Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary NYC95LA214

FIRE ISLAND, NY, USA

Aircraft #1

N4171G

GILLET C.P. 328

Analysis

The pilot/owner departed with another pilot for a local flight. About 25 minutes later, witnesses 3/4 mile off shore observed the airplane impact the water from a descending spin. Examination revealed no preimpact failure of the airplane or engine. The kit airplane was designed for aerobatic flight. The pilot/owner was not known to have performed aerobatic maneuvers. The other pilot owned an aerobatic airplane, and was known to have performed aerobatics. He had 1750 hours total time; 280 hours in a Pitts S-2 and 1 hour in this make and model. He was observed 2 hours earlier that day in another airplane performing aerobatics over the water near the area of the accident.

Factual Information

On September 4, 1995, at 1325 eastern daylight time, a Gillet, a homebuilt airplane, N4171G, was destroyed when it struck the water 3/4 mile south of the Robert Moses State Park, Fire Island, New York. The private pilot/owner of the airplane was fatally injured, and a second pilot was seriously injured. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, for the personal flight that departed the Republic Airport, Farmingdale, New York, about 1300. No flight plan had been filed for the flight conducted under 14 CFR Part 91. During a telephone interview, the pilot's wife stated that the pilot departed home, about 0930. The pilot's plan had been to fly to Groton, Connecticut. A friend of the second pilot reported that he owned a Pitts S-2, and he performed aerobatic maneuvers in that airplane. The friend dropped the second pilot off at the Republic Airport that morning, and then drove out to the Robert Moses State Park, and observed him perform aerobatics over the water. When the friend returned to the airport to pick him up, she found a note which stated that he went flying with another pilot. According to witnesses in a boat, they observed N4171G during the last 300 feet of a descending spin and impact with the water. One witness stated: I looked up and saw a small white airplane at low altitude (maybe 200 feet) in a spin heading downward, at a slight angle toward the water. Within 10 to 15 seconds, the plane crashed about 300 feet from where my boat was. I didn't see any smoke or fire. An examination of the wreckage was conducted on September 7, 1995, under the supervision of a Federal Aviation Administration Inspector. The examination revealed no pre-impact failures of the airplane or engine. Control continuity was confirmed to the pilot's flight controls from the airplane's ailerons, rudder, and elevator. The airplane was constructed by the owner, and issued an FAA Airworthiness Certificate on March 20, 1994. The airplane kit manufacture's specifications described the airplane to be "fully aerobatic." The pilot/owner had accumulated over 500 hours of total pilot experience, of which about 239 hours were in this airplane. He was not known to have performed aerobatic maneuvers. The second pilot held a Private Pilot Certificate. He was reported to have about 1,750 hours of total pilot experience, 280 hours in the Pitts S-2, and about 1 hour in this make and model.

Probable Cause and Findings

the failure of the pilots to maintain control of the airplane while performing aerobatics.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

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