Crash location | 26.851667°N, 80.226111°W
Reported location is a long distance from the NTSB's reported nearest city. This often means that the location has a typo, or is incorrect. |
Nearest city | West Palm Beach, FL
26.715342°N, 80.053375°W 14.2 miles away |
Tail number | N12003 |
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Accident date | 12 Apr 2012 |
Aircraft type | Piper PA-18A |
Additional details: | None |
**This report was modified on November 1, 2013. Please see the public docket for this accident to view the original report.**
The pilot stated that upon returning to the airport from a local flight, he elected to land on the grass turf runway, which had an asphalt runway intersection within the first quarter of its length. His landing speed was about 60 mph, the airplane touched down long on the first portion of the grass turf. The pilot held off lowering the tail wheel initially but then lowered it firmly onto the ground. During the landing roll on the asphalt portion, the airplane began to arc to the left, the pilot applied full right rudder and then eased on a "slight amount" of right brake. As the airplane departed the asphalt section, it abruptly nosed over, the propeller struck the ground and the airplane came to rest inverted on the grass turf runway, incurring substantial damage to the vertical section and rudder. An inspection of the runway's asphalt to grass turf transition section revealed that the airplane's main landing gear tires dug into the turf as it left the slightly higher asphalt. An aviation safety inspector from the Federal Aviation Administration responded to the accident scene and interviewed the pilot, who reported no mechanical malfunctions or failures during the landing and rollout. While the airplane was being repaired after the accident, a mechanic determined that the bolts holding the main wheel halves in position were excessively long, causing the wheel halves to separate and the brake discs to change position when the airplane transitioned from the asphalt to the turf runway.
The inadequate assembly of the brakes, which caused them to lock during the landing roll when the airplane transitioned from asphalt to turf, resulting in the airplane nosing over.