Loss of control Accident Cessna 152 N49453,
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ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 225694
 
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Date:Saturday 1 July 2017
Time:21:18
Type:Silhouette image of generic C152 model; specific model in this crash may look slightly different    
Cessna 152
Owner/operator:Dean International Inc
Registration: N49453
MSN: 15281280
Year of manufacture:1978
Total airframe hrs:12118 hours
Engine model:Lycoming O-235-L2C
Fatalities:Fatalities: 1 / Occupants: 1
Aircraft damage: Destroyed
Category:Accident
Location:Homestead, FL -   United States of America
Phase: En route
Nature:Private
Departure airport:Miami Executive Airport, FL (TMB/KTMB)
Destination airport:Miami Executive Airport, FL (TMB/KTMB)
Investigating agency: NTSB
Confidence Rating: Accident investigation report completed and information captured
Narrative:
The noninstrument-rated private pilot departed on a night flight for which he had not received proper authorization from the flight school that owned the airplane. For most of the approximate 30-minute flight, including taxi and takeoff, the pilot was conducting a video call with his girlfriend, but ended the call about 6 minutes before the accident occurred. During the flight, the pilot completed one practice hold pattern, maintaining nearly constant altitude about 1,400 ft mean sea level, then turned right toward an area with no ground reference lights, likely to perform another hold pattern, during which the airplane's altitude began to vary. The airplane then entered a right descending turn, during which it exceeded the standard turn rate, reached a rate of descent about 6,000 ft per minute, and subsequently impacted the ground. The airplane was destroyed by high-energy impact forces.

Personnel from the flight school assumed that the airplane had become stuck at a coastal airport due to weather but did not attempt to locate the pilot and did not report the airplane missing until 4 days later. An undetermined malfunction of the airplane's emergency locator transmitter (ELT) likely also contributed to the delay in identifying the crash and locating the wreckage. The wreckage was subsequently located, recovered, and examined; there were no discrepancies with the airframe, flight controls, engine, or recovered engine accessories.

The flight instructor who flew in the airplane earlier the day of the accident with the accident pilot later reported that the attitude indicator displayed a "3° or less" right bank during that flight; he did not write up the discrepancy. However, the airplane's directional gyro and attitude indicator displayed a heading and bank angle consistent with the radar data and the disposition of the wreckage path, which suggests an operative vacuum system and functional vacuum-operated flight instruments at the time of the accident. Although debris was found in the vacuum regulating valve, the debris was consistent with material produced by an insect, which likely entered the valve after the accident occurred.

Postaccident toxicology testing of specimens from the pilot identified ethanol and n-propanol. It is likely that the n-propanol and some of the ethanol was from postmortem production; however, the investigation was unable to eliminate the possibility that some of the ethanol could have been from ingestion and could not determine whether or to what extent it may have contributed to the accident.

Conditions conducive to the development of spatial disorientation were present at the time of the accident, including the night conditions, operating over an area with no ground lighting, scattered clouds (which would have reduced available moon illumination). Additionally, the airplane's spiraling descent and the fragmentation of the wreckage due to high-energy impact are consistent with the known effects of a loss of control due to spatial disorientation.

Probable Cause: The pilot's loss of control due to spatial disorientation while maneuvering in night conditions over an area devoid of ground reference lights.

Accident investigation:
cover
  
Investigating agency: NTSB
Report number: ERA17FA231
Status: Investigation completed
Duration: 1 year and 11 months
Download report: Final report

Sources:

NTSB

History of this aircraft

Other occurrences involving this aircraft
6 December 2015 N49453 Air Christian Inc 0 Ochopee, east of Carmestown, FL non

Location

Images:



Photos: NTSB

Revision history:

Date/timeContributorUpdates
01-Jun-2019 07:30 ASN Update Bot Added
20-May-2022 19:59 Captain Adam Updated [Operator, Phase, Departure airport, Destination airport, Narrative, Category, Photo]
20-May-2022 19:59 Captain Adam Updated [Photo]

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