Thursday, July 23, 2015

Aero Commander 100 Darter, N5542M: Accident occurred July 22, 2015 at Stinson Municipal Airport (KSSF), San Antonio, Texas

http://registry.faa.gov/N5542M

NTSB Identification: CEN15CA324
14 CFR Part 91: General Aviation
Accident occurred Wednesday, July 22, 2015 in San Antonio, TX
Probable Cause Approval Date: 03/14/2016
Aircraft: AERO COMMANDER 100, registration: N5542M
Injuries: 1 Serious, 1 Minor.

NTSB investigators used data provided by various entities, including, but not limited to, the Federal Aviation Administration and/or the operator and did not travel in support of this investigation to prepare this aircraft accident report.

The pilot attempted to start the airplane engine by hand propping it because the engine could not be started using the starter because the battery was dead. The airplane had a chock under the left main landing gear wheel, and the pilot side door was propped open with a passenger aboard for the engine start. Upon engine start, the airplane jumped the chock and began to accelerate along the ground. The pilot ran along side of the airplane attempting to open the pilot side door, which had closed. When the airplane speed became too fast for the pilot to run alongside of the airplane, he stood on the main landing gear, holding the strut, and continued to attempt entry into the airplane while telling the passenger to pull the brake, throttle, mixture, or turn off the ignition key switch. The airplane impacted a 10-inch barrier, knocking the pilots legs off the main landing gear, and the airplane ran over the pilot's leg. The pilot pulled up onto the wing strut, still giving instruction to the passenger while attempting to enter the pilot side door, but the prop-wash was making this "feat impossible". About 59 mph, the airplane departed the airfield, becoming airborne, and at 6 feet above ground level, the pilot let go of the wing strut and fell to the ground. The airplane climbed, nosed forward, touched down on the nose landing gear, and impacted a construction dirt pilot before it nosed-over. The airplane sustained substantial damage that included damage to each wing spar and a bent empennage. The pilot sustained minor injuries, and the passenger sustained serious injuries. The airplane was not equipped with shoulder harnesses and was not required to be equipped with shoulder harnesses. The pilot's experience in hand-propping airplanes and the injuries of the passenger were unknown at the time this report was written.

The National Transportation Safety Board determines the probable cause(s) of this accident as follows:
The pilot's improper decision to attempt flight with an unairworthy airplane and improper starting procedure that resulted in an uncontrolled takeoff without the pilot aboard. Contributing was the inoperative airplane battery/engine starter.

FAA Flight Standards District Office: FAA San Antonio FSDO-17



SAN ANTONIO --- The San Antonio Fire Department responded to an emergency Wednesday evening at a South Side airport.

The active fires website indicated that the incident occurred at about 8:50 p.m. at the Stinson Municipal Airfield in the 8500 block of Mission Road.

At the runway, a fixed wing single-engine aircraft could be seen upside down as firefighters examined the scene.

The plane is registered to Travis N. Tatum of Gatesville, according to the Federal Aviation Administration registry.

No information was available regarding injured persons or the cause of the accident.




SAN ANTONIO - A small plane flipped over at Stinson Municipal Airport late Wednesday night, San Antonio Fire Department officials said.   

The pilot was reportedly taxiing the plane at the end of the runway when the aircraft turned and flipped over, fire officials said. 

Crews took some time to get the pilot out of the cockpit because it had been crushed. 

Fire officials did not say whether the pilot was seriously injured. 

The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating the accident.

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