PA - Two Die in Plane Crash - Hanover Township, Luzerne County - 29 October 2022

Richrd

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CBS News:


Aviation Safety Network # 300307:
"The two occupants onboard the Ronald L. Snyder Amateur-Built
tailwheel-equipped airplane were fatally injured."

Flight-Aware Track Log:

Google™ Supplements & Updates:

Historically:
Causes of Death :: Multiple Trauma
Manners of Death :: Accidental​
[Contribution # 8607
Thread # 642097]
.
 
Last edited:
Both Victims Identified

"...the pilot was believed to have jumped out of the plane,
impacting the tail of the airplane before its final impact."


CBS News:



Aviation Safety Network # 300307:
"The two occupants onboard the Ronald L. Snyder Amateur-Built
tailwheel-equipped airplane were fatally injured."

Flight-Aware Track Log:

Google™ Supplements & Updates:

Historically:
Causes of Death :: Multiple Trauma
Manners of Death :: Accidental​
[Contribution # 8610
Thread # 642097]
.
 
.

Detailed FAA Report:
GRAPHIC TEXT
Narrative:
On October 29, 2022, about 1452 eastern daylight time, an experimental amateur-built Bearhawk Patrol airplane, N964RS, was substantially damaged when it was involved in an accident near Hanover Township, Pennsylvania. The pilot and pilot-rated passenger were fatally injured. The airplane was operated by the pilot as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight.

Before the flight, the pilot told a friend that the airplane had a rigging issue that seemed to cause the airplane to “kick” laterally during turns. His friend performed a 10-minute flight and reported that he noticed the odd yawing moment while performing turns. The pilot responded that he would address the issue at a later time. After fueling the airplane, the pilot and pilot-rated passenger fastened their seatbelts and departed the airport. Flight track information indicated that, several minutes after departure, the airplane leveled off. Soon thereafter, witnesses reported that the airplane “rolled” then “bucked” as its nose “dipped down initially,” then pitched up “quickly.” Several witnesses reported seeing the pilot out of the airplane at this time, and one reported seeing the pilot impact then “spiral” off the airplane’s tail. Witnesses then observed the pilot and airplane descend to the ground.

Ground scars and wreckage patterns indicated that the airplane impacted terrain in a near-vertical, nose-down attitude. All major airplane components were located at the accident site; however, paint chips, the airworthiness certificate, and portions of the cockpit ceiling or side window Plexiglas were the first items along the 1,900-ft-long debris path leading to the main wreckage (along the airplane’s flightpath), followed by a portion of a tail rib at 900 ft, and the pilot at 530 ft from the main wreckage. Postaccident examination of the engine revealed no evidence of any preimpact mechanical malfunctions or failures that would have precluded normal operation. Postaccident examination of the airframe revealed evidence consistent with the witness statements that the pilot impacted the empennage during flight.

Toxicology testing for the pilot detected the high cholesterol medication atorvastatin and the high blood pressure medication terazosin. There was no evidence of any acute issue on autopsy, and the pilot had been actively flying the airplane and was then observed outside of the airplane. Thus, the pilot’s cardiovascular conditions were not a factor in this accident.

Toxicology testing detected the antidepressant citalopram in the pilot’s heart blood and urine. While it is unknown how long the pilot was on this medication or the severity of his depression, witnesses reported that the pilot was functioning well, and looking forward to participating in a holiday airport event. Thus, effects from the pilot’s use of citalopram or the psychiatric condition for which he was taking the medication were not factors in this accident.

That the pilot was observed to have buckled his seatbelt and shoulder harness before flight, and that his seatbelt and shoulder harnesses were found intact, unlatched, and undamaged, suggests that he intentionally unbuckled his seatbelt during the short flight. Given his concern about the yaw during turns, he may have been attempting to observe the problem with the tail. It is possible that either the pilot fell out of the airplane while attempting to observe the tail section, or that the pilot displaced a flight control while attempting to observe the tail, which then caused an abrupt pitching moment that ejected him from the airplane.

Although the reason for the pilot’s exit from the airplane during flight could not be determined, his impact with the tail section of the airplane during flight resulted in substantial damage to the tail section and a subsequent loss of control during flight from which the pilot-rated passenger would not have been able to recover.

Probable Cause: The pilot’s decision to unlatch his seatbelt during flight, which allowed him to exit the airplane and impact the tail, resulting in a loss of control and impact with terrain.

local21news.com
local21news.com
https://photos-e1.flightcdn.com/photos/retriever/774c10e06f8cb899f23971a9dab5505b2714572c

Flight-Aware Track Log:

Flight Track Log ✈ N964RS 29-Oct-2022 (KWBW - FlightAware

Best Flight Tracker: Live Tracking Maps, Flight Status, and Airport Delays for airline flights, private/GA flights, and airports.
flightaware.com
flightaware.com

Google™ Supplements & Updates:
Plane Crash - Hanover Township, Luzerne County, PA - Google Search

CauseS of Death :: Multiple Trauma
MannerS of Death :: Accidental

Empennage = an Aircraft's Tail Section
FAA = Federal Aviation Administration
Pitch = rotation around the Side-to-Side Axis
Roll = rotation around the Front-to-Back Axis
Yaw = rotation around the Vertical Axis

[Contribution # 9260
Thread # 642097]

.
 

