Accident Cessna 210M VH-PJQ,
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ASN Wikibase Occurrence # 303
 
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Date:Thursday 14 August 1997
Time:16:35
Type:Silhouette image of generic C210 model; specific model in this crash may look slightly different    
Cessna 210M
Owner/operator:
Registration: VH-PJQ
MSN: 21062072
Year of manufacture:1977
Fatalities:Fatalities: 5 / Occupants: 5
Aircraft damage: Destroyed
Category:Accident
Location:6.6 km W Tindal, Aero., NT -   Australia
Phase: Unknown
Nature:Passenger - Non-Scheduled/charter/Air Taxi
Departure airport:Timber Creek, NT
Destination airport:Tindal, NT
Confidence Rating: Accident investigation report completed and information captured
Narrative:
A Cessna 210 (C210), operating under visual flight rules, was chartered for a one-day aerial sightseeing flight by a group of four interstate visitors. The flight departed from Darwin NT and flew to Kununurra WA where the aircraft was refuelled. It has been established that the aircraft held fuel for approximately 240 minutes of flight when it departed Kununurra. This was consistent with the fuel endurance noted on the flight plan.

From Kununurra, the aircraft flew to the Bungle Bungle Range (Bungle Bungles) WA, where some scenic flying was carried out before continuing to Timber Creek NT for an unscheduled landing due to the unavailability of an air traffic control clearance into Tindal airspace. During this leg of the flight the pilot amended his SARTIME for arrival at Tindal by 1 hour 30 minutes. The aircraft then flew to the Tindal airport at Katherine NT, where a refuelling stop had been planned. The pilot again amended his SARTIME for arrival at Tindal by a further hour. Approaching Tindal, the pilot communicated with other aircraft in the area and manoeuvred to establish a traffic pattern. After further communications, the pilot advised that he was joining downwind for runway 14. Shortly after this, the aircraft was observed to be flying at a very low height with the engine "spluttering". Witnesses saw the aircraft "porpoising" as it descended into trees. The sound of an impact was heard shortly after. The aircraft speed taken from the Tindal radar system recording was consistent with the aircraft being in a stalled condition from approximately 300 ft AGL.

The accident site was located approximately 6.6 km west of Tindal airport. Adjacent to the accident site were a number of areas suitable for a forced landing. Apart from these areas, the terrain was generally flat with occasional rocky outcrops, and was moderately treed. The accident site was contained within the moderately treed area. The five occupants had received fatal injuries.

Pilot information

The pilot held a commercial flight crew licence, a valid class one medical certificate and appropriate endorsements to allow him to operate C210 aircraft. The operator employed the pilot on a casual basis.

At the time of the accident, the pilot had accrued a total of 798 hours flying experience. Of this, 636.8 hours were in command with 481.3 hours on C210 aircraft. In the previous 30 days he had flown 47.2 hours, all of which were conducted as pilot in command on the C210. Evidence indicated that the last time the pilot had demonstrated practice forced landings was in March 1996. Evidence also indicated that the pilot had not previously conducted an extended flight with fare-paying passengers as was planned on the day of the accident.

Wreckage examination

The combination of speed and descent angle of the aircraft resulted in an estimated descent rate at impact of about 3,100 ft/min and an estimated peak impact load of 64G. Such an impact was not considered to be survivable.

The right fuel tank had been ruptured at its inboard end and there was evidence that a small amount of fuel had been released from the ruptured area. The left fuel tank was intact and it contained about one cup of fuel. Traces of fuel were found in some areas of the engine fuel system, most areas being dry. The aircraft was assessed as containing no useable fuel at the time of impact. The engine instruments indicated that the aircraft had flown for approximately 240 minutes since refuelling at Kununurra.

The landing gear and flaps were retracted and there was no evidence that either had been selected in anticipation of configuring the aircraft for a landing.

Flight Planning

On the reverse side of the flight plan form, the pilot had documented the planned flight legs for each route. Each line commenced with the departure point and contained the data for the flight to the destination. This method was not in accordance with the conventional method of flight planning and meant that the thought process required for each line of data was to think FROM the location at the beginning of the line rather than TO the location at the beginning of the line.

