Friday, November 10, 2017

Temco GC-1B Swift, personal flight conducted under the provisions of Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91, N2363B: Fatal accident occurred November 10, 2017 near Pineville Municipal Airport (2L0), Louisiana

Joseph E. Cannizzaro


The National Transportation Safety Board traveled to the scene of this accident.

Additional Participating Entities:

Federal Aviation Administration / Flight Standards District Office; Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Lycoming Engines; Williamsport, Pennsylvania 

Aviation Accident Factual Report - National Transportation Safety Board: https://app.ntsb.gov/pdf

Investigation Docket - National Transportation Safety Board: https://dms.ntsb.gov/pubdms

http://registry.faa.gov/N2363B

Location: Pineville, LA
Accident Number: CEN18FA030
Date & Time: 11/10/2017, 1120 CST
Registration: N2363B
Aircraft: TEMCO GC 1B
Aircraft Damage: Substantial
Defining Event: Fuel starvation
Injuries: 1 Fatal
Flight Conducted Under: Part 91: General Aviation - Personal 

On November 10, 2017, about 1120 central standard time, a Temco GC 1B airplane, N2363B, was substantially damaged when it impacted trees and terrain while maneuvering north of Pineville Municipal Airport (2L0), Pineville, Louisiana. The airline transport pilot was fatally injured. The personal flight was conducted under the provisions of Title 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and no Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) flight plan was filed for the flight. The cross-country flight departed Lake Water Wheel Airport (XS99), Shepherd, Texas, about 1000.

According to a friend of the pilot, the pilot had purchased the airplane in the spring of 2017. The pilot was an airframe and powerplant mechanic with an inspection authorization and had traveled between Texas and New York several times before the accident to conduct maintenance on the airplane. The pilot was relocating the airplane to New York, where he lived, on the day of the accident.

There were no fuel receipts available for the time before the accident. One witness observed the pilot and the previous owner carrying 5-gallon containers of fuel to the accident airplane; however, investigators were unable to determine how much fuel was on board at the time of departure from XS99.

According to an employee with the fixed base operator at 2L0, the pilot called on the airport UNICOM frequency and asked for verification that the landing gear were down and locked. The airplane was observed to fly from south to north over the airport and at the north end of the airport, the airplane pitched up and turned to the right. The employee confirmed, over the UNICOM frequency, that the landing gear appeared to be down, but the pilot did not respond.

Another witness saw the airplane start to climb and initiate a right turn between 250 and 300 ft above ground level. As the airplane turned, the tail of the airplane "wobbled," then the nose of the airplane pitched down, and the airplane descended below the tree line. The witness heard a loss of engine power just before the wobble and observed exaggerated rudder movements after the loss of power. 

Pilot Information

Certificate: Airline Transport; Flight Engineer
Age: 59, Male
Airplane Rating(s): Multi-engine Land; Single-engine Land; Single-engine Sea
Seat Occupied: Left
Other Aircraft Rating(s): None
Restraint Used: Lap Only
Instrument Rating(s): Airplane
Second Pilot Present: No
Instructor Rating(s): None
Toxicology Performed: Yes
Medical Certification: Class 1 With Waivers/Limitations
Last FAA Medical Exam: 07/09/2016
Occupational Pilot: Yes
Last Flight Review or Equivalent: 07/21/2016
Flight Time:   (Estimated) 2103.2 hours (Total, all aircraft), 13.5 hours (Total, this make and model), 3.3 hours (Last 90 days, all aircraft), 1.6 hours (Last 30 days, all aircraft), 1 hours (Last 24 hours, all aircraft) 

The pilot held type certificates for the Boeing 727 and the North American Sabreliner.

At the time of his medical certificate application, the pilot estimated his total flight time as 5,000 hours; 15 hours of which were logged in the previous 6 months. The certificate contained the limitation "Must wear corrective lenses for near and distant vision."

The pilot's family provided a scanned copy of several pages from the pilot's flight logbook; with entries dated between August 8, 2015, and October 26, 2017. A review of the logbook indicated that the pilot had logged no less than 2,102.2 hours. In 2015 the pilot had logged 12.5 hours in the make and model of the accident airplane. He did not have any logged flight time, in the make and model of the accident airplane, within the 6 months before the accident. 

Aircraft and Owner/Operator Information

Aircraft Make: TEMCO
Registration: N2363B
Model/Series: GC 1B
Aircraft Category: Airplane
Year of Manufacture: 1948
Amateur Built: No
Airworthiness Certificate: Normal
Serial Number: 3663
Landing Gear Type: Retractable - Tailwheel
Seats: 2
Date/Type of Last Inspection: 09/03/2017, Annual
Certified Max Gross Wt.: 1570 lbs
Time Since Last Inspection: 2 Hours
Engines: 1 Reciprocating
Airframe Total Time: 1526.08 Hours
Engine Manufacturer: Lycoming
ELT: C91A installed, activated, did not aid in locating accident
Engine Model/Series: IO-360-A1A
Registered Owner: On file
Rated Power: 200 hp
Operator: On file
Operating Certificate(s) Held: None 

The airplane was manufactured and issued the original airworthiness certificate in 1948 under the Civil Air Regulations Part 4a. Neither a Pilot Operating Handbook nor an Airplane Flight Manual were required; and therefore, performance-specific data such as fuel consumption was not available. In addition, the FAA major repair and alteration records available for the airplane indicated the airplane had been modified multiple times to include a powerplant change and landing gear changes.

