Pilot, Teenage Passenger Were Fatally Injured During Low-Level
Aerobatics
A Moore Skybolt, N6644, was destroyed On November 8, 2009, at
1122 CST when it impacted terrain shortly after taking off from
Quartz Mountain Airport (AXS) in Altus, Oklahoma. The pilot and a
teenage passenger were fatally injured by the impact.
The NTSB determined that the probable cause of this accident was
the pilot's poor judgment by performing intentional low-level
maneuvers that resulted in an inadvertent stall/spin at an altitude
to low to affect a safe recovery.
According to the probable cause report, visual meteorological
conditions prevailed at the time of the accident. The personal
flight was being conducted under the provisions of Title 14 Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 91 without a flight plan. The pilot
and passenger on board the airplane were fatally injured. The local
flight originated from AXS approximately 1119.
At the invitation of the pilot, the 17-year-old passenger and
his father went to the airport for an airplane ride. When they
arrived, friends told him that the pilot had fueled the airplane
(later determined to have occurred at 1050) and was currently
flying another passenger around the lake. Shortly thereafter, they
saw the airplane fly over head and the pilot performed “a
wing-over maneuver” and landed. After his son boarded the
airplane, the father watched them take off (recorded at 1119). He
wrote: “I estimate that when he (the pilot) was about 50 feet
off the ground, he started an aggressive climb at a 45 degree
angle, and then the aircraft banked hard to the right and they were
heading west, still climbing. At one point, it looked like (the
airplane) was in a vertical climb, and that is when he performed a
wing over-maneuver, either to the right or left, I can’t
remember. After that, the plane was in a nose dive towards the
ground. It seemed like the wings were going back and forth or it
may have even spiraled. I kept saying, ‘Pull up, pull
up.’ It disappeared off the horizon. I thought it was just in
a low spot and I just couldn’t see it. I saw smoke
immediately after that.” According to first responders, the
first 9-1-1 call reporting the accident was received at 1122.
A witness, whose wife had been a passenger on the previous
flight, submitted an affidavit. He watched the airplane take off
and climb. He wrote: “I estimate he was at 25 feet above the
ground. He appeared to do left and right turns. Shortly after that,
he made a right turn, not a radical turn, and the nose of the plane
went down. There appeared to be a wobble or possibly some spin or
flutter in the tail.” Another witness said the airplane
"lifted off, did a steep turn at midfield, climbed and departed to
the west." He then saw the airplane return and make "a wing-over
type maneuver to the right (East) in [a] descending turn," then
heard the sound of impact.
The airport's line chief said the pilot was giving rides to
friends. He did not observe the accident but said that on the
second flight, he saw the pilot take off and perform "a high speed
low pass (about half a wing length off the ground), waving his
wings to the people at his hangar, and then executing a vertical
climb out and steep bank (at least 60 degrees or more) before
departing to the north." On each flight, the pilot would do "his
same routine."
A pilot based at the airport who also did not see the accident
wrote, "I noticed the accident aircraft take off on runway 17 and
at midfield and at an altitude of approximately 100 feet do a right
turn and depart the airport to the west at about the same altitude.
The turn was made with a bank angle well in excess of 60 degrees."
He said he had observed the pilot "doing maneuvers in the pattern
that were not standard maneuvers." On one occasion, he saw the
pilot depart and do "a steep turn at midfield at a very low
altitude. He would also fly down the runway at low altitude and
pull up into a steep climb and bank around into downwind."
A copy of a portion of the pilot's logbook, containing entries
from November 12, 2005, to October 24, 2009, was made available for
inspection. According to this document, the pilot had logged a
total of 419.7 hours, of which 73.0 hours were in tail wheel
airplanes (all were in the Skybolt). Of this latter figure, 50.0
hours were listed as “YTD” (year-to-date) between
October 20, 2007, to January 12, 2008. It was not listed as dual,
solo, or pilot-in-command; only as total time. Of the remaining
23.0 hours of documented Skybolt time, 12.7 hours were dual
instruction and 10.3 hours were pilot-in-command.
The only aerobatic entries made were the following:
November 14, 2005, Tail wheel introduction, loops, rolls,
hammerheads, stalls. The entry was logged as dual instruction and
signed by the instructor.
July 26, 2008, Aileron rolls. The entry was logged as dual
instruction but was not signed by an instructor.
February 25, 2009, Lazy emblems (sic). The entry was logged as
dual instruction but was not signed by an instructor.
The pilot’s last biennial flight review was dated June 5,
2009, and included the following: “Stalls power on /off,
steep turns, S-turns, turns on a point, landing attitude
demonstration, emergency procedures, lazy 8’s.” Ten
days later, on June 15, 2009, a “first solo” entry was
made. On July 14, 2009, the entry “4th air show” was
made.
According to Altus Airport officials, they were unaware that the
pilot had performed low-level maneuvers in their traffic pattern
prior to the accident. No complaints about the pilot were ever
received by FAA’s Flight Standards District Offices in
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and Lubbock, Texas.
The autopsy reports attributed both the pilot and
passenger’s deaths to “multiple blunt force
trauma”. No carbon monoxide was detected in either victim. In
addition, no ethyl alcohol or cyanide was detected in the
pilot.
FMI: www.ntsb.gov