
When a
nice day turns bad
The arrival of
spring not only brings nature back to life, but most airports as well.
Beautiful weather contributes to the urge to just hop in the airplane and go,
but before launching, pilots should still take the time to check the weather.
On April 20, 2005,
the pilot of a Cessna 150 and his passenger departed Festus Memorial Airport in
Festus, Missouri, for an afternoon jaunt over the local area. After takeoff,
the pilot noticed dark clouds on the horizon and headed back to the airport.
The Cessna crashed during the landing attempt. The pilot was killed and the
passenger was seriously injured.
On the day of the
accident, the pilot and passenger drove to the airport to look at the pilot's
airplane. The pilot spent about 20 minutes walking around the Cessna and
explaining it to the passenger before they decided to go for a short flight.
They pulled the plane out of the hangar and the pilot did a preflight inspection,
followed by a runup. The passenger remembers that there was no traffic and the
weather was "sunny and nice, with a slight breeze."
After takeoff, the
pilot turned toward the west, and they immediately saw dark clouds and turned
back to the airport for a landing on Runway 18. The last thing the passenger
remembers is flying toward the airport with rain hitting the windshield.
Witnesses saw the Cessna returning to the airport and banking erratically while
on approach. One saw the airplane "turn on its left side" and descend
behind trees. The left wing hit first, 36 feet to the left of the runway.
Other pilots at the
airport noted that the wind was "blowing really hard, the tree tops were
bent over," and that "leaves and debris were blowing almost horizontally
above the road."
The closest weather
reporting station was located 25 nautical miles northwest of the accident site.
A few minutes before the accident, the weather was reported as winds 130
degrees at 5 knots, visibility 10 statute miles, and few clouds at 4,200 feet
with a broken layer at 7,000 feet. There was also mention of thunderstorms and
rain in the area.
Thirty minutes
after the accident, the weather included winds 280 degrees at 20 knots with
gusts to 29 knots, visibility 1 mile with heavy rain and a 900-foot scattered
layer.
A convective sigmet
was active at the time of the accident and was issued for a severe line of
thunderstorms moving east-southeast at 20 knots with cloud tops to 41,000 feet,
wind gusts of 60 knots, and 1.5-inch diameter hail. Weather radar showed
intense to extreme thunderstorms passing over the airport at the time of the
accident.
The NTSB determined
the probable cause of this accident was the pilot's inadequate preflight
weather evaluation and his failure to maintain aircraft control during the
landing approach.
Festus Memorial
Airport sits in a valley, with higher elevations to both the east and west.
Because the pilot did not get a preflight weather briefing, he was unaware of
the approaching thunderstorms. The temptation to get a "window
briefing" for a local flight can be strong, but as pilots, we need to
recognize that the weather can change quickly, and the best way to know what's
coming is to get a preflight weather briefing.