According to the weight and balance document located in the wreckage and dated January 8, 2003, the airplane could hold 215.7 lbs or 35.95 gallons of fuel, with the most aft center of gravity loading. The datasheet for the engine provided a fuel consumption range of 8.5 to 11 gallons per hour. If the fuel tanks were full, the airplane had a range between 3 and 4 hours depending on the fuel/air mixture settings controlled by a pilot in flight.

Fuel System

The airplane was equipped with an aftermarket auxiliary fuel tank system; one tank in each wing. The fuel lines ran from each respective fuel tank inboard to the fuel selector valve. The airplane was equipped with a two-part main tank. The main tank fed through 1 ¼ inch tubing into a header tank and then to the fuel selector valve. The routing then continued to the gascolator, to the fuel pump, and then toward the engine.

Each auxiliary tank was equipped with a copper vent line that ran through the length of the fuel tank. One end of the copper vent line was mechanically occluded. The fuel tank cap on the left auxiliary fuel tank was a vented cap. The vent on the outside of the cap was occluded with dirt. The fuel tank cap on the right auxiliary fuel tank was not a vented cap. Neither auxiliary tank was equipped with a fuel pickup line inside of the tank, and the fuel lines were mounted about ½ to ¾ inch up from the bottom of the tank.

According to major repair and alteration records and the maintenance records for the airplane, auxiliary fuel tanks were installed in January of 2008 under supplemental type certificate (STC) No. SA255SO. The airplane had flown 4.42 hours since the auxiliary fuel tanks were installed in the airplane.

According to a conversation with the holder for the STC, Merlyn Products, Inc., the airplane's previous owner had contacted the company in 2003 and stated that he had two auxiliary fuel tanks that did not have STC paperwork and he wanted to purchase the paperwork to indicate that they were approved for use in his airplane. Merlyn Products did not provide him this paperwork as the fuel tanks were not manufactured by Merlyn Products, Inc. One other company manufactured a single-tank auxiliary fuel tank for the Temco; this tank was mounted in the center fuselage of the airplane. Investigators were not able to determine where the fuel tanks were manufactured.

Investigators were unable to reach the previous owner or mechanic regarding the installation of the auxiliary tanks. Investigators were not able to determine if there were any fuel flow issues, known by the previous owner, once the new tanks were installed. 

Meteorological Information and Flight Plan

Conditions at Accident Site: Visual Conditions
Condition of Light: Day
Observation Facility, Elevation: KAEX, 80 ft msl
Distance from Accident Site: 6 Nautical Miles
Observation Time: 1053 CST
Direction from Accident Site: 261°
Lowest Cloud Condition: Clear
Visibility:  10 Miles
Lowest Ceiling: None
Visibility (RVR):
Wind Speed/Gusts: 9 knots /
Turbulence Type Forecast/Actual: None / None
Wind Direction: 90°
Turbulence Severity Forecast/Actual: N/A / N/A
Altimeter Setting: 30.28 inches Hg
Temperature/Dew Point: 17°C / 4°C
Precipitation and Obscuration: No Obscuration; No Precipitation
Departure Point: Shepherd, TX (XS99)
Type of Flight Plan Filed: None
Destination: Pineville, LA (2L0)
Type of Clearance: None
Departure Time: 1000 CST
Type of Airspace: Class G

Airport Information

Airport: Pineville Municipal Airport (2L0)
Runway Surface Type: N/A
Airport Elevation: 100 ft
Runway Surface Condition: Vegetation
Runway Used: N/A
IFR Approach: None
Runway Length/Width:
VFR Approach/Landing: Forced Landing 

2L0, is a public, non-towered airport (Class G) located 2 miles north of Pineville, Louisiana, at a surveyed elevation of 100 ft. The airport has one open runway 18/36 (3,000 ft by 75 ft, asphalt). There is a lake and water runway at the departure end of runway 18. Densely forested terrain is located off the departure end of runway 36. It is noted that the runway 18/36 safety areas are nonstandard. 

Wreckage and Impact Information

Crew Injuries: 1 Fatal
Aircraft Damage: Substantial
Passenger Injuries: N/A
Aircraft Fire: None
Ground Injuries: N/A
Aircraft Explosion: None
Total Injuries: 1 Fatal
Latitude, Longitude:  31.351944, -92.439722 

The accident site was located in heavily forested terrain about 0.4 mile northeast of the departure end of runway 36. The accident site was at an elevation of 125 ft mean sea level and the main wreckage came to rest inverted on a heading of 60°.

