Accident Swearingen SA226-TC Metro II N650S,
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ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 328318
 

Date:Thursday 12 June 1980
Time:15:46
Type:Silhouette image of generic SW4 model; specific model in this crash may look slightly different    
Swearingen SA226-TC Metro II
Owner/operator:Air Wisconsin
Registration: N650S
MSN: TC-228
Year of manufacture:1976
Total airframe hrs:8055 hours
Engine model:Garrett TPE331-3VW-303G
Fatalities:Fatalities: 13 / Occupants: 15
Aircraft damage: Destroyed, written off
Category:Accident
Location:ca 5 km N of Valley, NE -   United States of America
Phase: Approach
Nature:Passenger - Scheduled
Departure airport:Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, MN (MSP/KMSP)
Destination airport:Lincoln Municipal Airport, NE (LNK/KLNK)
Investigating agency: NTSB
Confidence Rating: Accident investigation report completed and information captured
Narrative:
Air Wisconsin Flight 965 departed Appleton, WI 12:45 arriving at Minneapolis at 14:02. The aircraft departed again at 14:20 for the last leg to Lincoln. Encountering moderate turbulence and moderate precipitation, the crew were cleared to leave the cruising altitude of 12,000 feet to 8,000 feet. At 15:36 Omaha Radar Approach Control cleared the flight down to 6,000 feet. Because turbulence was getting worse, and they were cleared for 4,000 and a little later to 3,000 feet.
While descending out of 6,000 feet massive water ingestion caused both engines to lose power simultaneously. Both engines were restarted, but the Metro couldn't recover and struck a muddy field in a slight nose down, right wing-down attitude. The aircraft bounced and hit the ground 288 feet further on. The plane skidded 1022 feet before coming to rest inverted.

PROBABLE CAUSE: "The flight crew's continued flight into an area of severe thunderstorms, and the resultant precipitation-induced flameout or loss of power of both engines at an altitude from which recovery could not be made. Contributing to the cause of the accident was the failure of the flight crew to utilise all available sources of weather information and the failure of the air traffic control system to disseminate critical weather information to the air traffic controllers and to the crew of Flight 965, the failure of air traffic control supervisory personnel to accomplish key job functions, and the failure of Center Weather Service Unit meteorologists to disseminate critical weather information to the Omaha Radar Approach Control Facility supervisors. Also contributing was the precipitation induced X-band radar attenuation which limited tile ability of airborne weather radar to detect the extent and intensity of the weather disturbances."

Accident investigation:
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Investigating agency: NTSB
Report number: NTSB/AAR-80-15
Status: Investigation completed
Duration: 6 months
Download report: Final report

Sources:

FAA-ASF-81-4
NTSB Safety Recommendations A-81-23
NTSB-AAR-80-15

Location

Images:


photo (c) NTSB; Valley, NE; 12 June 1980; (publicdomain)

Revision history:

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