• Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
Helicopter Flight Training Sponsors
 Search

Categories

 Search

NTSB Final Report: Arthur, KY

Location:

Arthur, Kentucky

Accident Number:

ERA22FA397

Date & Time:

September 3, 2022, 17:40 Local

Registration:

N162NH

Aircraft:

Rotorway Jetexec

Aircraft Damage:

Destroyed

Defining Event:

Controlled flight into terr/obj (CFIT)

Injuries:

1 Fatal

Flight Conducted Under:

Part 91: General aviation - Personal

 

 

Analysis

The helicopter pilot was flying a cross-country flight in thunderstorms. The former owner of the helicopter, its new owner, stated they were worried about the weather and tried to talk the pilot into waiting 1 day until the weather improved, however, the pilot did not want to wait and subsequently departed for his home airport.

Postaccident examination revealed no anomalies with the engine or airframe that would have precluded normal operation. There was no record of the pilot obtaining a weather briefing and rising terrain led up to the area of the accident. The observations surrounding the time of the accident from the closest official weather station indicated visual flight rules to instrument flight rules conditions, with reflectivity data indicating that thunderstorms were present along the route and at the accident site at the time of the accident. Accordingly, the flight likely encountered reduced visibility and heavy rain while in thunderstorms as a result of the pilot’s decision to fly in thunderstorm conditions. Had the pilot obtained a weather briefing he likely would have had increased his awareness of the severity of the weather conditions along his route of flight and may have elected to delay the flight further until conditions improved.

Probable Cause and Findings

The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident to be:

The pilot’s decision to attempt the cross-country flight in thunderstorm conditions, which resulted in controlled flight into terrain. Contributing to the accident was the pilot’s failure to obtain a weather briefing.

Findings

Personnel issues Decision making/judgment - Pilot

Aircraft Altitude - Not attained/maintained

Personnel issues Weather planning - Pilot

Environmental issues Thunderstorm - Effect on operation

Factual Information

History of Flight

Enroute VFR encounter with IMC

Enroute Controlled flight into terr/obj (CFIT) (Defining event)

HISTORY OF FLIGHT

On September 3, 2022, about 1740 central daylight time, an experimental, amateur-built RotorWay JetExec helicopter, N162NH, was destroyed when it was involved in an accident near Arthur, Kentucky. The pilot was fatally injured. The helicopter was operated as a Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)Part 91 personal flight.

The accident pilot was a friend of the helicopter owner, who had purchased the helicopter about 1 week before the accident and asked his friend to fly the helicopter from Missouri to Tennessee. The owner of the helicopter stated that he was “worried” about the weather on the day of the accident and tried to talk the pilot into waiting to fly the helicopter to Tennessee until the weather improved. The pilot did not want to wait, and he and his wife departed on the cross-country flight about 1030. According to the seller and previous owner, about 30 minutes later, the helicopter returned to the departure airport so that the pilot could drop off his wife. The seller stated that he tried to talk the pilot out of leaving that day because that flight would be long and rain was occurring along the route. The pilot waited “a couple of hours for the weather to improve” and then departed again.

On September 5, the helicopter wreckage was located in heavily wooded, steep terrain in Mammoth Cave National State Park.

Review of automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B) data revealed that data associated with the helicopter’s flight track ended about 40 nautical miles prior to the accident location. Additionally, the terrain became generally higher leading up to the area of the accident site.

METEOROLOGICAL INFORMATION

A search of archived information indicated that the accident pilot did not request weather information from Leidos Flight Service or ForeFlight. The accident pilot updated various potential flight paths and viewed airport information via ForeFlight through 1326 on the day of the accident. The available evidence did not show what, if any, weather information the accident pilot may have viewed before or during the accident flight.

A convective SIGMET advisory was valid for the accident site at the accident time. The advisory, which was issued at 1655, warned of an area of thunderstorms with cloud tops above flight level 450 with the convective area moving from 210° at 15 knots. In addition, a convective SIGMET was issued at 1555 that was valid for the accident area (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Aviation Weather Center graphic valid at 1700 CDT with valid convective SIGMETs, AIRMETs, and PIREPS with the accident location marked.

The observations surrounding the time of the accident from the closest official weather station indicated visual flight rules to instrument flight rules conditions with moderate-to-heavy rain and thunderstorms. Radar returns (Figure 2) showed the precipitation in the vicinity of the accident area, moving from southwest to northeast. 318 lightning flashes were reported within 50 miles of the accident site within 20 minutes before or after the time of the accident (Figure 3).

Figure 2. National Reflectivity Mosaic for 1740 CDT with the accident site marked with the black circle.

Figure 3. Base reflectivity scan initiated at 1739:55 CDT with the accident site marked with the black circle.

WRECKAGE AND IMPACT INFORMATION

The helicopter came to rest on its left side on a magnetic heading of about 045°. The cabin, instrument panel, seats, and engine compartment had fractured into several pieces. The tailboom remained attached to the fuselage but was heavily damaged from impact forces. The tail rotor was wedged between two trees, and both tail rotor blades had separated and were located near the front of the helicopter. The engine was separated from the gearbox due to impact. The engine exhibited evidence of tortional twisting. The engine and main rotor gearbox rotated freely. A borescope examination of the combustion and turbine blades found no anomalies.

MEDICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL INFORMATION

The Office of the State Medical Examiner, Louisville, Kentucky, performed an autopsy of the pilot. His cause of death was multiple blunt force injuries to the body. Toxicology testing performed by the Federal Aviation Administration Forensic Sciences Laboratory detected ethanol and propanol in the pilot’s blood but not in his urine. Ethanolis a social drug commonly consumed by drinking beer, wine, or liquor. It acts as a central nervous system depressant; it impairs judgment, psychomotor functioning, and vigilance. After absorption, ethanol is quickly and uniformly distributed throughout the body’s tissues and fluids. Ethanol can be produced after death by microbial activity, sometimes along with other alcohols, such as propanol.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Title 14 CFR 91.103 states that “each pilot in command shall, before beginning a flight, become familiar with all available information concerning that flight.” Federal Aviation Administration Advisory Circular 91-92, “Pilot’s Guide to a Preflight Planning” (dated March 15, 2021), provided information on preflight self-briefings, including planning, weather interpretation, and risk identification/mitigation skills. The advisory circular further stated in part the following:

Pilots adopting these guidelines will be better prepared to interpret and utilize real-time weather information before departure and en route, in the cockpit, via technology like Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) and via third-party providers.

Pilot Information

Certificate:

Airline transport; Flight engineer

Age:

69,Male

Airplane Rating(s):

Single-engine land; Multi-engine

Seat Occupied:

Left

 

land

 

 

Other Aircraft Rating(s):

Helicopter

Restraint Used:

4-point

Instrument Rating(s):

Airplane; Helicopter

Second Pilot Present:

No

Instructor Rating(s):

Airplane multi-engine; Airplane

Toxicology Performed:

Yes

 

single-engine

 

 

Medical Certification:

Class 1 With waivers/limitations

Last FAA Medical Exam:

February 7, 2022

Occupational Pilot:

No

Last Flight Review or Equivalent:

 

Flight Time:

40000 hours (Total, all aircraft), 5 hours (Total, this make and model), 150 hours (Last 90 days,

 

all aircraft)

 

 

Aircraft and Owner/Operator Information

Aircraft Make:

Rotorway

Registration:

N162NH

Model/Series:

Jetexec No Series Exists

Aircraft Category:

Helicopter

Year of Manufacture:

2019

Amateur Built:

Yes

Airworthiness Certificate:

Experimental (Special)

Serial Number:

109

Landing Gear Type:

Skid

Seats:

2

Date/Type of Last

September 2, 2022 Condition

Certified Max Gross Wt.:

1600 lbs

Inspection:

 

 

 

Time Since Last Inspection:

3 Hrs

Engines:

1 Turbo shaft

Airframe Total Time:

135 Hrs at time of accident

Engine Manufacturer:

Solar

ELT:

Not installed

Engine Model/Series:

T62T-32

Registered Owner:

On file

Rated Power:

165 Horsepower

Operator:

On file

Operating Certificate(s)

None

 

 

Held:

 

Meteorological Information and Flight Plan

Conditions at Accident Site:

Instrument (IMC)

Condition of Light:

Day

Observation Facility, Elevation:

KGLW,716 ft msl

Distance from Accident Site:

13 Nautical Miles

Observation Time:

17:35 Local

Direction from Accident Site:

132°

Lowest Cloud Condition:

Scattered

Visibility

7 miles

Lowest Ceiling:

Overcast / 9000 ft AGL

Visibility (RVR):

 

Wind Speed/Gusts:

6 knots /

Turbulence Type

None / None

 

 

Forecast/Actual:

 

Wind Direction:

280°

Turbulence Severity

N/A / N/A

 

 

Forecast/Actual:

 

Altimeter Setting:

30.08 inches Hg

Temperature/Dew Point:

22°C / 22°C

Precipitation and Obscuration:

Moderate - None - Rain

 

 

Departure Point:

Sturgis, KY (TWT)

Type of Flight Plan Filed:

None

Destination:

Glasgow, KY (GLW)

Type of Clearance:

None

Departure Time:

16:22 Local

Type of Airspace:

Class G

Wreckage and Impact Information

Crew Injuries:

1 Fatal

Aircraft Damage:

Destroyed

Passenger

N/A

Aircraft Fire:

None

Injuries:

 

 

 

Ground Injuries:

N/A

Aircraft Explosion:

None

Total Injuries:

1 Fatal

Latitude,

37.175949,-86.15031(est)

 

 

Longitude:

 

Administrative Information

Investigator In Charge (IIC):

Boggs, Daniel

Additional Participating

Sean Smith; FAA; Louisville, KY

Persons:

 

Original Publish Date:

March 20, 2024

Last Revision Date:

 

Investigation Class:

Class 3

Note:

 

Investigation Docket:

https://data.ntsb.gov/Docket?ProjectID=105866

READ MORE ROTOR PRO: https://justhelicopters.com/Magazine

WATCH ROTOR PRO YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://buff.ly/3Md0T3y

You can also find us on

Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/rotorpro1

Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/rotorpro1

Twitter - https://twitter.com/justhelicopters





Created 272 days ago
by Admin

Tags Arthur KY NTSB Report
Categories Press Releases
Categories
Print