The main wreckage included the inboard sections of the left and right wings, the fuselage, the left elevator, the horizontal stabilizer, the rudder, the vertical stabilizer, and the engine and propeller assembly. The engine and fuselage forward of the seats separated from the aft section of the fuselage and came to rest inverted behind the empennage. The outboard section of the left wing was found about 140 ft from the main wreckage. The top portion of a tree directly above this piece of the left wing was impact damaged and separated. The outboard section of the right wing, sections of canopy, the right elevator, ailerons, flaps, sections of cowling, and a section of the throttle were found in trees and on the ground between the outboard section of the left wing and the main wreckage. All major components of the airplane were located.

Flight control cables were traced from the cockpit to the ailerons, elevator, and rudder. All observed separations points exhibited signatures consistent with impact damage and overload separation. The elevator trim tab was found in a neutral position. The pitch trim motor was operational when electric power was applied to it.

The main landing gear were found retracted. Material consistent with wood splinters were found in the right-side jack pad and a pine branch was found in the right wheel well. The landing gear selector handle was found in its up position and its control shaft was continuous from the selector to the hydraulic pump assembly. The hydraulic pump and its solenoid were operational when electric power was applied to the solenoid.

Cockpit mixture and propeller governor controls were manipulated by hand and their respective engine linkage moved accordingly. The liberated throttle control was placed back into its cockpit location and pressed into its forward position and the engine throttle linkage moved forward. The engine throttle linkage was moved rearward and the cockpit throttle control moved out of its forward position. The engine driven fuel pump line to the fuel servo was broken off at the pump. A liquid consistent with the smell of aviation gasoline exited the line when it was moved.

The outboard section of one propeller blade was bent rearward and the other blade was not bent. The blades did not exhibit any leading-edge nicks or chordwise abrasions.

The fuel selector was found positioned on the main tank. Detents on the fuel selector valve were firm and an audible click could be heard at each detent. The electric fuel pump fuel line was torn and a liquid consistent with the smell of aviation gasoline exited the line when electric power was applied to the electric fuel pump. Both auxiliary fuel tanks were impact damage and separated from each wing. Investigators were unable to establish how much fuel was in each tank at the time of impact. The main fuel tank was not compromised and was empty. No contaminants were noted in the fuel lines or fuel screens that would have occluded fuel flow.

First responders reported that a small amount fuel leaked or dripped from the airplane when they arrived on scene; however, it is unknown how much fuel was on board at the time of the accident. No mechanical anomalies were noted with the airframe or flight controls that would have precluded normal operation.

Engine Examination

The engine No. 4 cylinder was impact damaged on the exhaust valve side of the cylinder. The top bank of spark plugs, p-leads, fuel pump, vacuum pump, propeller, and valve covers were removed to facilitate the examination. A mud dobber nest was observed on the inboard portion of the propeller flange. The spark plug points exhibited darker, sooty deposits consistent with a rich(er) mixture. The p-lead from the right magneto on the No. 4 cylinder was impact damaged and separated at the upper spark plug. The p-leads from the left magneto on the No. 1 and 3 cylinders were impact-damaged and separated.

The engine was rotated through by hand at the propeller flange. Valve movement, and drive train continuity was observed at the accessory case and on all four cylinders. Air movement was documented tactilely at the spark plug orifice on all four cylinders. Both magnetos were removed from the engine for further examination. Three of the four left magneto leads exhibited a spark when the unit was actuated by hand. The fourth lead was impact damaged at the cap and could not be functionally tested. The cap was removed, and the unit was rotated by hand; spark was observed at the point of the impact damaged lead. All four leads on the right magneto exhibited a spark when the unit was actuated by hand.

The spline on the vacuum pump was unremarkable. When actuated by hand, the unit rotated without resistance and suction and compression were obtained. No mechanical anomalies were noted with the engine that would have precluded normal operation. 

Flight Recorders

The accident airplane was equipped with a JPI EDM-700 engine data monitoring device and a Garmin GPSMap 696. Both devices contained data; however, neither device contained data pertinent to the accident flight. 

Medical And Pathological Information

The Louisiana Forensic Center, LLC., Youngsville, Louisiana, performed the autopsy on the pilot on November 10, 2017, as authorized by the Rapides Parish Coroner's office. The autopsy concluded that the cause of death was "blunt force injuries to head," and the report listed the specific injuries.


The FAA Bioaeronautical Sciences Research Laboratory, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, performed toxicological tests on specimens that were collected during the autopsy. The results were negative for all tests conducted.

NTSB Identification: CEN18FA030
14 CFR Part 91: General Aviation
Accident occurred Friday, November 10, 2017 in Pineville, LA
Aircraft: TEMCO GC 1B, registration: N2363B
Injuries: 1 Fatal.

