Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary BFO94LA154

MONTPELIER, VT, USA

Aircraft #1

N720PC

PIPER PA-18

Analysis

THE PILOT REPORTED THAT WHILE TURNING FROM BASE TO FINAL FOR APPROACH TO RUNWAY 23, HE REDUCED POWER. HE STATED THAT AS HE CONTINUED HIS APPROACH HE ADVANCED THE THROTTLE, BUT THE ENGINE DID NOT RESPOND. HE STATED THAT HE THROTTLED FORWARD THREE MORE TIMES BUT THE ENGINE DID NOT RESPOND. HE CHECKED AND VERIFIED THAT THE MIXTURE AND CARBURETOR HEAT WERE PROPERLY SET. HE STATED THAT HE LOWERED THE NOSE TO INCREASE THE AIRPSEED SO HE COULD FLARE ABOVE POWER LINES THAT WERE IN HIS PATH, BUT THE GEAR STRUCK THE LINES AND THE AIRPLANE DESCENDED TO THE GROUND. THE PILOT STATED THAT DURING HIS FLIGHT EARLIER HE HAD USED THE CARBURETOR HEAT AND IT WAS OPERATIONAL. THE PILOT REPORTED THAT HERE WERE NO MECHANICAL MALFUNCTION. THE TEMPERATURE AND DEW POINT WERE 71 AND 59 DEGREES F, RESPECTIVELY AND ACCORDING TO ICING PROBABILITY CHARTS THESE CONDITIONS WERE CONDUCIVE FOR CARBURETOR ICING.

Factual Information

On August 28, 1994, at 1045 eastern daylight time, N720PC, a Piper PA-18, operated by James Bond of Barre, Vermont, collided with power lines during landing on runway 23 at Montpelier Airport, Montpelier, Vermont. The pilot received minor injuries while the airplane sustained substantial damage. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and a flight plan was not filed. The local, personal flight was operated under 14 CFR 91. According to the pilot, he was returning from a local flight and he entered the traffic pattern for a landing on runway 23. He reported that on base leg, " I cut power back to 800-900 rpm's across from the numbers and turned airplane to glide at 70mph. Turned base a quarter mile beyond numbers and then final. With a quarter headwind from left I applied power only to find there was no power available. I tried 2-3 times....checked mixture, carburetor heat, fuel gages and switches." The pilot stated that he pushed the nose forward to build up the airspeed and that during the landing the airplane's landing gear struck power lines about a quarter mile from the airport and the airplane fell to the ground. The pilot reported that he used carburetor heat when he was flying around earlier. He stated that there was no mechanical malfunction and, "I hoped to flare above power lines and hoped for a soft landing in rough, rolling grass." The temperature and dew point were 71 and 59 degrees F respectively. According to carburetor icing charts (see attachments), conditions were conducive to carburetor ice.

Probable Cause and Findings

THE LOSS OF ENGINE POWER FOR REASONS UNDETERMINED.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

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