Aviation Accident Summaries

Aviation Accident Summary GAA19CA506

San Antonio, TX, USA

Aircraft #1

N901BG

Grob G103

Analysis

The glider pilot reported that, while being towed and approaching 3,000 ft above ground level, the glider's rear canopy opened. The glider pilot informed the tow airplane pilot via radio that the canopy had opened, and the tow airplane pilot informed the glider pilot that he would try to tow the glider closer to the runway. Shortly after, the glider entered an uncontrollable downward spin, and the front canopy shattered. The pilot regained control of the glider, and the rear canopy separated from the glider. The glider pilot made an extended right base and prepared for an off-airport landing. The flight controls were not responding properly, and the glider landed hard on the runway. The pilot reported that, after the accident, he found a section of the tow rope still connected to the glider and lodged in the rudder mechanism. A review of photographs of the airplane revealed that the tow rope exhibited overload signatures. Each airplane still had a portion of the tow rope attached to it after the tow rope failed. The glider sustained substantial damage to the composite fuselage.

Factual Information

The glider pilot reported that, while in tow and approaching 3,000ft AGL, the rear canopy opened. The glider pilot informed the tow airplane via radio of the open canopy, and the tow pilot informed the glider that he would try to tow the glider closer to the runway. Moments later, the glider entered an "uncontrollable downward spin," and the front canopy shattered. The pilot regained control of the glider, and he recalled that the rear canopy had separated from the glider. He made an extended right base and prepared for an off-airport landing. He reported that the flight controls were not responding properly, and the glider landed hard on the runway. The pilot reported that after the accident he, found a section of the tow rope still connected to the glider, which was wrapped and inserted into the rudder mechanism. Photographs received from FAA Inspectors showed that the tow rope exhibited overload signatures. Each airplane still had a portion of the tow rope attached to aircraft after the tow rope failure. The glider sustained substantial damage to the composite fuselage.

Probable Cause and Findings

The failure of the glider tow rope, which lodged in the glider's rudder and resulted in a hard landing. Contributing to the accident was the pilot's failure to properly secure the glider's aft canopy.

 

Source: NTSB Aviation Accident Database

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