This is preliminary information, subject to change, and may contain errors. Any errors in this report will be corrected when the final report has been completed. NTSB investigators either traveled in support of this investigation or conducted a significant amount of investigative work without any travel, and used data obtained from various sources to prepare this aircraft accident report.

On November 10, 2017, about 1120 central standard time, a Temco GC 1B airplane, N2363B, was substantially damaged when it impacted trees and then terrain while maneuvering north of Pineville Municipal Airport (2L0), Pineville, Louisiana. The airline transport pilot was fatally injured. The personal flight was conducted under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed and no Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) flight plan had been filed for the flight. The cross-country flight departed Lake Water Wheel Airport (XS99), Shepherd, Texas, about 1000.

According to an employee with the fixed base operator at 2L0, the pilot called on the airport UNICOM frequency and asked for assistance verifying that the landing gear were down and locked. The airplane was observed to fly from south to north over the airport and at the north end of the airport the airplane pulled up and turned to the right. The employee confirmed that the landing gear appeared to be down but the pilot did not respond. The airport manager of 2L0 was flying in the area and flew to the location that the airplane was last seen. The wreckage of the airplane was located about 30 minutes later.

The wreckage of the airplane came to rest in heavily forested terrain about half a mile north of 2L0. The main wreckage came to rest inverted on a 60 degree heading. The main wreckage included the inboard sections of the left and right wings, fuselage, the left elevator and its horizontal stabilizer, the rudder, the vertical stabilizer, the right horizontal stabilizer, and the engine and propeller assembly. The outboard section of the left wing was found about 140 feet from the main wreckage. The outboard section of the right wing, sections of canopy, right elevator, ailerons, flaps, sections of cowling, and a section of the throttle were found in trees and on the ground between the outboard section of the left wing and the main wreckage. All major components of the airplane were located.




A small plane crashed near Buhlow Lake this morning, with the pilot believed to be the only fatality.

Rapides Parish Sheriff's deputies were notified shortly before noon that a small aircraft crashed near the lake and the Alexandria Veterans Administration Hospital, a spokesman said. 

Deputies along with VA Police, VA Fire Department, Pineville Fire Department, Alpine Fire Department and Louisiana State Police responded to the scene. 

They found the wreckage of a single engine private aircraft in a thick, brush covered area between the VA and Bulow Lake.  Deputies located the body of the pilot and what appears to be the only occupant of the aircraft, the spokesman said. 


The Rapides Parish Coroner's Office responded to the scene to take custody of the body.  The Federal Aviation Administration was notified and has taken over the investigation. Investigators say an autopsy and toxicology tests will be conducted as part of their investigation to determine official cause of death.  


The name of the deceased is being withheld at this time until proper notification of family members is made, the spokesman said. Deputies did determine the pilot was not from the central Louisiana area.


Original article can be found here ➤ http://www.katc.com


A pilot not from Central Louisiana died Friday in a crash of a small plane near Buhlow Lake, according to the Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office.

The crash was reported around 11:47 a.m. to the Tioga substation by the Pineville Police Department. The single-engine private airplane was found in thick brush between the lake and the Veterans Administration Medical Center, reads a release.


The Federal Aviation Administration has taken over the investigation.


The pilot appeared to be the only occupant. The identity of the pilot has not been released yet, reads the release.


Deputies were able to determine that the pilot is not from Central Louisiana, it reads.


Deputies responded to the scene, along with police and fire personnel from the VA, Louisiana State Police and the Alpine and Pineville fire departments.


Original article can be found here ➤ http://www.thetowntalk.com


PINEVILLE, La. (KALB) - UPDATED information from RPSO:

The pilot of a small plane is dead following a crash near the grounds of the Alexandria Veterans Administration Hospital around 11:47 a.m. Friday according to the Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office.

RPSO says the Tioga Sub-station received a call from the Pineville Police Department reporting the possible crash of a small aircraft near Buhlow Lake and the grounds of the VA.

Deputies along with VA Police, VA Fire Department, Pineville Fire Department, Alpine Fire Department and troopers with the Louisiana State Police, responded to the scene.

Upon arrival, first responders located the wreckage of a single-engine private aircraft in a thick, brush covered area between the VA and Bulow Lake. Deputies located the body of the pilot, who appeared to be the only occupant of the aircraft, deceased.

The Rapides Parish Coroner's Office responded to the scene to take custody of the body. The Federal Aviation Administration was notified and has taken over the investigation. Investigators say an autopsy and toxicology tests will be conducted as part of their investigation to determine official cause of death.

The name of the deceased is being withheld at this time until proper notification of family members is made. Deputies did determine the pilot was not from the central Louisiana area.

4:30 p.m. Story:

KALB has learned that a small, single engine plane crashed near the property of the Alexandria Veterans Administration Hospital in Pineville late Friday morning.

A source tells KALB that the crash involved a single fatality, though the name of the person or the plane’s tail number have not yet been released to the public.

