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Narrative: Static test airframe only. The Lock Haven facility was nearly destroyed on June 23, 1972 when torrential rains from Hurricane Agnes caused the Susquehanna River to flood. The manufacturing plant was flooded to a depth of 16 feet (4.9 metres), effectively destroying about 100 aircraft and causing an estimated $23 million in damage.
At the same time (June 1972) the NASA Lunar Landing Research Facility was no longer in use for its original purpose. The 400-foot high structure was swiftly modified to allow engineers to study the dynamics of aircraft crashes. After the flood, Piper gave 32 written-off PA-28s, PA-31s and PA-23 Aztecs to NASA, which used them for crash tests at the Langley Research Center, using a rig originally built to simulate spacecraft landings on the moon for the Apollo program.
The Impact Dynamics Research Facility is used to conduct crash testing of full-scale aircraft under controlled conditions. The aircraft are swung by cables from an A-frame structure that is approximately 400 ft. long and 230 foot high. The impact runway can be modified to simulate other grand crash environments, such as packed dirt, to meet a specific test requirement.
In 1972, NASA and the FAA embarked on a cooperative effort to develop technology for improved crash-worthiness and passenger survivability in general aviation aircraft with little or no increase in weight and acceptable cost. A number of Piper PA-31 airframes, which had been irreparably damaged in the flood of Piper's Lock Haven factory on June 23, 1972 were used in the program
Since then, NASA has "crashed" dozens of GA aircraft by using the lunar excursion module (LEM) facility originally built for the Apollo program.