Attachments

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Last edited:
.

Detailed FAA Report:
GRAPHIC TEXT
Narrative:
On October 29, 2022, about 1452 eastern daylight time, an experimental amateur-built Bearhawk Patrol airplane, N964RS, was substantially damaged when it was involved in an accident near Hanover Township, Pennsylvania. The pilot and pilot-rated passenger were fatally injured. The airplane was operated by the pilot as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91 personal flight.

Before the flight, the pilot told a friend that the airplane had a rigging issue that seemed to cause the airplane to “kick” laterally during turns. His friend performed a 10-minute flight and reported that he noticed the odd yawing moment while performing turns. The pilot responded that he would address the issue at a later time. After fueling the airplane, the pilot and pilot-rated passenger fastened their seatbelts and departed the airport. Flight track information indicated that, several minutes after departure, the airplane leveled off. Soon thereafter, witnesses reported that the airplane “rolled” then “bucked” as its nose “dipped down initially,” then pitched up “quickly.” Several witnesses reported seeing the pilot out of the airplane at this time, and one reported seeing the pilot impact then “spiral” off the airplane’s tail. Witnesses then observed the pilot and airplane descend to the ground.

Ground scars and wreckage patterns indicated that the airplane impacted terrain in a near-vertical, nose-down attitude. All major airplane components were located at the accident site; however, paint chips, the airworthiness certificate, and portions of the cockpit ceiling or side window Plexiglas were the first items along the 1,900-ft-long debris path leading to the main wreckage (along the airplane’s flightpath), followed by a portion of a tail rib at 900 ft, and the pilot at 530 ft from the main wreckage. Postaccident examination of the engine revealed no evidence of any preimpact mechanical malfunctions or failures that would have precluded normal operation. Postaccident examination of the airframe revealed evidence consistent with the witness statements that the pilot impacted the empennage during flight.

Toxicology testing for the pilot detected the high cholesterol medication atorvastatin and the high blood pressure medication terazosin. There was no evidence of any acute issue on autopsy, and the pilot had been actively flying the airplane and was then observed outside of the airplane. Thus, the pilot’s cardiovascular conditions were not a factor in this accident.

Toxicology testing detected the antidepressant citalopram in the pilot’s heart blood and urine. While it is unknown how long the pilot was on this medication or the severity of his depression, witnesses reported that the pilot was functioning well, and looking forward to participating in a holiday airport event. Thus, effects from the pilot’s use of citalopram or the psychiatric condition for which he was taking the medication were not factors in this accident.

That the pilot was observed to have buckled his seatbelt and shoulder harness before flight, and that his seatbelt and shoulder harnesses were found intact, unlatched, and undamaged, suggests that he intentionally unbuckled his seatbelt during the short flight. Given his concern about the yaw during turns, he may have been attempting to observe the problem with the tail. It is possible that either the pilot fell out of the airplane while attempting to observe the tail section, or that the pilot displaced a flight control while attempting to observe the tail, which then caused an abrupt pitching moment that ejected him from the airplane.

Although the reason for the pilot’s exit from the airplane during flight could not be determined, his impact with the tail section of the airplane during flight resulted in substantial damage to the tail section and a subsequent loss of control during flight from which the pilot-rated passenger would not have been able to recover.

Probable Cause: The pilot’s decision to unlatch his seatbelt during flight, which allowed him to exit the airplane and impact the tail, resulting in a loss of control and impact with terrain.

local21news.com
local21news.com
https://photos-e1.flightcdn.com/photos/retriever/774c10e06f8cb899f23971a9dab5505b2714572c

Flight-Aware Track Log:

Flight Track Log ✈ N964RS 29-Oct-2022 (KWBW - FlightAware

Best Flight Tracker: Live Tracking Maps, Flight Status, and Airport Delays for airline flights, private/GA flights, and airports.
flightaware.com
flightaware.com

Google™ Supplements & Updates:
Plane Crash - Hanover Township, Luzerne County, PA - Google Search

CauseS of Death :: Multiple Trauma
MannerS of Death :: Accidental

Empennage = an Aircraft's Tail Section
FAA = Federal Aviation Administration
Pitch = rotation around the Side-to-Side Axis
Roll = rotation around the Front-to-Back Axis
Yaw = rotation around the Vertical Axis

[Contribution # 9260
Thread # 642097]

.

I don't think the FAA understands how depression works and that someone looking forward to an event is not a reliable predictor of behaviour related to depression.

But anyway, this is the first I've heard of a pilot doing what he did. Bizarre I think or maybe it's normal in small plane circles?
 

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