Several agencies responded to the scene including the Pineville and VA Fire Departments, RPSO and State Police. The NTSB is working with those agencies in the investigation.

RPSO said that the wreckage was found in a thick, brush-covered area between the VA and Buhlow Lake.

The body was taken into custody by the Rapides Parish Coroner's Office. Investigators said an autopsy and toxicology tests will be conducted as part of the investigation.

It has been determined that the pilot was not from the Cenla area.

Original article can be found here ➤http://www.kalb.com

Socata TB-200, N207GT, operated by Tipton Tampico LLC: Accident occurred November 10, 2017 in Annapolis, Anne Arundel County, Maryland

The National Transportation Safety Board did not travel to the scene of this accident.

Additional Participating Entity:
Federal Aviation Administration / Flight Standards District Office; Baltimore, Maryland

Aviation Accident Preliminary Report - National Transportation Safety Board: https://app.ntsb.gov/pdf

Tipton Tampico LLC:  http://registry.faa.gov/N207GT

Location: Annapolis, MD
Accident Number: ERA18LA021
Date & Time: 11/10/2017, 1520 EST
Registration: N207GT
Aircraft: SOCATA TB200
Injuries: 3 None
Flight Conducted Under:  Part 91: General Aviation - Personal

On November 10, 2017, about 1520 eastern standard time, a Socata TB200, N207GT, operated by Tipton Tampico LLC, was substantially damaged during a forced landing near Annapolis, Maryland. The commercial pilot and two passengers were not injured. The personal flight was conducted under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 91. Visual meteorological conditions prevailed, and no flight plan was filed for the flight that departed Tipton Airport (FME), Fort Meade, Maryland, about 1430.
The pilot reported that he was conducting a sightseeing flight with his two children around the eastern shore of Maryland. About 45 minutes after departure, the airplane was at an altitude of 1,500 ft and about 25 miles southeast of FME, when the pilot felt a very light and subtle vibration from the engine. Shortly thereafter, the propeller rpm increased to 2,700 rpm uncommanded and was "pegged at the redline." He followed the checklist and reduced engine power in an attempt to remain below redline rpm , but it had little effect. The airplane was 11 miles southeast of FME when the engine vibration increased, and the cockpit started filling-up with smoke; he diverted to Lee Airport (ANP) Annapolis, Maryland. The pilot reported that the engine gauges were all "indicating green" during this time, but once the situation started deteriorating rapidly, he focused on flying the airplane and did not recall reading the gauges again.

Immediately after turning south towards ANP at around 1,400 feet, the engine experienced a total loss of power. The pilot realized that the airplane would not be able reach the airport and he looked for a place to land. He maintained 70 knots in a glide and found an exit ramp on a state highway that appeared to be relatively straight and free of vehicles. The airplane touched down normally on the road, but struck a light pole and a guardrail before coming to rest on the grassy shoulder of the road.

Examination of the airplane by a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) inspector revealed that both wings were sheared, the engine detached from the fuselage, and the right horizontal stabilator was crushed.

According to FAA records, the airplane was issued a standard airworthiness certificate in the normal category on September 24, 2001. It was a four-place, internally braced low-wing airplane, that was equipped with fixed tricycle landing gear, and a Lycoming IO-360, 200-horsepower engine with a two-blade metal constant-speed propeller.

The weather conditions reported at FME, 12-miles northeast of the accident site, at 1524, included wind from 350° at 12 knots gusting to 17 knots , visibility 10 miles, clear skies, temperature 3° C, dew point -9° C, and an altimeter setting of 30.38 inches of mercury.

The airplane was recovered from the accident site and retained for additional examination.




FORT MEADE, Md. - The pilot who successfully landed a small plane along a highway during rush hour is recounting his experience to FOX 5.

The incident happened last Friday on Route 50 in Annapolis at around 3 p.m.
  
Christopher Curry, 32, told FOX 5 his sons, 4 and 8, got out of school early that day so he decided to take them up for a flight to see the fall foliage.

“I love doing fun things with them,” said Curry.

He has had his pilot’s license since he was 19. Curry also flew Harrier Jets in the Marine Corps.

It was about 40 minutes into the flight from Tipton Airport in Fort Meade when things started to go wrong. Curry noticed a slight shudder in the engine compartment. As he turned back toward the closest runway at Lee Airport in Edgewater, the nose of the plane started vibrating violently and the cabin filled with smoke.

He was still 14 miles from the airport, but Curry knew the plane wouldn’t go that far at that altitude, so he began to look for a safe landing space.

“I see a landfill there,” explained Curry. “I see some machinery, some people working and it is uneven terrain so I am thinking that is not going to work. And I am looking at the highway right there. [I realize] it’s either the trees or the highway. And the trees, the airplane will probably break apart and crumble up.”

But the highway was packed with rush hour drivers.

“I am looking at my airspeed to make sure I don’t fall out of the sky,” added Curry. “I am looking at the lanes and I see an off-ramp that has just enough room for me to set the plane down.”

