A preliminary report issued by federal safety investigators did not flag any serious safety failures that could have led to the fiery crash of a plane just after takeoff last month on a skydiving outing in Missouri that , including several very experienced jumpers.
The National Transportation Safety Board issued a preliminary report Thursday based on initial inspections of the wreckage and flight records.
The report said it found no indication of any pre-crash mechanical malfunctions or failures in the engine that would have prevented the normal operation of the plane.
In fact, NTSB said it appeared that the engine of the single-engine turboprop plane had been producing power at the time of the crash.
鈥淚 was surprised that they had determined that the engine was producing power,鈥 said Jeff Guzzetti, president of Guzzetti Aviation Risk Discovery, an aviation safety consultancy. 鈥淚nitially I thought it smacked of a potential engine problem and that the pilot had been trying to return to the airport.鈥
The federal agency also said a post-accident sample from the fuel truck found the fuel to be free of sediment or debris, and a review of the skydiving business operators鈥 software showed that the airplane had met the weight and balance limitations for the flight.
The report raised no concerns about the weather or the pilot, who had accumulated over 4,100 total flight hours and was in his second consecutive jump season working for the operator, Skydive Kansas City.
The airplane was not equipped with a crashworthy voice or data recorder, like those that record flight data on commercial planes, nor was it required to be, investigators said. The NTSB report did note, however, that its investigators had recovered damaged GoPro cameras from the wreckage.
The federal agency’s investigation into the accident was ongoing, and a final report often takes a year or more to complete.
The June 14 crash happened about an hour south of Kansas City, when the Pacific Aerospace 750XL carrying a pilot and 11 skydivers took off from Butler Memorial Airport at 11:25 a.m. on a clear day.
During the initial climb, the airplane began a gradual turn to the left, with both wings eventually becoming almost perpendicular to the ground before it slammed into a field, nose down, and burst into flames, investigators said.
The straight up-and-down position of the wings meant they could no longer produce enough aerodynamic lift to keep the plane in the air and the NTSB will have to figure out why that happened, Guzzetti said.
The fire inflicted significant damage to the aircraft’s major structural components, as well as the cockpit, the cabin and the fuel system, investigators said.
Some family members of were at the airport to watch the jump and witnessed the crash, authorities said. The United States Parachute Association, skydiving鈥檚 governing body, said its technology director, Jen Sharp, .
Skydive Kansas City called the crash a 鈥渄evastating loss.”
Poor maintenance is often a factor when skydiving planes crash and the NTSB has previously raised concerns about the in past crash investigations. The after a that killed 11 people in Hawaii that the FAA鈥檚 regulatory system isn鈥檛 strong enough to ensure the safety of skydiving flights.
The Federal Aviation Administration has yet to adopt the NTSB鈥檚 recommendations, but said it established a committee in April that will recommend ways to increase skydiving safety and will consider the safety board鈥檚 proposals.
The United States Parachute Association said that Skydive Kansas City adheres to the safety standards set by the largest skydiving organization in the world, including all FAA maintenance requirements. The skydiving industry says it has a strong safety record. The association said that last year nearly 3.5 million jumps were completed and that 16 civilians died, the majority from human error.
The plane that crashed was built in 2010, according to FAA records. It made two successful flights the morning of the crash, the NTSB said. It is popular for skydiving and certified to be operated by a single pilot.
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