Sunday, December 16, 2012

Rans S-12: Loss of power, emergency landing in Sparks farm, northern Baltimore County, Maryland

 
An experimental plane landed safely on a Sparks soybean field after experiencing loss of power on Dec. 15. 


An experimental plane landed safely on a Sparks soybean field after experiencing loss of power on Dec. 15.

Baltimore County police and Maryland State police responded to a report of a plane down on Cold Bottom Road in Sparks around 12:15 p.m., said Greg Shipley, state police spokesman.

Shipley said they found a 1996 Rans S experimental light plane sitting in the field. Pilot Peter Stern, 51, of Baltimore, and passenger Ricardo Velez, 58, of Abingdon, were not injured and the plane was not damaged, he said.

"The first thing I knew about it was police cars screaming up the driveway," said Chuck Ensor, who owns Cold Bottom Farms where the plane landed. "For most of the time, I stood outside directing police and the fire departments to the field."

Ensor said this isn't the first plane to land in his field. He said there have at least two other similar incidents, both without injuries.

Shipley said the Federal Aviation Administration was notified and after FAA personnel arrived at the scene, they gave the pilot permission to take off. He said the plane's home base is Shoestring Airport in Shrewsbury, Pa.


http://www.baltimoresun.com

 SPARKS, Md. —   A small plane lost power Saturday over northern Baltimore County, prompting an emergency landing in a farmer's field, state police said.

Troopers were called at about noon Saturday to a farm in the 1000 block of Cold Bottom Road in Sparks, where the plane landed.

The plane was a 1996 Black and Yellow Rans S 12 Experimental Light Plane and was flying south at approximately 2000 feet in Parkton when the engine started running rough. The pilot is from Baltimore and a passenger is from Abingdon, and they were headed back to their home base, Shoestring Airport in Pennsylvania.

The landing was uneventful, and there was no damage to the plane or the farmer's property.

The Federal Aviation Administration authorized the plane to take off from the farmer's field and return to Pennsylvania.

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