It was a gamble.

“For all I know we could be knocked out cold as soon as we impact the ground, or a car could come out of the bend and hit us,” said Curry.

In avoiding the cars, Curry clipped a light pole and guardrail, which whipped them around and tore off the wings. The cockpit remained intact.

“I kind of had my instinctive parental driver arm kind of come down over my son’s chest,” added Curry. “We stop. I look back. The boys are okay. They are not crying. No one seemed completely freaked out. I’m like, ‘Hey, we’re alive!’”

Curry said during the ordeal, he talked his 8-year-old son through the process to keep him calm. His 4-year-old slept in the back.

“I am just so thankful to everyone who ran over and helped us,” said Curry. “They were all so nice. They gave my sons jackets to keep them warm.”

Despite the close call, Curry and his sons say they will fly again, after taking a break.

The Federal Aviation Administration is still investigating what went wrong with the plane, which is a single-engine Socata TB200.


Story, video and photo gallery:  http://www.fox5dc.com









A Marine Corps pilot returning to Tipton Airport from a pleasure flight over the Eastern Shore with his sons on Friday made an emergency crash landing on the ramp off Interstate 97 near Annapolis.

The pilot and two children aboard were not injured when the rented single-engine airplane came down.

Maryland State Police said Friday night the pilot, Christopher Curry, 32, landed the plane after it lost RPMs as he was returning to Tipton Airport.

Police said the plane clipped a guardrail and a light pole, then crashed. A wing was ripped from the plane, but the passenger compartment was completely intact, police said.

Terence Russell, whose company leases the Socata Tobago XL, said Curry is a former Harrier jet pilot now stationed at Fort George G. Meade.

Capt. Russ Davies, a spokesman for the Anne Arundel County Fire Department, posted information on Twitter shortly after 3:30 p.m. that the plane crashed on the ramp from I-97 South to Aris T. Allen Boulevard.

A Maryland Department of Transportation traffic camera photo showed a plane near a wooded area just off the roadway with police and fire engines on the roadway. The camera was shut off shortly after the crash.

A Marine Corps pilot returning to Tipton Airport from a pleasure flight over the Eastern Shore with his sons on Friday made an emergency crash landing on the ramp off Interstate 97 near Annapolis.

The pilot and two children aboard were not injured when the rented single-engine airplane came down.


Original article can be found here ➤  http://www.baltimoresun.com




A small Socata plane crashed this afternoon on Route 50 Eastbound near the junction with I-97.

Fire crews were dispatched around 3:30pm for a small plane that had crashed. Witnesses on the scene said that the pilot and two passengers were uninjured. According to witnesses, the pilot had a military-type uniform and the passengers appeared to be children. Anne Arundel County Fire Department EMS evaluated them at the scene.

The Socata TB-200 is registered to Tipton Tampico, LLC out of Tipton Airport at Ft. Meade. According to their corporate registration, Tipton Tampico is a LLC engaged in providing rental and operation of aircraft.

As expected, traffic around the scene is snarled and motorists are advised to avoid the area is possible. Expect road closures for several more hours (4:47pm).

Original article ➤ http://www.eyeonannapolis.net




Authorities in Maryland say no one was hurt when a small plane crashed on an interstate exit ramp near the state capital.

Maryland State Police say the plane, with three people on board, took off from Tipton Airport in Fort Meade, Maryland, on Friday afternoon.

Troopers say the pilot reported he was losing power and made an emergency landing along Interstate 97 near Annapolis, Maryland.

Anne Arundel County Fire Department officials say paramedics checked an adult and two children who were on the plane and said they were not hurt.

Photos posted on the department's Twitter feed show the plane just off the road along a wooded area. The tail number is clearly visible.

Maryland State Police are investigating.

Original article can be found here ➤ http://abcnews.go.com





A small plane crashed onto an interstate ramp near Annapolis, Maryland, on Friday and three people walked away unharmed, officials say. 

The single-engine plane crashed Friday afternoon on a highway ramp leading from southbound I-97 to Route 665, near busy Route 50. With two children on board, the pilot had engine trouble.

Remarkably, no one on the plane or on the road was hurt, Lt. Erik Kornmeyer of the Anne Arundel County Fire Department said live on News4. 

"We do not believe they're going to need further medical attention," he said about the three people on board the plane.

Chopper4 footage showed a man in uniform and two little boys alongside the plane.

The pilot took off from Tipton Airfield in Fort Meade and was trying to return, Maryland State Police said. 

But he had engine trouble and tried to made an emergency landing. 

The plane crashed onto the exit ramp and slammed into a guardrail, state police said. Dramatic Chopper4 footage shows the plane's wings snapped off.

No other vehicles were involved, and no one was reported to be hurt. 

Crews hauled off parts of the plane with a tow truck. Also, they are evaluating a small fuel leak at the crash site. 

