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King Air NTSB prelim

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ultrarunner

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 26, 2001
Posts
4,322
Here is the prelim report:

NTSB Identification: CHI07LA063
14 CFR Part 91: General Aviation
Accident occurred Friday, February 02, 2007 in Cape Girardeau, MO
Aircraft: Raytheon Aircraft Company B200, registration: N777AJ
Injuries: 2 Uninjured.

This is preliminary information, subject to change, and may contain errors. Any errors in this report will be corrected when the final report has been completed.
On February 2, 2007, about 1030 central standard time, a Raytheon Aircraft Company B200, N777AJ, sustained substantial damage during an uncontrolled descent and recovery from cruise at flight level 270. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed at the time of the accident. The flightcrew reported that they depressurized the airplane after noticing cracking of the airplane windshield. They then donned their oxygen masks but were unable to obtain oxygen from the oxygen system resulting in their loss of consciousness. They later regained consciousness, recovered from the descent, and landed without further incident at Cape Girardeau Regional Airport, Cape Girardeau, Missouri. The 14 CFR Part 91 flight was operating on an instrument rules flight plan. The pilot and copilot were uninjured. The flight originated from Rogers Municipal Airport-Carter Field, Rogers, Arkansas, at 0939.

On-scene inspection of the airplane noted that approximately 2/3 of the left horizontal stabilizer and elevator were separated from the aircraft and 2/3 of the right elevator was separated but attached at the inboard hinge. The left and right wings were wrinkled. The left pilot windshield outer and inner ply were intact. The inner ply exhibited a shattered appearance with a crack at the lower right hand corner of the windshield. The cabin pressurization dump switch was in the dump position.

The oxygen system worked when it was functionally tested in accordance with Airplane Flight Manual.

The last sentence is interesting. A couple of things come to mind:

1. the masks were not plugged in.

2. the masks were plugged in and the pilots never opened the valve (they were flying with it in the closed position).

3. they tried to open the valve and it was frozen (not uncommon).

4. they passed out before getting enough oxygen.

But it is apparent they tried pretty hard to kill themselves. And I'm at a loss as to the flight crews logic in dumping the cabin BEFORE even donning a mask. Or even dumping it in the first place.....

Olive and Walter saved those guys lives that day!
 
Any emergency where you have fire,smoke,rapid decompression..whatever the scenerio...what are the bold faced emergency items?

Usually..
1> Oxygen...On 100% ALL
2> Crew communication...establish
3> Cabin Pressure..Depressurize (AS req'd)
 
Here is a picture of the tail.


king_air_missing_tail.jpg
 
Only an 8 year old airframe so maybe not even a total loss. All depends on how bad the wing is bent......but easy enough to put new wings on it. I bet it gets repaired.

BB-1638 will have quite the reputation!
 
Off topic but... whenever if fly above 15,000 I arm the O2. Anyone else do this? I know many guys that don't bother even when flying in the upper 20's.
 
Not off topic at all. It should be armed anytime you fly. Issues occurring necessitating the need for oxygen are not altitude dependent.
 
....

Not off topic at all. It should be armed anytime you fly. Issues occurring necessitating the need for oxygen are not altitude dependent.


Bingo. I pull the handle before I leave the ground, no matter how high im going. When your flying nine unwashed middle easterners with sandals on in mid-july, youll need/want the O2.
 
You dont dump the cabin for a cracked front windshield. You increase the Cab Alt to bring the diff down. The only window you dump for is the side window.
 
Had this happen a long time ago. Just followed the checklist, brought the cabin to 9500 descended even further to bring the diff down to something like 2 psi, slowed down as a precaution and then landed. No biggie.
 
You dont dump the cabin for a cracked front windshield. You increase the Cab Alt to bring the diff down. The only window you dump for is the side window.

So true, I had a crack in mine about a month ago, no where does it say dump the cabin press. I went into TEB with a cracked windshield pilots side and no Loc pilots side to mins. I just flew from the copilots hsi and returned to home base the next day at 16,000. Forty miles from home my fuel press went to zero. Next day and $14,000 later new windscreen and fuel transducer, and an unbent bird. King Airs are tough.
 
here ya guys go, I know everyone is wondering what the wings look like

KIngair2_06_014.jpg


KIngair2_06_013.jpg


KIngair2_06_012.jpg


Did you photograph these yourself or were they pulled from another site. Just curious if that was your home base. If so, any interesting local details on the incident you care to share?

.
 
I didnt take these pics, got them from a RAS Friend. Sources from the inside said the plane is No good. But thats about all i have at the moment and the obvious, Pilot error.
 

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