Descripción del Accidente ASN 19 NOV 2013 Learjet 35A XA-USD - Fort Lauderdale International Airport, FL (FLL)
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Estado:Accident investigation report completed and information captured
Fecha:martes 19 noviembre 2013
Hora:19:56
Tipo:Silhouette image of generic LJ35 model; specific model in this crash may look slightly different
Learjet 35A
Operador:Aero J.L.
Registración: XA-USD
Numéro de série: 35A-255
Año de Construcción: 1979
Horas Totales de la Célula:6842
Motores: 2 Garrett TFE731-2-2B
Tripulación:Fatalidades: 2 / Ocupantes: 2
Pasajeros:Fatalidades: 2 / Ocupantes: 2
Total:Fatalidades: 4 / Ocupantes: 4
Daños en la Aeronave: Destruido
Consecuencias: Written off (damaged beyond repair)
Ubicación:5 km (3.1 milles) NE de la costa de Fort Lauderdale International Airport, FL (FLL) (   Estados Unidos de América)
Fase: Ascenso Inicial (ICL)
Naturaleza:Ferry/Posicionado
Aeropuerto de Salida:Fort Lauderdale International Airport, FL (FLL/KFLL), Estados Unidos de América
Aeropuerto de Llegada:Cozumel Airport (CZM/MMCZ), México
Descripción:
The aircraft, a Learjet 35A bound for Cozumel, Mexico, impacted the waters of the Atlantic Ocean about three miles northeast of Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (KFLL), Fort Lauderdale, Florida. All four aboard were killed.
The airplane had just completed an air ambulance flight for Air Evac International from San Jose, Costa Rica to Fort Lauderdale, and was repositioning back to its base in Cozumel, Mexico.
The airplane departed Fort Lauderdale Airport runway 10R about 19:50.
After the aircraft climbed straight ahead over the ocean to about 2,200 ft and 200 knots groundspeed, the copilot requested radar vectors back to the departure airport due to an "engine failure." The controller assigned an altitude and heading, and the copilot replied, "not possible," and requested a 180-degree turn back to the airport, which the controller acknowledged and approved. However, the airplane continued a gradual left turn to the north as it slowed and descended.
At 19:52:34 the crew radioed "Mayday, mayday, mayday". The Miami Departure controller instructed the crew to turn left, heading 260 and continued to give vectors for an approach to runway 28R.
During the next 3 minutes, the copilot requested, received, and acknowledged multiple instructions from the controller to turn left to the southwest to return to the airport. However, the airplane continued its slow left turn and descent to the north. The airplane slowed to 140 knots and descended to 900 ft as it flew northbound, parallel to the shoreline, and away from the airport. Eventually, the airplane tracked in the direction of the airport, but it continued to descend and impacted the ocean about 1 mile offshore, broke up and sank.
According to conversations recorded on the airplane's cockpit voice recorder, no checklists were called for, offered, or used by either flight crewmember during normal operations (before or during engine start, taxi, and takeoff) or following the announced in-flight emergency. After the "engine failure" was declared to the air traffic controller, the pilot asked the copilot for unspecified "help" because he did not "know what's going on," and he could not identify the emergency or direct the copilot in any way with regard to managing or responding to the emergency. At no time did the copilot identify or verify a specific emergency or malfunction, and he did not provide any guidance or assistance to the pilot.

Examination of the left engine's thrust reverser system components after salvage found that the upper blocker door was attached to the reverser and found in a partially deployed position.

Probable Cause:

PROBABLE CAUSE: "The pilot's failure to maintain control of the airplane following an inflight deployment of the left engine thrust reverser. Contributing to the accident was the flight crew's failure to perform the appropriate emergency procedures, the copilot's lack of qualification and capability to act as a required flight crewmember for the flight, and the inflight deployment of the left engine thrust reverser for reasons that could not be determined through postaccident investigation."

Accident investigation:

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Investigating agency: NTSB
Status: Investigation completed
Duration: 2 years and 2 months
Accident number: ERA14FA045
Download report: Summary report

Fuentes:
» Cockpit Voice Recorder transcript
» LiveATC
» FlightAware
» Miami Herald
» NTSB


Fotos

photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
accident date: 19-11-2013
type: Learjet 35A
registration: XA-USD
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
Image of radar track
photo of Learjet-35A-XA-USD
XA-USD
 

Map
This map shows the airport of departure and the intended destination of the flight. The line between the airports does not display the exact flight path.
Distance from Fort Lauderdale International Airport, FL to Cozumel Airport as the crow flies is 921 km (576 miles).
Accident location: Exact; as reported in the official accident report.

This information is not presented as the Flight Safety Foundation or the Aviation Safety Network’s opinion as to the cause of the accident. It is preliminary and is based on the facts as they are known at this time.
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