"The containment of that fuel is what our major concern is," Kornmeyer said. 

The fixed wing plane was registered in Anne Arundel County, federal records show. 

Original article ➤ https://www.nbcwashington.com






ANNAPOLIS, Md. — A single-engine plane crashed Friday afternoon in a wooded area alongside Interstate 97 at U.S. Route 50.

Maryland State Police said the pilot took off from Tipton Airfield and was trying to return. The pilot advised that he lost engine RPMs and made an emergency landing around 3:30 p.m.

The pilot successfully landed the plane on the Maryland Route 665 exit ramp from southbound I-97. The plane struck a guardrail; No other vehicles involved.

An adult and two children were evaluated, but no injuries were reported, Anne Arundel County fire officials said.

Fire officials said crews were evaluating a small fuel leak.

Original article can be found here ➤ http://www.wbaltv.com

'Personality plus' on display at WWI Platte Valley fighter pilot museum: Smithsonian courted Colorado family for its vintage memorabilia

Mike Gugeler, of Erie, welds on a tube frame for a biplane at the Vintage Aero Flying Museum near Fort Lupton Tuesday. 


Sunday dinners at his grandparents' home in Rapid City, S.D., often attracted a once dangerous band of men — World War I combat veterans from around the country who found each other through the grapevine and then kept in touch.

These mini-reunions gave the guests a soapbox to tell their stories and process their shared experiences, Andy Parks, 54, said of his father's childhood recollections.

"And for my dad, a kid then reading pulp fiction about the war, it was captivating — like watching a movie at the table," he added.

Long after the meal, the then middle-aged vets moved their conversation to the basement where Fred Parks — Andy Parks' grandfather — showcased a growing collection of memorabilia from the war in a small museum he built.

Part of his grandfather's eventual fascination with and focus on collecting aviation items stemmed from an unrealized dream, Andy Parks explained.

"He fought in World War I with the artillery," he continued. "But he was gassed in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive and invalided out of the war before he could transfer from the artillery into the 166th Aero Squadron's American Expeditionary Forces to join his cousin, Capt. Victor Parks, the squadron commander."

Still, the front row seat on that generation's storytelling inspired Andy Parks' father, Dr. Jim Parks, to carry on the tradition and collect much more memorabilia donated by aviators the family befriended over multiple decades.

Dr. Parks — an obstetrician/gynecologist who practiced in Denver and taught at the University of Colorado — like his father wanted to pay his respects and show hospitality to veterans. 

"I think they both understood that the vets they visited and invited to visit us were living history. And the ones I met — about half of the pilots represented in the collection today — were like grandpas to me," Andy Parks, now a Highlands Ranch resident, said. "So, our family has a 'personality plus' way of sharing this sliver of distant World War I history."

For that reason, the Smithsonian Institution — the nation's flagship repository in Washington, D.C., for historical American artifacts — came calling a few years back.

"They wanted me to donate our collection, which highlights uniforms and memorabilia from American pilots who flew for the British and the French before U.S. involvement. But we have more than they have, and I told them that they should donate their collection to me," Andy Parks said. 

Tom Kooken and Julie Kinder, 17, work Tuesday on a wing for a biplane at the Vintage Aero Flying Museum near Fort Lupton. 


Inside the time capsule

That collection grew considerably in 1981, when Andy Parks' father organized a reunion in Paris attended by 48 World War I aces —fighter pilots from both sides with five or more victories. For this reason, the event drew media coverage from outlets such as the long running American television talk show, "Today," Andy Parks, who often traveled with his father to meet vets at home and abroad, said.

"Around those tables, the pilots said that they knew whenever they shot down another pilot that there would be a mother crying that night," he continued. "It was intimate combat. Sometimes they could see each other's eyes." 

Through that gathering in France the Parks family met more vets and collected more uniforms and memorabilia well before the last known World War I vet, an Englishman, died in 2012 at 110.

Besides about 100 uniforms, the collection today includes original art — both by the wildly famous and the relatively obscure.

For instance, one jacket sports a leather squadron insignia patch sketched and hand-colored by Walt Disney, who enlisted — though underage at the time — to serve in World War I's Red Cross Ambulance Corps.

The Parks also acquired a detailed pencil sketch of an aerial dogfight with a three-dimensional perspective from above of planes in death spirals through clouds drawn by William Lambert on Jan. 27, 1918 — the day the Cincinnati native shot down his fifth plane to become an ace with, ultimately, 18 air-to-air victories.

Other memorabilia includes: sterling silver wings pins created by Tiffany and Cartier for high-ranking officers; soft leather trench coats called "teddy bears" for the plush fur lining that kept pilots warm as they flew in open cockpits; and aerial maps glued to plywood.

Because Andy Parks grew up the same way his dad did — with a basement museum honoring vets — he, too, got many closeups with veterans who heard about the collection in Colorado and arrived from all over to view it after corresponding with the family.