The line on the flight plan commencing with "KU" contained data applicable for the flight from Kununurra to the Bungle Bungles, a distance of 100 NM and an estimated elapsed time of 45 minutes. No time had been planned for sightseeing at the Bungle Bungles.The line on the flight plan commencing with "BU", assumed to be the Bungle Bungles, contained data applicable for the flight from the Bungle Bungles to Timber Creek, a distance of 161 NM and an estimated elapsed time of 1 hour 12 minutes. No data had been entered on the flight plan for the leg between Timber Creek and Tindal, a distance of 131 NM, which would have been expected to take approximately 60 minutes. A more accurate planned time interval, calculated by the investigation team, for the flight between Kununurra and Tindall was approximately 3 hours 20 minutes, including an allowance of 20 minutes for flight in accordance with standard operating procedures for sightseeing at the Bungle Bungles. The pilot's flight plan indicated that he had allowed only 1 hour and 57 minutes. No waypoints other than departure and destination points were entered, except for the significant sightseeing destinations of the Bungle Bungles and the East Alligator River area. The anomaly in the flight-planned time between Kununurra and Tindal was consistent with the information contained on the other side of the flight plan form and which was submitted to Airservices Australia for flight notification purposes. Although the actual time of landing at Timber Creek could not be established, evidence suggested that the actual time from Kununurra to Timber Creek was probably about 2 hours 50 minutes. Although two fuel calculation columns were annotated with "KU" and "TN" under the "endurance" line at the bottom of the table, no other entries were made in the columns.

Fuel considerations

Persons interviewed during the investigation said that the pilot considered fuel loading prior to flights and there had been occasions when the aircraft's load was reduced in order to carry an adequate fuel load. However, there was some evidence, other than on the accident flight, that the pilot was not in the habit of maintaining a running log of time, distance and fuel endurance. The operator's chief pilot advised that during the pilot's most recent check, he noted that the pilot used only the GPS for navigation and did not keep a flight log, but that he always seemed to know where he was.

There was no evidence to suggest that the fuel gauges were unreliable. A video recorder recovered from the wreckage contained a recording of the flight taken by one of the passengers and provided a clear view of the instrument panel while the aircraft was on approach to land at Timber Creek. The left fuel gauge indicated that the tank was nearly empty while the right gauge indicated approximately one quarter full. Calculations based on this evidence determined that the aircraft had approximately 15 US gallons or some 57 L on board during the approach to Timber Creek, which equated to approximately 1 hour's flight time.

The operator

The chief pilot was the owner of the organisation and the only full-time employee. Three part-time pilots, including the pilot of the accident flight, were employed on a casual basis. From June 1994, the operator's AOC was upgraded from aerial work to include charter operations.

The company operations manual required the chief pilot to ensure that pilots rostered for charter flights familiarise themselves with the route and conditions expected along the route. The chief pilot reported that he had not seen the pilot's plan, and that he had not discussed the plan or the route in detail with the pilot before he departed on the accident flight.

Navigation

One Global Positioning System (GPS) unit was recovered from the wreckage and another was found in the pilot's bag. The unit in use on the accident flight contained waypoints appropriate to the flights conducted on the day of the accident; however, the route-tracking facility was not selected. Although the unit could be used for fuel endurance calculations, no parameters had been entered into the unit to allow this to occur. The last position retrieved from the unit after the accident was consistent with the accident location.

Information obtained during the investigation suggested that the pilot tended to use the GPS exclusively for navigation, and was not in the habit of recording any fixes on a map or other documentation. This information was consistent with the evidence provided by the pilot's documentation recovered from the aircraft. No entries had been made on the pilot's navigation charts. Only the intended tracks had been drawn on them. Some positions and estimates given by radio would most likely have been obtained by reference to a GPS unit.

The flight plan contained almost no information other than that entered during the flight planning stage. No positions and times were entered. There was no evidence of any attempt to maintain a fuel log by recording fuel quantities at significant points, or recording tank selection times.

Sources:

https://www.atsb.gov.au/publications/investigation_reports/1997/aair/aair199702601/

History of this aircraft

Other occurrences involving this aircraft
15 May 1990 VH-PJQ 0 Kununurra Airport (YPKU), Kununurra, WA sub

Revision history:

Date/timeContributorUpdates
21-Jan-2008 10:00 ASN archive Added
01-May-2018 09:21 Pineapple Updated [Time, Cn, Total fatalities, Total occupants, Other fatalities, Nature, Departure airport, Destination airport, Source, Damage, Narrative]

Corrections or additions? ... Edit this accident description

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