing from the airframe. The nose and right main landing gear hit the up slope of a gully causing both gears to separate. According to an FAA inspector, subsequent disassembly examination of the Teledyne Continental Motors IO-520 engine revealed a broken crankshaft at the No. 3 cheek, between the No. 2 main journal and the No. 2 rod journal. According to the engine logbook, Teledyne Continental Motors had remanufactured and zero-timed the engine on December 9, 1997, and the engine had accumulated about 1623 hours since that time. The crankshaft was examined at the NTSB Materials Laboratory, Washington, D.C. Examination revealed that the crankshaft separated due to a fatigue crack that originated from the aft fillet radius of the No. 2 main journal. The fatigue area contained circumferential gouge marks and heat damage that was consistent with a bearing shell that had rotated or shifted. The bearing shell from the No. 1 rod journal also contained wear damage on the aft and forward edges that were consistent with shifting during engine operation. (See the NTSB Materials Laboratory Factual Report, an attachment to this report).

Probable Cause and Findings

a total loss of engine power due to an in-flight separation of the crankshaft, caused by a fatigue crack that originated from the aft fillet radius of the No. 2 main journal, resulting in a forced landing in a field and impact with a tree.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

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