Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Steen Aero Lab SKYBOLT, N77VW: Accident occurred September 19, 2011 in Greenleaf, Idaho

http://registry.faa.gov/N77VW

NTSB Identification: WPR11LA459 
14 CFR Part 91: General Aviation
Accident occurred Monday, September 19, 2011 in Greenleaf, ID
Probable Cause Approval Date: 08/15/2012
Aircraft: MCARTHUR STEEN SKYBOLT, registration: N77VW
Injuries: 1 Uninjured.

NTSB investigators may not have traveled in support of this investigation and used data provided by various sources to prepare this aircraft accident report.

The pilot was performing aerobatic maneuvers in the plans-built experimental biplane. He successfully completed an aerobatic routine and then elected to perform it a second time. During the initial dive, as he began to level the airplane, he observed the outboard trailing edge of the upper left wing fail, with fabric material in trail from the aft spar. He regained partial control, but decided to bail out a short time later. The airplane subsequently rolled inverted and entered a near-vertical descent that continued to ground impact.

The 15-year-old airplane, which was purchased by the pilot 16 months before the accident, had fabric-covered wooden wings. The pilot described the build quality of the airplane as "average" and stated that he had noted chips and cracks in the paint, which were acceptable when referenced to the inspection criteria in the fabric manufacturer’s installation manual.

The airplane sustained extensive impact damage, and sections of the upper left wing separated from the airframe in flight and were not located. Fabric material from the recovered wreckage was examined, and the paint was cracked, fragmented, and separated from the majority of the fabric surface. It appeared that the fabric had been incorrectly treated prior to painting and then painted with a brittle automotive paint, which was prone to cracking. The fabric manufacturer’s installation manual cautioned that automotive paint can lead to premature failure of fabric cover because cracking can expose the fabric material to damaging ultraviolet light, which will substantially reduce the fabric's strength. The failed area was on the upper wing, which would have been exposed to sunlight on a regular basis. Although the improperly treated and painted fabric may have led to the in-flight failure of the upper left wing, a determination of the wing’s failure mode could not be made because the separated section of the wing was not recovered.

The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident to be:
Structural failure of the upper left wing during aerobatic flight.

On September 19, 2011, about 1315 mountain daylight time, a McArthur Steen Skybolt, N77VW, collided with terrain following an in-flight structural failure near Greenleaf, Idaho. The pilot was operating the experimental amateur-built airplane under the provisions of Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 91. The airline transport pilot was not injured, the airplane sustained substantial damage and became completely fragmented during the impact sequence. The local flight departed Caldwell, Idaho, about 1255. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan had been filed.

The pilot was performing aerobatic maneuvers in a practice area. He completed a routine uneventfully, and elected to perform it a second time. During the initial dive when he began to level the airplane, he observed the outboard trailing edge section of the upper left wing fail, with fabric material in trail from the aft spar, which appeared to be devoid of any wing ribs. He regained partial control of the airplane, but elected to bail out a short time later. The airplane subsequently rolled inverted, and began a near-vertical descent into a field.

The single engine biplane was comprised of wooden wings, covered in fabric. It was built from plans, completed in 1996, and purchased by the pilot 16 months prior to the accident. The pilot described the build quality of the airplane as, "average" and as such, had planned to ultimately restore the airplane. He noted sections of chipped paint and circular, "ringworm" cracks in the surfaces of the fabric covering, which he attributed to the airplane being painted with automobile paint.

The failed upper wing section was subsequently examined by an investigator from the NTSB, and an inspector from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The wing structure had become heavily fragmented, with the spar fractured into multiple sections. The aft ribs inboard of the aileron were not located, and presumed to have separated in flight. All remaining ribs and spar fragments were free of rot.

Sections of the wing fabric covering material garnered from the upper wing were recovered for examination. The material bore the stamp, 'Poly-Fiber D-103 FAA PMA Stits Aircraft'. The samples were examined at the facilities of Consolidated Aircraft Coatings, the manufacturer of the Poly-Fiber material, in the presence of the NTSB investigator-in-charge. Representatives from Consolidated determined that the material was of the medium weight type, manufactured before 1992. A tensile breaking strength test was performed on two 1-inch-wide strips, utilizing a calibrated load cell. The materials yielded at a force of between 91.20 and 91.67 pounds. The minimum acceptable yield value for this material was 90 pounds.

According to the FAA approved Poly-Fiber installation manual "How to Cover an Aircraft Using the Poly-Fiber System," in order to utilize the fabric material on a certified airplane, it must be treated after installation with a sealant (Poly-Brush), aluminum impregnated ultraviolet (UV) protection coating (Poly-Spray), and a final color coat (Poly-Tone). Examination of the recovered material revealed that the paint had become cracked, fragmented, and separated from the majority of the fabric surface. The material exhibited light streaks of pink fabric sealer, which covered about 50% of the fabric surface. The installation manual states that a correctly sealed surface should be uniformly deep pink in color. Paint fragments were examined, and were brittle when worked by hand. The paint consisted of layers of the ultraviolet protection coating with a final coat of what appeared to be automotive paint. The installation manual states the following regarding the use of automotive paints:

"Premature failure of cover jobs is often caused by automotive paint cracking over Poly-Brush and Poly-Spray. When these brittle paints fail, they take subcoatings with them, exposing the fabric to UV damage."

The installation manual states that a raw, uncoated piece of Poly-Fiber material, left exposed outside for 1 year will lose about 85% of its strength.

The pilot stated that he did not observe substantial cracks in the area of the wing failure, and that the nature of other cracks was acceptable, when referenced against the installation manual's inspection procedures.




A salvage crew looks at the wreckage of a Skybolt, an open cockpit biplane after it crashed at 1:14 p.m. Monday into an alfalfa field south of Greenleaf. The pilot from Boise, bailed out of the plane at 5,500 feet when a piece of the upper left wing fell off while he was performing aerobatic maneuvers after taking off from the Caldwell Airport. He was able to parachute down safely, landing approximately 500 yards south of the wreckage.



A Boise pilot was uninjured when he parachuted out of his airplane just before it crashed off of Lower Pleasant Ridge Road in Canyon County Monday afternoon.

According to a release from Canyon County Sheriff’s Office, deputies responded to a report of the crash just after 1 p.m. The pilot had been practicing aerobatic maneuvers. A structural failure in the the “Skybolt” open pit bi-wing plane caused the crash, deputies said.

The pilot guided the airplane away from homes in the area before bailing out and deploying his parachute. The airplane is a total loss. It was based out of the Caldwell Airport. An irrigation system in an alfalfa field were damaged by the crash. No one was hurt.

The National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administration are investigating.

GREENLEAF, Idaho -- A pilot barely escaped with his life this afternoon after ejecting from a stunt plane moments before it crashed into an alfalfa field in Greenleaf.

A Canyon County Sheriff's deputy says the pilot of the Skybolt plane was doing aerobatic maneuvers around 1 p.m. when he experienced some type of "structural failure."

The pilot was able to avoid homes in the area before parachuting to safety. He was alone in the open cockpit Bi-winged plane and was not injured.

The plane had taken off from the Caldwell Airport. The aircraft appears to be a total loss.

An irrigation system was also damaged in the crash.

The National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Aviation Administration are investigating.