"I remember my mom putting up with (ace fighter pilot) Ken Porter asking her to mix a third Boodles martini until she got it right," Andy Parks said. "... And I was old enough then to record interviews my dad or I did with them and just listen in on the conversations. I still remember dad saying, 'Go get that trunk.' And opening the stuff we hadn't sorted yet with them was like opening a time capsule."

Julie Kinder, 17, left, and her mother Rebecca Kinder clean the fuselage of a replica WWI biplane at the Vintage Aero Flying Museum near Fort Lupton on Tuesday.


New name, new digs

To give the public more access to the collection, Andy Parks used his inheritance after his father died in 2002 to build a more formal museum — now a nonprofit 501(c)(3) named the Vintage Aero Flying Museum and also still known as the LaFayette Foundation.

The international aviation museum today tells bits of both sides of the war's story in the skies from inside a nondescript hangar at the Platte Valley Airpark near Fort Lupton four miles northwest of Hudson and about 40 miles northeast of Denver.

There, volunteers —teenagers to octogenarians from Boulder, Weld, and Arapahoe counties — conduct tours, clean and enhance displays, and build or repair replica vintage aircraft including the Fokker DVII German biplane Andy Parks and his dad built between 1971 and 1978.

"At the Treaty of Versailles there was a line item that required Germany to destroy every one of them except for the 20 it needed to give to each Allied country so that they could study the superior technology then," he said.

Erie resident and volunteer, Mike Gugeler, 60, has helped with building and rebuilding planes within the collection. On Tuesday, he covered wings for an SE5a fighter plane under construction there.

He explained that flying vintage aircraft sometimes feels like driving a car in desperate need of an alignment.

"They pull hard," he said. "So, you could say that we've learned a lot about stability and aerodynamics in the last 100 years."

Another volunteer, Rebecca Kinder of Centennial, said she shows up with her 17-year-old daughter, Julie, to give back and get out of her comfort zone.

"I didn't think I could weld or cover wings," she said. "But the opportunity to learn was here, and it gives me a chance to touch history every time."



The Vintage Aero Flying Museum near Fort Lupton.


Out of the closet

In telling this century-old story, it helps that the uniforms are out of the closet.

Somehow, the mannequins modeling them within the tall glass cases flanking the hangar's mezzanine level humanize World War I.

Instead of displaying random uniforms sewn into history and mostly forgotten there, these threads speak to lives understood with more context given the personal knowledge the Parks family had of the vets who donated them, according to Andy Parks, now the museum's executive director.

Space constraints today prompted the Parks family to exhibit about half of its collection at the Platte Valley Airpark hangar museum and the other half — which concentrates more on World War II aviation history — at the Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, he noted.

Yet, the cramped hangar exhibit still pulls a strong thread through this momentous era.

For most of these characters, their story begins in the same way — by volunteering to fly for the Allies before the U.S. officially engaged in World War I in April 1917.

"These pilots weren't usual soldiers of fortune," Andy Parks said during a museum tour. "They were men often from prominent families like the Vanderbilt family who didn't want their assets in Europe threatened by an aggressor."

For instance, the museum features the uniform of John Stetson of Stetson hat fame for volunteering to fly as a fighter pilot for the Allies and being forced instead to teach pilots due to his old age of 33.

The estate of James Norman Hall — coauthor in 1932 of "Mutiny on the Bounty" (Little, Brown and Company) — also donated his uniform.

Others with humble beginnings stand out, too. Eddie Rickenbacker, dubbed "Ace of Aces," dropped out of school in seventh grade.

Eugene Bullard is another underdog featured in the collection for being the first black American fighter pilot in combat.

Institutional racism kept him from flying with the Americans when the U.S. entered World War I. But before then, he flew with the French and became known as the "Black Swallow of Death."

"Today, there's almost a fear of military collections, like it's wrong to focus on this history because it glorifies war," Andy Parks said, glancing at the array of mannequins on the mezzanine before getting back to work on aircraft parked below.

"No. We are not glorifying war. We are glorifying the personal sacrifices made by young people and remembering what they did so there would be no more war. I know for a fact that every one of these guys — if they could —would say that they hated what they saw and did to keep the next generation from having to do it again."

If you go

What: Tours and volunteer opportunities at the Vintage Aero Flying Museum featuring World War I aircraft, uniforms and memorabilia. Projects include building and repairing vintage aircraft; designing displays and dioramas; learning to give tours; and sorting donations. Welding, woodworking and painting skills appreciated, but no experience necessary!

When: Anytime between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., most Tuesdays. (Please contact VAFM to discuss projects and how you can help.)

Where: Platte Valley Airpark, 7507 County Road 39, Fort Lupton


More information: To schedule a tour for individuals or groups; volunteer; get specific hangar directions; or make a tax deductible donation, contact Andy Parks, VAFM executive director, at andy@vafm.org. To learn more, please visit www.vafm.org.

Story and photo gallery:  http://www.timescall.com